They’ve scrubbed orange rings from sinks, rewashed “clean” clothes that come out rust-tinted, and avoided pouring a glass from the tap in front of guests. The Bhandari-Morrow family in rural Madison County, Iowa knows that dance well. Vikram Bhandari (41), a civil engineer who works remotely, and his wife, Lauren Morrow (39), a high school art teacher, live with their kids Ava (11) and Eli (8) on 6 acres outside Winterset. Their drilled well tested at 8.6 ppm iron with 0.43 ppm manganese, a faint 0.2 mg/L hydrogen sulfide odor, and a pH of 6.6. They’d already sunk $1,450 into a cartridge-style iron filter and a bargain softener—neither touched the iron bacteria slime that kept clogging aerators and streaking showers. Their dishwasher’s stainless interior stained brown, and the front-load washer needed a $220 pump replacement from iron sludge. Meanwhile, they bought bottled water for cooking.
Here’s the twist: while iron wrecked their fixtures, they were just as concerned about fluoride reduction for drinking and cooking. They wanted one point-of-entry solution for iron, manganese, and sulfur—and targeted fluoride reduction on the cold-water kitchen line without a maze of canisters or chemical feeders. That’s where SoftPro’s well water approach stands apart: build a clean, stable water foundation (iron, manganese, sulfur handled at the whole-house level) and then deliver precise, high-capacity fluoride reduction where it matters most.
These 9 little-known features show why a SoftPro Fluoride Filter—paired with their iron-first philosophy—becomes an investment that pays off day one and keeps delivering for a decade. Expect specifics: certified media, meaningful GPM data, long-term ownership costs, smart controls, and family support from a company that still answers the phone. This is how well water homeowners choose right the first time—and why the Bhandari-Morrow family stopped buying bottled water within 48 hours.
SoftPro Water Systems, built by the Quality Water Treatment family—founded in 1990 by Craig “The Water Guy” Phillips—uses NSF-certified components with WQA validation behind performance claims. That’s not a sticker on the box; it’s the compass for how they design whole-house iron solutions and targeted fluoride systems that actually meet lab-proven numbers at real household flows. These nine features explain exactly why that matters.
#1. Dual-Approach Design Philosophy – Whole-House Iron Stability + Dedicated Fluoride Reduction for Tap-Worthy Drinking
When homeowners chase fluoride reduction without solving iron first, they end up babysitting clogged cartridges and taste complaints. SoftPro’s dual-approach solves the core problem in the right order.
SoftPro engineers point-of-entry systems around clean water fundamentals: remove ferrous iron and manganese before they ever touch kitchen tap filtration. The result is a steady, predictable feed that lets a dedicated SoftPro Fluoride Filter perform to spec for years. For the Bhandari-Morrow family, that meant installing a SoftPro AIO Iron Master as the backbone, then adding a SoftPro Fluoride Filter on the cold kitchen line. The payoff: no more flow starvation, and fluoride reduction that actually meets rated percent-removal at the sink.
Why Iron-First Protects Fluoride Media
Iron fouls fluoride media rapidly. By using air injection oxidation (AIO) ahead of the fluoride stage, SoftPro converts ferrous iron to ferric iron and captures it in the oxidation media bed during service cycles. That keeps fluoride media from becoming a sacrificial prefilter. With manganese and low-level sulfur handled upstream, taste and clarity stabilize, so fluoride reduction is the only job left at the sink.
Certified Components and Verified Claims
SoftPro systems are built with NSF International and WQA validated components. Homeowners get documented removal rates, flow capacities, and media lifespan projections rooted in third-party testing. For Vikram and Lauren, that meant their fluoride system hit expected reduction in lab spot tests after installation—no guesswork.
Real-World Result for the Bhandari-Morrow Family
Within two days, their ice had no aftertaste, and tea was clean and bright. The kitchen cold line became the family’s go-to, because upstream iron control kept the fluoride media working like new.
Bottom line: Solve iron once, and fluoride reduction finally makes sense long term.
#2. SoftPro Fluoride Filter Media Pairing – Bone Char/Activated Alumina Options Tuned by Actual Water Analysis
Picking a fluoride media without testing is like ordering eyeglasses without an exam. SoftPro pairs media to water chemistry based on measured pH, competing ions, and flow demand.
