Why I Always Use a Shower Filter

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Five reasons to use a shower filter
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Most of us know the importance of drinking enough water and filtering it to avoid harmful chemicals or contaminants, but did you know that shower water can be just as harmful (if not more so) than drinking water?

Here’s why:

What’s in Shower Water?

Unfiltered shower water can contain an array of chemicals like chlorine (which we try to avoid whenever possible) as well as bacteria and fungus from the shower head.

The skin is much more than just a covering for the body. It is the largest organ and is responsible for important functions like vitamin d creation and synthesis. It also has the ability to absorb much of what it comes in contact with and we are learning that it has its own unique and important microbiome!

This is why topical magnesium oil works so well and why sunlight is so important.

It is also why a shower filter is so vital:

Chlorine is effective at killing pathogens in the water, but the properties that make it able to do this may affect the skin microbiome and the delicate balance of bacteria on the skin.

These are some of the biggest risks associated with the chemicals in shower water (and the reasons I use a shower filter):

1. We May Absorb More Chlorine Through Showering than Through Drinking Water

It may seem counterintuitive, but showering in chlorinated water can lead to more chlorine absorption than drinking chlorinated water. This is because we typically shower at warm temperatures, which makes absorption easier and because this water is coming in contact with such a large area of the body. In fact, research shows that the chlorine in shower (or bath) water can easily enter the bloodstream as it has a low molecular weight and can easily pass into the body.

Chlorine can also interact with other matter in the water to form harmful byproducts like trihalomethanes (THMs). One of these trihalomethanes is chloroform, which I’m familiar with from my childhood days of reading Nancy Drew mysteries, as it was often used by criminals to cause victims to pass out. Thankfully, it isn’t found in high enough amounts in shower water to cause that severe of a problem, but it certainly isn’t good to come into contact with regularly.

Warm air and water also open lungs, making inhalation of these chemicals easier as well. In fact, a study found a higher than normal concentration of chloroform in the lungs of study participants after a warm shower.

Chemicals absorbed through the skin can enter the blood stream quickly and have a tremendous impact on the body. This is great when it comes to things like topical magnesium that we want to enter the body quickly and in large enough amounts, but not so good when it comes to harmful disinfectant byproducts. This study even showed a greater lifetime risk of cancer and other problems from bathing or showering in chlorinated water than from drinking it.

2. Shower Water Releases Chemicals into the Air in the Home

There are some obvious offenders of indoor air-pollution:

Scented candles release harmful fragrances and paraffin into the air and are a major source of indoor air pollution. Air fresheners and cleaning chemicals are also major offenders, but many of us don’t realize that shower water is also high-up on this list!

The heat of shower water can cause chemicals to vaporize and be released into the air at higher amounts than they are even present in the water itself. The EPA found significant and detectable levels of THMs and other byproducts in indoor air as a result of bath and shower water.

3. Chemicals in Shower Water may Cause Harm to the Skin Microbiome & Irritate Skin

As I already mentioned, the microbiome isn’t limited to the gut. While the importance of beneficial bacteria in the gut is becoming much more well known, there are lesser known “biomes” on the body, including the mouth and skin.

Logically, showering in a disinfecting agent like chlorine that is chemically tested to reduce bacteria in the water  may have a tremendous impact on the skin biome. Many of the effects to the beneficial bacteria are not visible and many people don’t seem to have any noticeable affects, though some experience dry skin, eczema or irritation.

4. Chemicals Present in Shower Water are Linked to Cancer & other Health Problems

As a follow up to the first point, some of the chemicals present in the water supply have been linked to various types of cancers. These chemicals can be problematic enough when consumed in water but are even more harmful when inhaled or absorbed through skin. Chris Kresser explains:

Research conducted on the health effects of chlorinated drinking water have demonstrated a variety of toxicity issues. Several studies have found that communities using chlorinated or chloraminated drinking water have an increased risk of bladder, kidney, and rectal cancers. (456) THMs from chemically treated water have been associated with a variety of poor birth outcomes, such as spontaneous abortion, birth defects, and low birth weight. (7) Chlorine and chloramine vapors are associated with greater risk of asthma, and may damage the mucosal lining of the respiratory tract. (8) Free radicals in chlorinated water have been linked to liver malfunction, weakening of the immune system and pre-arteriosclerotic changes in arteries. (9)

and Food Renegade points out a more specific link between chlorine and breast cancer:

Breast cancer, which now effects one in every eight women in North America, has recently been linked to the accumulation of chlorine compounds in the breast tissue. A study carried out in Hartford Connecticut, the first of it’s kind in North America, found that, “women with breast cancer have 50% to 60% higher levels of organochlorines (chlorination byproducts) in their breast tissue than women without breast cancer.”

