Not all water filters remove the same things. A carbon pitcher filter that’s great at removing chlorine taste won’t touch arsenic. A UV system that kills bacteria won’t remove lead. A water softener that eliminates hard water scale won’t reduce PFAS. Every filtration technology has specific strengths and specific blind spots — and understanding what each one actually removes is the key to choosing the right filter for your water.
This article breaks down the six major residential water filtration technologies, explains exactly what each one removes (and doesn’t), and provides a comprehensive comparison chart so you can match your water concerns to the right technology.
Activated Carbon Filtration
Activated carbon is the most common filtration technology in residential water filters. It’s used in pitcher filters, faucet-mount filters, refrigerator filters, under-sink systems, and whole-house filters. Carbon works through a process called adsorption — contaminants stick to the surface of the carbon as water passes through.
Activated carbon has an enormous surface area (one gram of activated carbon has a surface area of approximately 3,000 square meters) created by heating carbon-rich materials (coconut shells, coal, or wood) in the absence of oxygen. This vast surface area provides millions of tiny pores where contaminant molecules can attach.
What Activated Carbon Removes
- Chlorine: Extremely effective — carbon is the standard technology for chlorine removal. Reduces chlorine taste and odor by 95-99%.
- Chloramine: Standard carbon has limited effectiveness. Catalytic carbon (a specially treated form) is needed for effective chloramine reduction.
- Volatile organic compounds (VOCs): Effective against benzene, toluene, xylene, trichloroethylene, and many other organic chemicals.
- Pesticides and herbicides: Effective against atrazine, lindane, 2,4-D, and many others.
- Disinfection byproducts: Reduces trihalomethanes (TTHMs) and some haloacetic acids (HAA5).
- Taste and odor compounds: Removes earthy, musty, and chemical tastes and odors.
- Some heavy metals: Carbon block filters (not granular) can reduce lead, mercury, and some other metals when certified to NSF 53.
- PFAS: High-quality carbon block filters certified to NSF 53 or P473 can reduce PFAS, but effectiveness varies significantly by filter design.
- Sediment: Carbon block filters provide mechanical filtration of particles. Granular carbon is less effective for sediment.
What Activated Carbon Doesn’t Remove
- Dissolved minerals: Calcium, magnesium, sodium, potassium — carbon doesn’t affect water hardness or TDS
- Fluoride: Standard carbon does not remove fluoride
- Nitrates: Carbon is ineffective against nitrates
- Arsenic: Standard carbon does not effectively remove arsenic (some specialty media can)
- Bacteria and viruses: Carbon does not disinfect water — it can actually harbor bacteria if not replaced on schedule
- Total dissolved solids (TDS): Carbon doesn’t reduce TDS readings
Carbon Block vs. Granular Activated Carbon (GAC)
Carbon block filters compress carbon into a solid block, forcing water through tiny channels. This provides both chemical adsorption and mechanical filtration (trapping particles as small as 0.5 microns). GAC filters use loose carbon granules — water can find paths of least resistance through the granules, reducing contact time and allowing some contaminants to pass through. For health-related contaminant removal (lead, cysts, PFAS), carbon block is significantly more effective than GAC.
Reverse Osmosis (RO)
Reverse osmosis forces water through a semi-permeable membrane with pores approximately 0.0001 microns in size — small enough to reject the vast majority of dissolved contaminants. RO is the most comprehensive single filtration technology available for residential use.