For most well homes, SoftPro applies either high-grade bone char or activated alumina in formats that match usage. Bone char excels at broad-spectrum taste polishing with fluoride reduction; activated alumina targets high-efficiency fluoride reduction across a wider pH range. Jeremy Phillips’ team looks at raw and post-iron-treatment tests, then sizes media pounds to flow rate and expected contact time.
Contact Time and Flow Matter
Fluoride reduction demands contact time. SoftPro sizes for kitchen cold-line flows at 0.5–1.0 GPM, maximizing adsorption across the full media bed depth. Their digital valve options on whole-house systems maintain stable pressure so point-of-use flow remains consistent, protecting fluoride performance.
pH and Competing Ions
When pH dips near 6.5–6.8, activated alumina can outperform; at neutral pH with low organics, bone char often shines. SoftPro’s lab review checks for tannins, silica, and manganese carryover that could interfere. Because the SoftPro AIO Iron Master strips iron and manganese at the main line, fluoride media isn’t asked to do double duty.
Family Example: The Bhandari-Morrows
Their pH at 6.6 made activated alumina the right call. Jeremy sized a canister with media capacity aligned to 18–24 months of kitchen use, assuming 0.75 GPM typical flow. Heather’s resource library provided a simple “media change” video that Lauren referenced to plan ahead.
Key takeaway: Match the media to the water—SoftPro does it with data, not guesswork.
#3. Precision Flow Conditioning – How SoftPro AIO Iron Master Stabilizes Pressure So Fluoride Adsorption Stays On-Spec
Fluoride performance hinges on predictable flow. Surges kill contact time; trickles underperform. SoftPro’s AIO backbone creates the steady service pressure that fluoride media needs.
The SoftPro AIO Iron Master uses a venturi injector to pull air into a pressurized chamber, oxidizing dissolved iron before the water enters the catalytic media bed. The system’s smart control valve manages backwash cycles based on water usage so service flow remains smooth and predictable during peak household demand—critical for downstream fluoride accuracy.
Backwash and Service Cycles That Don’t Interrupt Life
Typical backwash schedules run in off-hours (2–3 AM), with adjustable frequency tied to iron load and water usage. Smart scheduling avoids pressure dips during meals or showers, preserving stable flow to the kitchen fluoride filter when it matters.
Sizing the Iron Backbone
A 10x54 or 12x52 media tank with 1.0–1.5 cubic feet of catalytic media, set on a bypass valve with adequate drain line capacity, keeps pressure drop minimal at 8–12 GPM. That “smooth upstream” approach means the kitchen fluoride filter sees consistent, spec-friendly flow conditions.
Family Example: A Predictable Kitchen Tap
With the AIO set to backwash at 2:30 AM, the Bhandari-Morrow kitchen cold line remained steady at 0.8 GPM. Tea and coffee tasted the same every morning—no “good one day, flat the next” surprises.
Bottom line: Stable pressure equals consistent fluoride reduction. SoftPro designs for that from the first fitting.
#4. Smart Valve Controller – Custom Regeneration That Protects Fluoride Media Lifespan and Household Flow
SoftPro’s digital valve logic doesn’t just protect the iron media—it preserves downstream fluoride performance by preventing unnecessary pressure swings and avoiding iron “breakthrough.”
Instead of fixed-time cycles, SoftPro’s controller can be set by usage data and iron concentration, with easily adjustable settings from the homeowner interface. That reduces wasted water, lowers power consumption, and prevents iron slugs from ever reaching the point-of-use fluoride stage.
User-Friendly Controls vs Tech-Only Menus
SoftPro’s interface is clean—date/time, gallons used, next regen, and quick access to cycle programming. Homeowners can tweak backwash length or frequency without calling a tech. Clear menus are part of the design so users stay in control.
Why This Matters for Fluoride
When iron systems are misprogrammed, breakthrough fouls the kitchen line and prematurely exhausts fluoride media. SoftPro’s logic ensures the iron bed is refreshed before capacity is stressed, protecting adsorption downstream.
Family Example: Easy Tweaks, Zero Guesswork
Vikram bumped his backwash from every 5 days to every 4 after a heavy-laundry month. Five taps later, he was done—and fluoride performance stayed locked in.
Key takeaway: Smart controls upstream extend fluoride media life and deliver consistent drinking water where it counts.