Of course, correlation does not equal causation, but in this case, the evidence is strong enough to at least warrant caution and further study. At the very least, I find it worth taking precautions against easy-to-eliminate sources of chlorine exposure by using things like drinking water filters and shower filters.

5. Chloramines May be Even more Harmful than Chlorine

Another chemical often used in the water supply is chloramine, a mixture of chlorine and ammonia. As you may imagine, it has its risks as well and may be even more irritating to the skin and lungs that just chlorine.

Unfortunately, many filters that remove chlorine do not easily remove chloramines, so it is important to research options and address both chemicals when considering shower filters.

As I explained in this post, certain types of Vitamin C can remove chloramines and can be added to a bath to remove chlorine and chloramines in the water, though this is certainly more difficult to add to a shower.

Types of Shower Filters

There are various types of shower filters that are effective against chlorine and chloramines and I’ve personally tried several over the years. Filters may use charcoal/carbon, Vitamin C or KDF (kinetic degradation fluxion). There are pros and cons to each type of filter, including (from least effective to most effective):

  • Carbon filters:  Simple carbon filters like the popular Sprite filters are effective at removing chlorine (though not as effective against chloramines) and with a caveat: They don’t work very well at warm temperatures. In fact, they become less effective the warmer the water gets, making them more effective for drinking water filtration (usually filtered cool) and less effective for shower filters. They are a budget friendly option that can be helpful, especially for those who don’t take really hot showers.
  • Three-in-one Filter – I started using the Canopy Filtered Showerhead in 2024 and have really liked it. It has 3 types of filtering media: granular activated carbon, KDF-55, and calcium sulfite. The showerhead has a filter inside that I replace about every few months and was easy enough for me to install.
  • KDF filters: Another relatively budget friendly option, a KDF filter is very effective at removing chlorine, but not as effective at removing chloramines. These may be a good option in places where chloramines are not used in the water supply.
  • Vitamin C Filters: My favorite option for removing both chlorine and chloramines. Vitamin C creates a chemical reaction that completely changes chlorine and chloramines, rendering them harmless. These types of filters remove both chlorine and chloramines almost completely and can also benefit the skin. In fact, many people report skin and hair improvements after using these filters. I’ve tried this vitamin C filter with great results.

Unfortunately, I’ve never found a shower filter that completely removes chlorine and chloramines (though some, like the Vitamin C filters, remove 90+%). The only filter I’ve found that seems to completely remove chloramines, chlorine (as well as most fluoride and other contaminants in shower water is a completely whole house filter (like this one).

How to Filter Bath Water

For a long time, I filled my children’s bath from the shower head so that the water would run through the filter to remove the chlorine before finding a better way. There is a bath dechlorinator that removes chlorine (and some of the chloramine) in bath water in just a couple of minutes. This is the one I’ve used.

Shower Filters: Bottom Line

Filtering shower water is one simple and relatively inexpensive step that can make a big difference in reducing chlorine and other chemical exposure in the home. Some people (like me) seem to be much more sensitive to chlorine and notice the effects more readily, but these chemicals affect all of us on a cellular level.

Using a simple shower filter or bath dechlorinator is an easy way to remove chlorine and other harmful chemicals in bath and shower water.

Do you use a shower filter? If so, can you tell a difference in your health? 

Sources

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Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

142 responses to “Why I Always Use a Shower Filter”

  1. Misty Bane Avatar
    Misty Bane

    Thank you for all of your posts on filtering water in the home. We have never had any kind of water filter installed. Do you have the multi step filter installed in your kitchen, shower filters in your bathrooms and then a whole house filter as well? Or is that too much?

