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Last updated: February 22, 2026

Most people buy an iron filter, install it, and still end up with rust stains in the sink.

That’s because iron in well water isn’t one thing. It’s three different problems that need three different solutions. Pick the wrong treatment and you’ve spent $500 to $2,000 on equipment that doesn’t fit your water.

Iron is also the most common contaminant complaint among private well owners in the US. The staining, the metallic taste, the orange ring around the bathtub drain, all of that is fixable. But the fix depends entirely on which type of iron you have.

Here’s how to get it right.

The Three Types of Iron in Well Water

Before any treatment decision, you need to know which type of iron you’re dealing with.

Ferrous iron is dissolved iron. The water looks clear when it comes out of the tap, but it leaves orange or brown stains after sitting or drying. This is the most common type in private wells.

Ferric iron is oxidized iron, the rust particles you can actually see. Water looks orange or reddish-brown straight from the tap. It’s already in solid form.

Iron bacteria aren’t iron at all, they’re microorganisms that feed on iron and leave behind a reddish-brown slime. You’ll notice it in toilet tanks and around aerators. They make iron problems much worse, and filtration alone won’t fix them.

You may have one type, or a combination. A lot of wells with iron bacteria also have elevated ferrous iron, which means you’re dealing with two problems at once. The treatment approach changes depending on which you have, and trying to shortcut the diagnosis is where most people waste money.

Step 1: Test Before You Buy Anything

A basic iron test panel from a state-certified lab runs $30 to $60. That’s a small price before spending real money on equipment.

The test should cover:

  • Total iron concentration (mg/L)
  • pH (critical, low pH makes iron harder to treat)
  • Manganese (often co-occurs with iron, needs its own treatment consideration)
  • Iron bacteria, if you see slime signs (requires a separate BART test or iron bacteria culture)

The EPA’s Secondary Maximum Contaminant Level for iron is 0.3 mg/L. That’s the threshold where taste, odor, and staining become noticeable. But many private wells run 1 to 10 mg/L or higher. Some rural wells in iron-heavy geology test above 20 mg/L. The concentration matters because some filter systems are rated for 5 mg/L and will fail quickly if your water comes in at 12 mg/L. Knowing your exact number tells you which systems are actually sized for your situation.

Best Mail-In Water Tests covers certified labs that can run a full iron panel, including bacteria testing if needed.

Also see: Well Water Testing Guide

Step 2: Match Treatment to Iron Type

Treating Ferrous (Dissolved) Iron

This is the most common scenario. The water looks clear, but iron is hiding in it.

Air injection / oxidizing filter, This is the go-to for most dissolved iron problems. The system injects air into the water stream, which converts ferrous iron into ferric particles that can then be filtered out. The particles get trapped in the filter bed and flushed away during backwash. Systems like the SpringWell WS handle iron concentrations up to roughly 10 to 15 mg/L depending on water chemistry. No chemicals needed, which keeps ongoing costs low. This is the most practical option for the majority of well owners dealing with dissolved iron.

Greensand filter, Uses potassium permanganate to oxidize and capture iron. Effective for higher iron levels and handles manganese well too. But you’ll need to periodically replenish the potassium permanganate. That adds ongoing cost and a regular maintenance step compared to air injection. If your water has both high iron and high manganese, greensand may be worth the trade-off.

Water softener, Works for dissolved iron, but only at low concentrations, typically under 1 to 3 mg/L. If iron is your primary problem, don’t rely on a softener. It will foul and lose efficiency fast at higher iron levels. A softener can be used alongside a dedicated iron filter for complete treatment. Think of the softener as a finishing step for hardness, not an iron solution.

Treating Ferric (Particulate) Iron

Ferric iron is already in solid form. The fix is simpler.

A 5-micron sediment filter will physically trap the particles. For ferric-only situations, this is the cheapest and most straightforward option. Add a carbon filter after the sediment stage and you address taste and odor at the same time.

Multi-stage sediment plus carbon is a solid starting point if your test confirms only ferric iron without elevated dissolved iron underneath it.

Treating Iron Bacteria

Iron bacteria require a different approach entirely. Filtration alone won’t fix this, you have to disinfect.

Shock chlorination is the first step. Pour a chlorine solution directly into the well, let it sit for 12 to 24 hours, then flush the system thoroughly. This kills the bacteria colony. Your local cooperative extension office or well contractor can walk you through the correct chlorine concentration for your well depth and volume. Most well owners can do this themselves with guidance. It’s not complicated, but getting the dilution right matters.

For ongoing control, a continuous chlorination system injects small amounts of chlorine into the water supply automatically. Follow it with a carbon block filter to remove residual chlorine before it reaches your drinking water. Carbon block after a chlorine injector is an important pairing, you don’t want to drink chlorinated water long-term, and the carbon stage handles that.