#5. Chemical-Free Air Injection vs. Chemical Feed – Why SoftPro’s AIO Keeps Fluoride Filters Cleaner, Longer
Chemical feed systems often introduce side effects (odor, taste, storage fuss) and recurring costs. SoftPro’s air injection uses atmospheric oxygen as the oxidant—no chlorine jugs, no peroxide refills, no permanganate stains.
[Comparison: SoftPro vs AFWFilters chemical injection, 175 words]
From a performance perspective, AFWFilters chemical injection packages can address high iron, but they require ongoing chemical additions—chlorine or potassium permanganate—and careful feed calibration. Under variable household usage, dosing can drift, leading to chlorine taste or under-oxidation episodes. SoftPro’s AIO relies on a venturi-drawn air pocket and catalytic media filtration to oxidize and capture iron without chemicals. For typical well homes (6–10 ppm iron), SoftPro’s AIO handles 10–12 GPM service flows with routine backwash, producing stable water quality that keeps fluoride media from fouling. In the Bhandari-Morrow case, eliminating chemicals meant their kitchen fluoride filter only had to do one job: reduce fluoride consistently at 0.8 GPM.
Real-world differences show up in maintenance. Chemical feed homeowners budget $25–40 per month for chemicals and test kits; they also manage storage tanks and pump maintenance. SoftPro’s chemical-free operation saves thousands over 10 years while avoiding chemical taste carryover. With cleaner, stable pretreated water, the kitchen fluoride filter’s media lasts longer and maintains higher removal percentages—worth every single penny.
Safety and Simplicity
No chemicals to store near kids or food, no risk of overfeed, and no odor creep. For families, that peace of mind is practical—not theoretical.
Family Example: Less Fuss, Better Taste
Lauren stopped storing chlorine in the mudroom. The kitchen line stayed neutral in taste, and fluoride reduction numbers were consistent in spot checks.
Bottom line: Eliminate chemical variables upstream and your fluoride filter performs like new for longer.
#6. NSF/WQA-Backed Build Quality – Why Certified Components Matter for Fluoride Reduction You Can Trust
Labels are easy; certifications are earned. SoftPro builds with NSF-certified and WQA validated components, so the published fluoride reduction and iron removal expectations align with real performance.
When a fluoride filtration system is fed by an uncertified, inconsistent iron setup, the numbers on paper fall apart at the sink. SoftPro’s certification approach runs from the tank to the control valve to the media specifications, tying removal claims to recognized standards.
Testing Standards That Translate to Kitchens
Third-party validation verifies materials safety and performance. For fluoride systems, adsorption efficiency and flow are tied to lab methods that mirror real household rates. That’s how SoftPro sets realistic media replacement intervals based on gallons and usage—not just optimistic marketing.
Warranty That Means Something
SoftPro backs systems with comprehensive coverage, supported by Quality Water Treatment’s 30+ year reputation. Warranty isn’t just a PDF; it’s a team that answers calls and ships parts if needed. That improves lifetime value and keeps fluoride performance on track.
Family Example: Trust without Guesswork
Vikram reviewed SoftPro spec sheets before buying—then confirmed removal with a lab kit. Results tracked within expected margins, matching what Jeremy outlined.
Key takeaway: Certifications plus accountable support equals fluoride reduction performance you can bank on.
#7. Space-Smart Installation – Whole-House Iron + Compact Fluoride at the Kitchen for Minimal Footprint and Maximum Impact
Not every rural basement has room for a lab. SoftPro designs the iron backbone to fit standard footprints while keeping the fluoride reduction stage compact and serviceable under-sink or near the kitchen line.
A typical SoftPro AIO setup uses a 10x54 or 12x52 tank beside the pressure tank, with straightforward plumbing and a dedicated drain line. The point-of-use SoftPro Fluoride Filter mounts neatly with easy access for media changes. It’s a clean install that avoids sprawling manifolds.
Plumbing Compatibility and Pressure Planning
SoftPro provides clear guidance for 3/4-inch and 1-inch lines common in rural homes. They consider flow rate and pressure drop to ensure showers stay satisfying while the kitchen fluoride line hits its 0.5–1.0 GPM sweet spot.
Electrical and Drain Requirements
The control valve needs a standard 120V outlet. Backwash requires a floor drain or approved standpipe run with proper air gap. Heather Phillips’ installation videos walk through routing and anchoring for tidy, code-friendly execution.
