Good news first: Arkansas water is soft
Arkansas is one of the softest states in the country. Both Little Rock and Fayetteville test soft — under 30 mg/L, roughly 1 to 1.7 grains per gallon (gpg). At those levels, hard-water scale simply isn't a meaningful problem on municipal supplies.
We're not going to invent a crisis. If you're on city water in Arkansas, your water heater is not fighting a scale battle, and there is no reason to buy a conditioner to fix scale that isn't forming.
So when does scale actually matter in Arkansas?
The honest answer is: mostly on private wells. Soft municipal water is the statewide norm, but a private well draws from whatever aquifer sits beneath it, and some wells run harder — and can carry iron — than the nearby city supply.
If you're on a well, don't guess based on the state average. Test your water. A basic test gives you your true hardness in gpg and tells you whether iron is present. That single step decides whether you need to do anything at all.
What scale does — if your water is hard
For context, here's what you'd be preventing if your well did test hard: heated hard water drops calcium carbonate onto hot surfaces — a tank's bottom and element, or the tight channels of a tankless heat exchanger. Around a quarter-inch of scale can erode 25 to 40 percent of a heater's efficiency. That's a real cost, but in Arkansas it applies to a minority of homes, not the typical soft-water household.
Straight advice
- City water (Little Rock, Fayetteville, most towns): soft — scale protection isn't needed.
- Private well: test for hardness and iron before spending anything.
- Well tests hard: a salt-free conditioner can help keep new scale from bonding to your heater — but it won't remove existing hardness or iron. Deal with iron separately if your test finds it.
If your well came back genuinely hard, here's the right-sized salt-free scale protection for your Arkansas water heater:
Salt-free conditioners reduce and help prevent new water-heater scale; they are not softeners and do not remove existing hardness. Free U.S. shipping. See our hard water guide.
