Water Softener & Plumbing Services
in Centerville, UT
Centerville homes deal with genuinely hard water, with one Utah hardness source putting ZIP code 84014 at about 200 ppm, or 11.7 grains per gallon. That is the kind of water that can leave heavy scale on fixtures, reduce soap performance, and add wear inside water heaters and plumbing over time.
Centerville’s water system is also more robust than many homeowners realize. The city maintains 82.16 miles of culinary water main, 4,639 residential connections, 370 commercial connections, and a supply mix that comes from six active wells plus treated surface water purchased from Weber Basin Water Conservancy District.

In the city’s 2021 conservation plan, wells supplied about 342.5 million gallons, or 68 percent of annual usage, while Weber Basin supplied about 161.5 million gallons, or 32 percent.
Our services
- Water softener installation: Help reduce hard-water scale on fixtures, pipes, and appliances.
- Water heater repair and replacement: Hard water can leave mineral buildup that hurts efficiency and equipment life.
- Whole-home water filtration: Improve taste and address broader water-quality concerns at every tap.
- Plumbing repairs: We handle leaks, fixture issues, and general residential plumbing service for Centerville homeowners.
- Reverse osmosis systems: Add cleaner, better-tasting drinking water at the kitchen sink.
Centerville water system
Centerville’s own planning document says the city’s 10-year water master plan prioritizes replacement of older cast and AC pipe to reduce main breaks and leaks. The city has also begun design work on a new reservoir to replace an older outdated reservoir and increase storage by more than 0.5 million gallons.
Local plumbing conditions are shaped by both hard water and an aging but actively maintained distribution system. Centerville also reports that 188 residents still use culinary water for lawn and garden irrigation, while most other residents are served by Weber Basin and Deuel Creek irrigation companies for outdoor watering.
Why this Is Important locally
Centerville’s conservation plan set a goal of 70 gallons per day per person, and its reported usage had declined to 79.4 gallons per day per person using 2020 data. The city is also replacing older meters with radio-read meters to catch leaks sooner, since winter averaging can otherwise let plumbing leaks go unnoticed for months.
That means a water test and a quick plumbing check can do more than improve taste or reduce spots. In a city with hard water, older pipe replacement priorities, and active leak detection efforts, the right softening or filtration setup can help protect fixtures, improve appliance performance, and flag waste before it gets expensive.



