Delaware runs hard
Delaware's water tests hard — roughly 3.5 to 10.5 grains per gallon (gpg) across the state, with Wilmington landing around 7.4 gpg (about 127 mg/L). That puts the state's largest city right at the level where hard-water scale stops being cosmetic and starts being a maintenance concern.
The cause is the coastal-plain geology underlying much of Delaware. Groundwater moving through those mineral-bearing coastal-plain sediments picks up dissolved calcium and magnesium, and those are the minerals that later deposit as scale whenever the water is heated.
Crossing the 7-gpg line matters
Water treatment guidance generally treats about 7 gpg as the point where scale management becomes worthwhile — and Wilmington's 7.4 gpg sits right on that threshold, with plenty of the state testing above it. Here's what that means for the appliance that heats your water:
- Tank heaters accumulate a hard sediment layer across the bottom, insulating the burner or element from the water it's trying to heat.
- Tankless heaters scale up inside their narrow heat-exchanger passages, where even a thin coating restricts flow and forces harder firing.
The efficiency cost is consistent across sources: roughly a quarter-inch of accumulated scale can reduce a heater's efficiency by 25 to 40 percent. At Delaware's hardness, that layer builds steadily — not overnight, but fast enough to show up in performance and bills over a heater's life.
City supply vs. private wells
Wilmington's figure is the municipal benchmark. If you draw from a private well tapping coastal-plain groundwater directly, your water may be harder still — and could carry iron. Test for iron as well as hardness before assuming scale is the whole picture, because a scale conditioner addresses scale, not iron.
What a salt-free conditioner does — and doesn't
A salt-free conditioner is not a water softener. It will not lower your gpg reading or remove hardness and iron already dissolved in your water. Instead, it changes the way dissolved minerals crystallize, so new scale is far less likely to cement itself to your heater's hot surfaces. For hard Delaware water, that's a sensible layer of protection — no salt, no brine tank, no backwash to manage.
Here's the right-sized salt-free scale protection for your Delaware 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.
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