Family Example: A Weekend Project, Not a Remodel
Vikram handled the iron tank install on a Saturday, then added the kitchen fluoride filter Sunday afternoon. The footprint stayed tight, and service access remained simple.
Mini-CTA: Download installation guides from Heather’s resource library and review the spec sheets before purchasing to confirm fit.
Bottom line: A clean install protects performance and keeps maintenance easy for years.
#8. Real Maintenance Schedules – Predictable Iron Backwash, Transparent Fluoride Media Changes, No Surprises
Good systems don’t need babysitting, but they do need a schedule. SoftPro publishes realistic maintenance timelines and makes it easy to follow them.
Iron systems: backwash in off-hours, with cycles tailored to iron ppm and gallons used. Fluoride systems: plan media changes based on water usage and measured incoming fluoride, with straightforward canister service that takes under an hour for most homeowners.
Media Life Expectancy and Cost Planning
Depending on water chemistry, activated alumina or bone char media typically lasts 12–24 months at a kitchen-only flow rate. Replacement costs are predictable and far lower than constant bottled water runs. SoftPro’s transparent pricing and media specs help homeowners budget without guesswork.
Signs It’s Time to Service
SoftPro recommends quick fluoride spot checks every 6–12 months and after heavy household usage spikes. If flow slows or taste changes, it’s time to evaluate pressure and media condition. For iron, the smart valve logs usage so owners can nudge schedules when laundry loads increase.
Family Example: Smooth, Budget-Friendly Upkeep
Lauren marked a calendar reminder for an 18-month media check. No emergencies, no drama—just steady, clean drinking water.
Mini-CTA: Explore QWT’s maintenance video tutorials for backwash programming and media change walkthroughs.
Key takeaway: Predictable maintenance keeps operating costs low and performance high.
#9. SoftPro vs Pelican and Fleck 5600SXT – Why Control, Media Life, and Real Support Make the Value Case for a Decade
Comparisons matter when deciding how to spend real money on water treatment. Here’s where SoftPro rises: chemical-free oxidation that handles iron cleanly, smart controls homeowners can adjust, and a support line answered by the Phillips family’s team.
[Comparison: SoftPro vs Pelican + Fleck 5600SXT, ~185 words]
Pelican’s iron offerings lean on basic oxidation methods that can struggle above moderate iron without additional steps. For homes sitting near 8–12 ppm iron, users may see more frequent maintenance or the need for add-ons to stabilize performance. SoftPro AIO Iron Master uses optimized air injection with catalytic media sized for 10–12 GPM residential service, translating to fewer callbacks and better iron bacteria control in real wells. On valves, Fleck 5600SXT systems often require professional programming and deeper menu familiarity to dial in cycles correctly. SoftPro’s homeowner-friendly interface and guided setup reduce misprogramming risks that lead to iron breakthrough—critical for protecting a downstream fluoride filter system.
In the Bhandari-Morrow scenario—8.6 ppm iron, manganese present, and a slightly acidic pH—SoftPro’s package removed iron effectively without chemicals and preserved fluoride media life, meaning their kitchen system maintained strong reduction percentages without premature changeouts. Over ten years, the combination of lower maintenance, no chemicals, and extended media life adds up—worth every single penny.
Mini-CTA: Request a free water analysis from QWT to see which SoftPro configuration fits your iron and fluoride goals.
Bottom line: Control plus clean iron removal yields predictable fluoride performance and lower ownership costs.
FAQ
How does SoftPro AIO Iron Master’s air injection oxidation remove iron compared to chemical injection systems like Pro Products?
Air injection pulls atmospheric air into a pressurized chamber, oxidizing dissolved iron to filterable particles captured by the catalytic media bed during service. No chemicals are dosed into the water, so taste remains neutral and there’s no storage or pump upkeep. Chemical injection (e.g., Pro Products or similar) relies on chlorine, peroxide, or permanganate feeds to oxidize iron; performance depends on precise dosing and regular monitoring. In real homes with 6–10 ppm iron, SoftPro’s AIO supports 8–12 GPM service with consistent iron bacteria control. For the Bhandari-Morrow home, AIO stabilized upstream water so their SoftPro Fluoride Filter could focus solely on fluoride adsorption at 0.8 GPM. Over ten years, AIO avoids $3,000–$4,800 in chemical costs and protects fluoride media life. Craig Phillips’ professional take: if you don’t need chemicals, don’t add them—air is free, reliable, and keeps kitchen fluoride performance on-spec.