  2. Sydney Franklin Avatar
    Sydney Franklin

    Does anyone have knowledge or thoughts on putting vitamin c crystals in body care products, or using vitamin c soap? I have a large kdf filter and the sonaki inline vit c filter and am still feeling and smelling the effects of chlorine (the water is really bad where I’m living temporarily). I was lucky to live somewhere that ran off purely spring and creek water, but sadly no longer 🙁 I’m wondering if anyone has any insight to whether using vitamin c infused soap would help with this exposure? I am extremely sensitive and currently trying to heal a debilitating patch of eczema so kind of desperate to figure out what more I could do. For now I’m trying to not shower and wash my eczema with buckets of water I treat.. :/ any help or suggestions are much appreciated!

  3. Sydney Franklin Avatar
    Sydney Franklin

    where is this? i have been looking for a database where i can search for which places run off spring water, or have more legit water treatment, etc, but am having a really hard time. i am extremely sensitive and any amount of chlorine is super irritating to my skin and eyes. i was healthiest when i lived somewhere that ran off spring water, with no eczema or skin issues whatsoever. trying to research a place to settle or go to school that has better water, but having a hard time. EWG does not list chlorine levels, etc

  4. Soumya Avatar

    Hi Katie,
    I have been reading type blogs quote often now and small changes are sure bringing big differences in our life’s
    We are so indepted to you. Our family just loves you.
    Now i have this one question, I remember seeing this below water filter recommendation:

    https://www.amazon.com/Homspal-10-Stage-Shower-Filter-Cartridges/dp/B07588PTJR/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&linkCode=ll1&tag=wellnessmama-20&linkId=dac0d348b758b59e21d1cd7fc4eac531

    How do you think it is different from RadiantLife?
    Which one do you suggest?
    If and if not we have chloramines in our area, because we are moving to a new place soon and do not know if we may or may not have.
    Thanks in advance
    Loads of love

      1. Soumya Avatar

        Thank you,
        also, how about the Berkey shower filter? We are currently using their water filter for drinking after I saw your post and love it.
        Is the Berkey shower filter comparable to the Radiant Life?

  5. Lindsay Avatar

    Hi! So if I want a shower filter that will remove chlorine, chloramines, voc’s, bacteria and fluiride, aqua tru is the one?

      1. Mike Avatar

        Is this some kind of advertisement for this brand of filter mentioned just now in the comments?? There is no mention of this in your article..please explain.

  6. Sophie Avatar

    Hi Katie, thanks for your great articles. I’ve read both your shower filter and general water filter post, but I have a specific question I’m hoping you can help me with please. I’ve been having concerns with my health (my cancer markers are up & my liver is struggling). I am concerned that one aspect that I cannot readily control at the moment (I eat very cleanly and optimise as many areas of health and wellbeing as possible) is that I live on the edge of a mine site that my husband manages in Indonesia. Every aspect to the lifestyle here is wonderful but I am concerned about the water that I’m showering in, that I may be exposed to heavy metals in the water. The shower filtration systems don’t seem to address that so I’m wondering if I’d need to go for a drinking water filtration system. Do you have any advice please. It plays on my mind every time I have a shower 🙁
    Our drinking water is currently reverse osmosis water which I add minerals into, but its not filtered at the house.
    Thanks so much for your help Katie x
    Sophie

  7. Judy Avatar

    Are you familiar with Enagic’s Anespa ? It also attaches to your tap/shower and removes chlorine and bacteria. Doesn’t have issues with heat , and is portable.

  8. Jen Avatar

    Do you know if it would work to add vitamin C powder or tablets to a bath? Haven’t considered the cost yet…
    Thanks for this post!

    And just found the post you have about adding Vitamin C to the bath!

  9. Jen Avatar

    Do you know if it would work to add vitamin C powder or tablets to a bath? Haven’t considered the cost yet…
    Thanks for this post!

    1. Rachel Avatar

      I’m not Katie, but where I live, the water is heavily chlorinated (more so than anywhere else I’ve ever been) and almost smells (and looks) like pool water when I fill the tub. I add sodium ascorbate (one of the two types of vitamin C, though according to one of Katie’s other posts either type will work) powder to the bath water once I’ve filled it, and keep adding until the chlorine smell is basically gone. So yes, it will work, at least to some extent. I buy a 1 lb jar on Amazon and it lasts me several months, and my tub is huge (~1.5x the size of a standard tub).

