Salt vs. Salt-Free Water Softeners: Which Is Better?
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Salt vs. Salt-Free Water Softeners: Which Is Better?

Are you struggling with hard water in your home or business? Water softeners offer a proven method for removing nearly all hardness minerals, including calcium and magnesium, using a process called ion exchange. For this to work, owners must periodically replenish the softener brine drum with salt.

Salt-free water softeners — called water conditioners — provide an alternative, although unproven, method for addressing water hardness without having to replenish salts. In this article, we’ll explore the pros and cons of each type of system, from efficiency and cost to how each approach impacts long-term water quality.

The best choice for you will depend on whether you want soft water and the benefits that come with it, or conditioning to prevent a minor amount of scale inside the plumbing.

What Is a Salt-Based Water Softener?

Ion exchange water softeners remove dissolved minerals in water that make it “hard”. These can cause dry, irritated skin and hair, as well as scale buildup in pipes, on fixtures and in water-using appliances, reducing their efficiency.

Ion exchange works by attracting the water’s minerals to negatively charged resin beads inside the tank. That is, softening replaces the water’s calcium and magnesium with sodium or potassium. Depending on the setup and water chemistry, iron and manganese may be removed as well. The minerals are then flushed out during regeneration, producing softer, cleaner water.

The salt you put in a water softener is used during regeneration to recharge the resin beads. Without salts, your water softener would stop functioning.

triplex water softener installed Kinetico for Halcyon Hotel Denver
Triplex Kinetico water softener installed in a commercial application, for a hotel in Denver, CO.

Benefits of Ion Exchange

Limitations of Water Softeners

What Is a Salt-Free Water Conditioner?

Salt-free water conditioners aren’t designed to remove hardness minerals from water. Instead, they convert dissolved minerals, such as calcium and magnesium, into microscopic crystals that are less likely to form scale. These systems work best when the water is minimally to moderately hard to begin with.

Drawbacks and Considerations

Salt-free conditioners often mislead consumers by focusing on the elimination of salt used in conventional ion exchange systems. With no ion exchange process, there is no need for adding salts to make these systems run.

However, what is often not communicated is that the media responsible for converting hardness minerals into crystals has a relatively short lifespan, generally between one and five years, before a re-bed of the media is necessary.

This expense far outweighs salt consumption, especially with demand-operated systems such as Kinetico.

Mother and daughter doing laundry

Which Is Right for You?

Left untreated, hard water dries out skin and hair, stripping natural oils and clogging pores, while dulling fabrics, leaving streaks on dishes and stains on plumbing fixtures.

Salt-based water systems offer the most comprehensive approach to mitigating hardness minerals and their negative impacts, while salt-free conditioners offer a lower-maintenance option for reducing scale. Some water conditioners may incorporate a carbon filter to reduce chlorine and improve the water’s taste.

Choose Salt-Based If…

Kinetico water softeners are WQA Gold Seal and NSF/ANSI 44 standard certified, undergoing rigorous third-party testing for performance, durability and safety.

Choose Salt-Free Conditioners If…

Salt-free water conditioners minimally relieve effects of hard water, such as scale. A salt-based softener is where people will see the most noticeable improvements. Especially for dry skin, hair and long-term protection for appliances.

Need Help With Hard Water? Talk to a Kinetico Expert Today

To find the right solution for your hard water problems, schedule a free water test and consultation with one of our Water Quality Experts. We’ll help you see through the noise using reliable science and proven water treatment methods, so you can choose what’s best with confidence.