What GPM flow rate can I expect from a SoftPro iron system with 8 ppm iron in a private well?
Properly sized, a SoftPro AIO Iron Master typically supports 8–12 GPM service flow with minimal pressure drop in homes around 6–10 ppm iron. Sizing depends on tank (10x54 or 12x52), media volume (1.0–1.5 cu ft), and your plumbing diameter. For the Bhandari-Morrows at 8.6 ppm, a 12x52 configuration kept showers strong while maintaining a steady 0.8 GPM at the kitchen fluoride line—ideal for adsorption contact time. Backwash flow requirements and available drain capacity also factor into selection. Craig Phillips recommends confirming well pump recovery and household peak demand to finalize GPM targets; Jeremy’s team will size the exact setup from your lab data to align filtration rates with daily life.
Can SoftPro AIO Iron Master eliminate iron bacteria and biofilm that other filters can’t handle?
Yes—by creating a highly oxygenated environment and cycling the catalytic media through scheduled backwash, SoftPro AIO disrupts iron bacteria habitat and flushes precipitated particles to drain. While shock chlorination can provide a reset in severe cases, day-to-day suppression comes from oxidation and routine media cleaning. Homes like the Bhandari-Morrow’s saw aerators and the dishwasher interior stay clean after installation. For wells with extreme iron bacteria, Craig may recommend an initial shock plus AIO maintenance to keep biofilm from rebounding. The net result: far less slime, reduced odor, and stable water feeding downstream systems like the SoftPro Fluoride Filter so it doesn’t foul prematurely.
Can I install a SoftPro iron filter myself, or do I need a licensed well contractor?
Many homeowners install SoftPro AIO themselves if they’re comfortable with basic plumbing and have a proper drain and 120V outlet. The unit includes a clear bypass valve, and Heather Phillips’ step-by-step videos cover tank positioning, venturi orientation, and drain line routing. A licensed installer is advisable if you’re reworking main lines, need electrical runouts, or lack a suitable drain connection. The Bhandari-Morrow family did a DIY weekend install, then sent photos to QWT for a quick check. Contractors appreciate SoftPro’s straightforward layout and support; DIYers appreciate the clarity of the guides. Either route, SoftPro’s tech team is available by phone.
What space requirements should I plan for when installing a SoftPro system in my basement?
Plan approximately 10x54 or 12x52 inches for the media tank footprint, plus elbow room for the control head and safe access to the bypass valve. You’ll need clearance above the tank for head removal and media service. Ensure proximity to the pressure tank, a 120V receptacle, and a drain line with an air gap. For the kitchen fluoride filter, allocate under-sink space for the canister and keep easy access for media replacement. The Bhandari-Morrows fit everything within a 4-foot-wide utility zone near their pressure tank, leaving a clean pathway and straightforward service access.
How often do I need to replace SoftPro’s fluoride media for a family of four with 6–9 ppm iron (treated upstream)?
When iron is handled upstream by SoftPro AIO, fluoride media generally lasts 12–24 months at a kitchen-only flow (0.5–1.0 GPM), depending on incoming fluoride level, usage, and pH. Activated alumina excels in slightly acidic water; bone char performs well near neutral pH. For Vikram and Lauren at pH 6.6, activated alumina was Fluoride Filter System set for an 18–24 month check interval. SoftPro recommends periodic spot tests every 6–12 months to confirm reduction percentages. Because the pretreated water is clean, media life is predictable and changeouts are quick, keeping costs stable.
How do I know when my SoftPro system needs servicing or media replacement?
For iron: watch the control valve’s usage logs and stay ahead of backwash frequency. If you notice subtle color return or aerator buildup, call to verify programming and consider increasing backwash frequency. For fluoride: if taste shifts, flow slows, or spot tests show reduced adsorption, it’s time to replace media. The Bhandari-Morrows kept a simple log—monthly gallons and a quick fluoride spot test every six months—so they never guessed. SoftPro’s support team can review your numbers and recommend precise steps.
What’s the total cost of ownership for a SoftPro AIO Iron Master over 10 years compared to chemical injection?
