Colorado's hardness is a tale of elevation
Few states vary as much as Colorado. Hardness runs anywhere from about 1 to 16 grains per gallon (gpg), and the mountains-versus-plains split explains almost all of it. High-country surface water — fresh snowmelt that hasn't lingered in mineral rock — is soft. Fort Collins and Longmont, drawing largely from mountain sources, come in around a gentle 1.2 gpg.
The Front Range is a different animal. Denver averages roughly 8.5 gpg and can range from 7 up toward 16 depending on source and season. That's the difference between water you barely think about and water that leaves a mark on your heater.
Match your action to your city
Because the state is so split, generic advice is useless here. Sort yourself first:
- Soft mountain-fed towns (Fort Collins, Longmont, ~1.2 gpg): scale is a minor concern; you likely don't need a conditioner for it.
- Denver and the harder Front Range (7-16 gpg): scale is a real, ongoing maintenance issue worth addressing.
- Private wells anywhere: test for hardness and iron — well chemistry doesn't follow the city figure.
What Front Range hardness does inside a heater
When water at 8 to 16 gpg is heated, calcium carbonate precipitates onto hot surfaces — the base and element of a tank heater, or the confined heat-exchanger passages of a tankless unit, which scale up fastest. The familiar figure applies: roughly a quarter-inch of scale can cut heater efficiency by 25 to 40 percent, showing up as slower recovery and higher energy use. On Denver-area water, that build-up is meaningful; in the soft mountain towns, it's slow enough to be a non-issue.
Where a salt-free conditioner fits
Understand what it is: a salt-free conditioner is not a softener. It doesn't lower your gpg or remove minerals already in the water, and it won't touch iron. What it does is change how dissolved minerals crystallize so that new scale struggles to bond to your heater — a practical choice for hard Front Range homes that want protection without salt, brine, or backwash. Soft mountain-town homes generally don't need it.
If you're on the harder Front Range, here's the right-sized salt-free scale protection for your Colorado 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.
- ✓ 90-Day Money-BackNo restocking fees — return within 90 days.
- ✓ Manufacturer WarrantyGenuine Fleck · Pentair · VIQUA equipment.
- ✓ Free Expert SizingTalk to a specialist and buy the right system the first time.