  10. Michael Avatar

    The KDF filter is working for our family as a balance of time and effort to maintain. It seems every place you turn as a parent there is another research project to just stay normally healthy, which makes a site like this so helpful. We also went with the Watts RO Pure Plus for drinking water at the kitchen sink as well. Many of these kind of ROs have a filter after it leaves the storage tank, as well as an option for PH balancing. And then IQAir for air filtration. Amazing how much effort it is to try removing toxicity from the basics of water and air for our kids today.

  11. Lisa Avatar

    What about well water? Should a person filter all water in house if you have well water? I am confused if this is nessesary to filter out pharmaceuticals, herbicides and pesticides or are these molecules too large to enter through your skin? Thank you for your input.

  12. Mark Amo Avatar
    Mark Amo

    Love the post. I also recommend to use only eco-friendly shower filter. These products do not harm the environment whether in their production.

  13. Alicia Jordan Avatar
    Alicia Jordan

    We’ve used a water softener system for years for our well water and I am convinced (after trying for years to find the reason) that my extremely dry hair is due to the salt content. Do you have any recommendations for a shower filter that would help reduce the salt?

      1. Michelle Avatar
        Michelle

        Hi Katie! You recommended two shower filters- one from Amazon & another from radiant life. Do you think they are equal? Or do you have a preference? Thx for all you do!

  14. Lori Avatar

    Thank you for bringing the importance of shower filters to our attention! We have a few questions. First, do any of the shower filters also work to help eliminate fluoride, pharmaceuticals, and chemicals from fracking? Second, we read the reaction between ascorbic acid and chloramine takes a minimum of four minutes? If that’s correct information, how would a shower filter really work? And last, would various citrus essential oils and cheap vitamin C tablets work in our bath tub?

    Also, we would like to point out the huge water waste by using reverse osmosis. Hauling water is very common in our area. After losing our well, we now haul into two underground cisterns. This practice has taught us the preciousness of water.

  15. Barbara Bates Avatar
    Barbara Bates

    I think I read through all the responses but didn’t see your response to Sara at #9. Can you cite scientific studies demonstrating that our skin actually absorbs chemicals in harmful quantities? I’m ready to accept proof but it seems to me that if our skin could absorb toxins that easily we would be in a world of trouble since we come in contact with all kinds of chemicals on a daily basis. Sara’s observation makes a lot of sense. This is why I don’t buy all the hype about essential oils. It would be a scary world indeed if our skin didn’t protect us! We are fearfully and wonderfully made as Psalm 139 tells us. Thanks for your great website.

    1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

      Great question. I actually have a post in the works about it, but a couple of short examples that come to mind:
      -Nicotine patches and birth control patches both rely on absorption through the skin and are harmful in large quantities
      -In the same way, I know people who worked in tobacco field when it was wet who got violently ill from absorbing too much nicotine through the skin
      -The CDC warns about the dangers of certain substances being absorbed through the skin: https://www.cdc.gov/niosh/topics/skin/

      Also, research has revealed that skin absorption occurs via diffusion, the process whereby molecules spread from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration. Three mechanisms by which chemicals diffuse into the skin have been proposed:

      Intercellular lipid pathway
      Transcellular permeation
      Through the appendages

  16. Julie Avatar

    Wellness Mama,
    Thank you so much for all you do. You are a wealth of information. I am w seeing if you have any recommendations for shower head filters for well water or your thoughts on whether it’s necessary. I’ve thought about getting one for a while and your article was a motivating factor!

  17. Diane Avatar

    I’ve been to so many shower water filter sites and you’re the first person to lay it out honestly. Thank you. In my opinion…the VERY FIRST STEP is to contact the water company where you live and ask if they put chloramines or chloride in the water. Only THEN can one make an educated purchase using your website as a guide.

  18. michelle Avatar
    michelle

    hi there! we’re in the process of purchasing a shower filter.. I saw two of your posts on shower heads and I’m wondering which you feel is best? thanks so much! and THANK YOU for all your awesome healthy info!!!! you’re amazing!

    https://www.radiantlifecatalog.com/product/new-century-shower-filter/water-filtration-systems/?a=96418

    https://www.amazon.com/Vitamin-Filter-Inline-Sonaki-Chloramines/dp/B01BLO3FAU/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&qid=1460996217&sr=8-6&keywords=vitamin+c+shower+filter&linkCode=sl1&tag=wellnessmama-20&linkId=aabc2fcd91368cde27fc04e16b4796d7

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