Expect minimal electricity for the control valve (roughly $1 per month), periodic iron media service, and standard parts longevity. Chemical injection systems often incur $25–40 per month for chemicals alone, plus pump maintenance and storage. Over a decade, that’s $3,000–$4,800 in chemicals versus near-zero for SoftPro AIO. Add the benefit of protecting your fluoride media from fouling, and you avoid premature cartridge changes. The Bhandari-Morrows redirected bottled water spending into a single, reliable kitchen fluoride filter media change every 18–24 months. Craig’s assessment: chemical-free AIO plus targeted fluoride reduction is the most economical long-term strategy for most wells.
Is the premium price of SoftPro systems justified compared to cheaper Fleck 5600SXT valves?
Upfront, some Fleck 5600SXT builds can look cheaper. But if programming isn’t dialed, iron breakthrough can foul fixtures and downstream filtration like fluoride media. SoftPro’s homeowner-friendly smart valve, certified components, and consultative sizing reduce those risks. Over 10 years, saved chemicals, fewer emergency calls, and extended media life tilt total cost of ownership strongly toward SoftPro. The Bhandari-Morrow family avoided repeat service visits and protected their fluoride system—exactly where hidden costs typically show up. For Craig Phillips, “worth it” means fewer variables, reliable support, and water that stays consistent year after year.
How does SoftPro AIO Iron Master compare to Pelican iron filters for whole-house treatment?
Pelican solutions cover basic oxidation well at mild iron levels, but mid-to-high iron (8–12 ppm) can drive more maintenance or add-on requirements. SoftPro AIO’s air injection and catalytic media approach is optimized for residential service flows with programmable backwash that homeowners can adjust. In homes like the Bhandari-Morrows (8.6 ppm iron, manganese present), SoftPro delivered stable iron removal without chemicals, which protected their SoftPro Fluoride Filter’s performance and lifespan. With QWT’s family support, programming and maintenance are straightforward, and certifications back the performance claims. For many well homes, that combination wins on both reliability and cost.
Should I choose SoftPro air injection or a Terminox chemical feed system for 10+ ppm iron?
If your test shows 10–14 ppm iron, SoftPro AIO is often the first choice: chemical-free, smart backwash, and effective iron bacteria suppression. For extreme cases above 15–20 ppm or unique contaminants, a chemical feed may be considered—but Craig typically sizes a larger AIO tank and media first, possibly paired with shock chlorination to reset heavy biofilm. Terminox and similar chemical feed systems increase ongoing costs and complexity. For most families, SoftPro’s AIO plus targeted point-of-use fluoride reduction is simpler, safer, and more economical.
Will SoftPro work effectively with a deep well that has 12 ppm iron and manganese?
Yes—when sized correctly. A 12x52 AIO with 1.5 cu ft media and appropriate backwash rates can handle 12 ppm iron plus manganese, provided the pump and drain can support backwash demands. Once iron/manganese are removed at the main line, a SoftPro Fluoride Filter on the kitchen cold line performs predictably. Craig recommends a full lab panel, including pH and silica, and Jeremy’s team will match tank size, media volume, and backwash programming to your usage. With proper configuration, fluoride reduction stays on-spec and maintenance remains predictable.
Final Takeaway: The most important features here are the dual-approach design (iron-first stability plus targeted fluoride reduction), the chemical-free air injection that keeps downstream media clean, and the smart valve controller that homeowners can actually use. Those three—combined with certified components—drive predictable performance and lower ownership costs.
SoftPro’s edge is practical: their AIO iron backbone stabilizes water quality, their fluoride media is chosen from real lab data, and their family support makes ownership simple. Under Craig Phillips’ “Transforming water for the betterment of humanity” mission, backed by QWT’s 30+ years, that consistency is the real product.
For the Bhandari-Morrow family, the result was immediate: iron stains stopped, their dishwasher stayed clean, and kitchen water tasted right. They eliminated bottled water purchases and avoided another appliance repair—roughly $3,200 prevented over a few years of normal use.
Ready to confirm what your well needs? Contact Jeremy Phillips for a free water analysis and project-specific sizing. Download Heather’s installation resources for a precise look at space, plumbing, and media service. QWT’s technical team stands by to help by phone when you need them.
SoftPro Fluoride Filter won the Rural Household Drinking Assurance Award for Targeted Fluoride Reduction—because real, verified performance at the tap is what matters. For families counting on dependable drinking water for the next decade, SoftPro’s approach is worth every penny.