Water filter marketing is full of numbers: 0.1 micron, NSF 42/53/58, 600 gallons capacity, BPA-free. Most shoppers glaze over. But these specs determine whether a filter actually protects your family — or just makes water taste better.
Micron Size: The #1 Misunderstood Spec
One micron (μm) is one-millionth of a meter. A human hair is about 70 microns. Bacteria range from 0.2 to 5 microns. Viruses from 0.02 to 0.3 microns.
Here’s what the numbers mean:
- 1 micron — removes sediment, some bacteria, parasites (cyst)
- 0.1 micron — removes most bacteria, some viruses
- 0.01 micron — removes viruses (ultrafiltration)
- 0.0001 micron — reverse osmosis range, removes dissolved salts, heavy metals
Marketing trap: “Sub-micron” means less than 1 micron — but that could be 0.9 or 0.01. Always get the exact number.
NSF/ANSI Certifications That Actually Matter
NSF International is the independent testing body. Here are the certifications you should know:
- NSF 42 — Aesthetic effects. Taste, odor, chlorine removal. The “nice to have.”
- NSF 53 — Health effects. Removes lead, cysts, VOCs, mercury. This is the one that matters.
- NSF 401 — Emerging contaminants. Pharmaceuticals, pesticides, PFAS. The newest standard.
- NSF 58 — Reverse osmosis systems. Specifically for RO.
- NSF P473 — PFAS removal to below 70 ppt. The gold standard for forever chemicals.
流量 (Flow Rate) and Capacity
Most filters list a “600 gallon” or “2,000 gallon” capacity. That’s under lab conditions with clean test water. In real-world use with heavily contaminated source water, expect 50-70% of rated capacity.
For a family of four on a gravity filter, budget for filter element replacement every 6-12 months depending on usage. Berkey replacement filters and similar are an ongoing cost — factor it in.
Red Flags in Filter Marketing
- “Removes 99.9% of contaminants” — which ones? Vague claims = no NSF certification.
- “Alkaline water benefits” — not a contaminant removal feature. Different subject.
- “No third-party testing” — walk away. If they won’t let NSF test it, they’re hiding something.
When we review filters on Filter The Gov, we run the specs through this exact framework. NSF 53 + sub-micron + honest capacity claims = filter we’ll recommend.