What Reverse Osmosis Removes
- Total dissolved solids (TDS): 90-99% reduction — this includes all dissolved minerals, salts, and metals
- Lead: 95-99% reduction
- Arsenic: 95-99% reduction
- Fluoride: 90-97% reduction
- Nitrates: 85-95% reduction
- PFAS: 90-99% reduction
- Sodium: 90-98% reduction
- Chromium-6: 95-99% reduction
- Radium: 90-97% reduction
- Bacteria and cysts: 99%+ reduction (the membrane pores are far too small for microorganisms to pass through)
- Chlorine, VOCs, pesticides: Removed by the carbon pre-filters and post-filters that are part of every RO system
- Microplastics: Effectively removed by the membrane
What Reverse Osmosis Doesn’t Remove (or Removes Poorly)
- Dissolved gases: CO2, hydrogen sulfide, and some volatile organic compounds can pass through the membrane as gases
- Some pesticides with very small molecular weight: A few organic compounds are small enough to pass through — the carbon filters in the system typically catch these
Important note: RO removes beneficial minerals (calcium, magnesium) along with harmful contaminants. The resulting water has very low mineral content and slightly acidic pH. Many RO systems include a remineralization stage to add minerals back.
UV (Ultraviolet) Disinfection
UV systems use ultraviolet light at 254 nm wavelength to damage the DNA of microorganisms, rendering them unable to reproduce and effectively killing them. UV is a disinfection technology, not a filtration technology — it doesn’t physically remove anything from the water.
What UV Disinfection Removes (Inactivates)
- Bacteria: E. coli, coliform, Salmonella, Legionella — 99.99%+ inactivation
- Viruses: Hepatitis A, norovirus, rotavirus — 99.99%+ inactivation
- Protozoan cysts: Cryptosporidium, Giardia — 99.9%+ inactivation (these are resistant to chlorine but vulnerable to UV)
What UV Disinfection Doesn’t Remove
- Any chemical contaminant: Lead, arsenic, PFAS, chlorine, VOCs, nitrates — UV has zero effect on chemical contaminants
- Sediment or particles: UV doesn’t filter anything physically
- Dissolved minerals: No effect on hardness, TDS, or mineral content
- Taste or odor: UV doesn’t improve taste
UV is almost always used in combination with other filtration technologies — typically after sediment and carbon filtration, which provide clear water that allows UV light to penetrate effectively.
Distillation
Distillation heats water to boiling, captures the steam, and condenses it back into liquid water. Contaminants with higher boiling points than water are left behind in the boiling chamber.
What Distillation Removes
- Heavy metals: Lead, mercury, arsenic, cadmium — effectively removed
- Dissolved minerals: Calcium, magnesium, sodium, fluoride — effectively removed
- Nitrates: Effectively removed
- Bacteria and viruses: Killed by the boiling process
- Sediment and particles: Left behind in the boiling chamber
- TDS: Dramatically reduced (similar to RO)
What Distillation Doesn’t Remove (or Removes Poorly)
- Volatile organic compounds (VOCs): Many VOCs have boiling points lower than water and will evaporate with the steam, ending up in the distilled water. Some distillers include a carbon post-filter to catch VOCs.
- Some PFAS compounds: Volatile PFAS may carry over with the steam
- Chlorine: Evaporates with the steam (though a carbon post-filter addresses this)
Sediment Filtration
Sediment filters use a physical barrier (pleated polyester, spun polypropylene, or wound string) to trap particles based on size. They’re rated in microns — a 5-micron filter catches particles larger than 5 microns, a 1-micron filter catches particles larger than 1 micron.
What Sediment Filters Remove
- Sand, silt, and clay: Effectively removed
- Rust and pipe scale: Effectively removed
- Dirt and debris: Effectively removed
- Some large microorganisms: Filters rated at 1 micron or below can trap Cryptosporidium cysts (4-6 microns) and Giardia cysts (8-15 microns)
What Sediment Filters Don’t Remove
- Dissolved chemicals: Chlorine, lead, PFAS, VOCs, pesticides — sediment filters have no effect on dissolved contaminants
- Bacteria and viruses: Too small to be caught by standard sediment filters
- Taste and odor: No improvement
- Dissolved minerals: No effect on hardness or TDS
Sediment filters are pre-filters — they protect downstream equipment (carbon filters, RO membranes, UV systems) from clogging and damage. They’re essential but not sufficient on their own for drinking water treatment.