One thing to be clear about: iron bacteria will come back if you only filter them without disinfecting. The biofilm they create deep in the well and pipes will re-establish itself. You may see a few months of improvement after installing a sediment filter, then the problem returns. Disinfection is not optional here.

If you have iron bacteria, plan your treatment in this order: shock the well first, then install a filtration system once the bacterial load is under control.

Step 3: Check Your pH

If your water pH is below 7, dissolved iron is harder to oxidize. Acidic water keeps iron in its dissolved ferrous state longer, which means oxidizing filters have to work harder and may not fully convert iron before it reaches the filter media.

In that case, pH adjustment may need to happen before or alongside iron treatment. A calcite filter raises pH naturally by dissolving calcium carbonate into the water. For more acidic water, a soda ash injection system gives you better control.

Your lab test will flag low pH. If it’s below 6.5, build pH correction into your treatment plan from the start.

Why Whole-House Treatment Is the Right Call

Iron damages more than your drinking water. It stains laundry, clogs pipes, shortens the life of water heaters and dishwashers, and fouls irrigation equipment. The orange staining in the sink is visible. The iron buildup inside your water heater and washing machine hoses is not, but it’s happening.

A point-of-use filter under the kitchen sink won’t protect any of that. Iron treatment needs to happen at the point of entry, before water reaches your hot water heater, washing machine, or showers.

This is one area where well water owners need to think differently than city water users. On a municipal supply, your water utility handles most contaminant control. On a private well, everything downstream of your pressure tank is your responsibility. Iron at 5 mg/L entering your home unfiltered will shorten appliance lifespans, stain fixtures permanently, and cause problems that a $50 sink filter can’t touch.

Whole-house iron filtration costs more upfront but protects your appliances and plumbing. That’s where the real return on investment is.

Maintenance: Build It Into Your Budget

Every iron filter needs periodic backwashing to flush out trapped particles and regenerate the filter media. Many systems backwash automatically on a set schedule. Others need manual attention.

Filter media doesn’t last forever. Depending on your iron load and the system type, media replacement runs every 5 to 10 years. Greensand systems also require potassium permanganate restocking.

When you’re comparing system costs, factor in the ongoing maintenance, not just the purchase price. A $300 filter with expensive media replacement may cost more over five years than a $700 system with lower ongoing costs.

Making the Decision

Test first. The $30 to $60 lab test tells you iron type, concentration, pH, and whether bacteria are involved. That information determines everything else.

If your results show dissolved iron under 3 mg/L with no bacteria and acceptable pH, a quality air injection filter or even a softener may be enough.

If you’re over 5 mg/L, or you have a mix of iron types, or bacteria are present, you’ll need a multi-stage system. Combination systems that handle oxidation, filtration, and sediment in a single tank exist for exactly this scenario.

See the full comparison: Best Iron Filters for Well Water

Also useful if you’re still figuring out your water: Understanding Iron in Well Water


Test your water before choosing a treatment system. Source water chemistry varies significantly by region and well, and what works for a neighbor’s well may not match what your water needs.

Frequently Asked Questions

What type of iron filter do I need for well water?
It depends on which type of iron you have. Ferrous (dissolved) iron needs an oxidizing system like an air injection filter or greensand filter. Ferric (particulate) iron can be removed with a sediment filter. Iron bacteria require disinfection before any filtration works. Test your water first, it's the only way to know which system to buy.
Will a water softener remove iron from well water?
Only at very low levels, typically below 1, 3 mg/L of dissolved iron. Softeners aren't built for iron removal and will foul quickly at higher concentrations. If iron is your main problem, a dedicated iron filter is the right tool. A softener can work alongside an iron filter but shouldn't replace it.
How do I know if I have iron bacteria?
The most obvious sign is a reddish-brown or rust-colored slime in your toilet tank, around faucet aerators, or in your well cap. You may also notice a musty or swampy smell. Confirm with a BART test or iron bacteria culture from a state-certified lab. Visual signs alone are enough to start with shock chlorination.
How long does an iron filter last?
The tank and valve on a quality whole-house iron filter typically last 10, 15 years with proper maintenance. Filter media needs to be replaced every 5, 10 years depending on iron load. All systems require periodic backwashing, sometimes daily. Budget for maintenance when comparing system costs.
Can I use a whole-house iron filter with low water pressure?
Most iron filters need at least 20, 25 PSI to operate, and backwashing requires adequate flow rate. If your well pump delivers low pressure, check with the manufacturer before buying. Some systems are specifically built for lower-pressure wells. A pressure gauge test before purchasing saves a lot of hassle.