Florida sits among the hardest-water states in the nation
Florida water is very hard to extremely hard, testing from 10 to 17-plus grains per gallon (gpg). Tampa and Orlando both run around 17 gpg — figures that put Florida squarely among the hardest municipal waters in the United States.
The reason is right under your feet. The Floridan Aquifer, which supplies much of the state, flows through vast beds of limestone. As water moves through that porous carbonate rock, it dissolves calcium continuously — so by the time it reaches your tap, it's carrying a heavy mineral load ready to precipitate the moment it's heated.
Why Florida water heaters are on the front line
At 17 gpg, scale doesn't creep — it accumulates aggressively. Calcium carbonate crystallizes onto the hottest surfaces in your plumbing, and your water heater is the hottest spot of all:
- Tank heaters build a thick, rock-like sediment bed on the bottom that insulates the element and can leave it firing into a crust instead of into water.
- Tankless heaters are the most exposed — their fine heat-exchanger channels scale over quickly at this hardness, choking flow and triggering faults.
The efficiency toll is stark and well established: about a quarter-inch of scale can cost a heater 25 to 40 percent of its efficiency. In most states that quarter-inch takes years. In 17-gpg Florida water, it arrives dramatically faster — which is why scale protection here is less a nicety than a routine part of owning a heater.
Cities and wells
Tampa and Orlando are the headline hard spots, but this is a statewide condition, not a local one. Private wells drawing straight from the Floridan Aquifer are at least as hard as the municipal supply and may carry iron; test for iron along with hardness, because a scale conditioner treats scale, not iron.
Setting expectations for salt-free protection
Here's the honest boundary: a salt-free conditioner is not a softener. It cannot lower Florida's punishing gpg numbers or remove minerals already dissolved in your water, and it won't remove iron. What it does is change how those minerals crystallize so that new scale is far less likely to bond to your heater's hot surfaces — a genuinely useful defense in a state where scale forms this fast, and one that avoids the salt, brine, and backwash of a conventional softener.
Here's the right-sized salt-free scale protection for your Florida 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.