Ion Exchange
Ion exchange systems swap undesirable ions in water for less harmful ones. The most common residential application is water softening, where calcium and magnesium ions (hardness) are exchanged for sodium or potassium ions.
What Ion Exchange Removes
- Hardness minerals: Calcium and magnesium — the primary function of water softeners
- Barium and radium: Removed as part of the cation exchange process
- Low levels of iron and manganese: Up to 2-3 ppm of ferrous (dissolved) iron
- PFAS (specialized resins): Specialty anion exchange resins can remove PFAS with up to 99% effectiveness, though these are different from standard water softener resins
- Nitrates (specialized resins): Anion exchange resins can remove nitrates
What Ion Exchange Doesn’t Remove
- Chlorine, VOCs, pesticides: No effect on organic chemicals
- Bacteria and viruses: No disinfection capability
- Sediment: No physical filtration
- Lead, arsenic, PFAS (standard softener resin): Standard cation exchange softener resin does not remove these
The Complete Comparison Chart
✅ = Effective, ⚠️ = Partially effective or depends on specific product, ❌ = Not effective
Matching Your Concern to the Right Technology
Here’s a practical decision guide:
- “My water tastes like chlorine” → Any activated carbon filter (pitcher, faucet-mount, under-sink, or whole-house)
- “I’m worried about lead” → Under-sink carbon block certified to NSF 53 for lead, or reverse osmosis
- “I want to remove PFAS” → Reverse osmosis (NSF 58) or carbon block certified to NSF 53 for PFAS
- “My well water has bacteria” → UV disinfection (with sediment pre-filter)
- “I have hard water” → Water softener (ion exchange)
- “I want the most thorough filtration possible” → Reverse osmosis system
- “My water has iron staining” → Oxidizing iron filter (air injection or greensand)
- “I want to remove everything” → Multi-stage system: sediment filter + carbon + RO (+ UV if on well water)
Frequently Asked Questions
Does any single filter remove everything?
No. Every filtration technology has limitations. Reverse osmosis comes closest to comprehensive removal, but it doesn’t kill bacteria (though its membrane blocks them physically) and it doesn’t remove dissolved gases. A multi-stage system combining sediment filtration, carbon, and RO covers the broadest range of contaminants. Add UV if microbial disinfection is needed.
Do more expensive filters remove more contaminants?
Generally, yes — but not always proportionally. A $30 Brita pitcher removes chlorine taste effectively. A $300 under-sink carbon block adds lead, cysts, and VOC removal. A $500 RO system adds arsenic, fluoride, nitrates, and TDS reduction. The jump from $30 to $300 adds significant health protection. The jump from $300 to $500 adds protection for specific contaminants (arsenic, fluoride, nitrates) that may or may not be in your water. Match the filter to your actual water quality rather than buying the most expensive option by default.
Can a water filter make water 100% pure?
Practically, no. Even the best residential systems leave trace amounts of some contaminants. Reverse osmosis achieves 95-99% removal of most dissolved contaminants, and distillation is similarly effective. Laboratory-grade deionized water requires multiple treatment stages that aren’t practical for home use. For drinking water purposes, 95-99% removal of harmful contaminants is more than sufficient.
The Bottom Line
What a water filter removes depends entirely on the technology it uses. Carbon filters excel at chlorine, VOCs, and taste improvement. Reverse osmosis provides the most comprehensive contaminant removal. UV kills microorganisms. Sediment filters catch particles. Ion exchange addresses hardness. No single technology does everything, which is why many effective water treatment systems combine multiple technologies in a multi-stage approach. Start by identifying what’s in your water (through your CCR or a water test), then choose the technology — or combination of technologies — that addresses your specific contaminants.
Related articles:
- Water Filter Buying Guide — choosing the right filter for your needs
- Carbon Block vs Granular Carbon — comparing the two carbon types
- UV Purifier vs Reverse Osmosis — when to use each technology
- NSF Certifications Explained — verifying filter performance claims
- How to Read a Water Quality Report — identifying what’s in your water