Water Softener & Plumbing Services
in CLEARFIELD, UT
Clearfield homeowners deal with hard water that is strong enough to leave spots on dishes, scale on fixtures, and mineral buildup inside water heaters and plumbing. One local hardness source lists Clearfield at about 236 ppm, or 13.8 grains per gallon, which puts it firmly in hard-water territory.

That means water treatment is not just about nicer showers; it can also help protect appliances, reduce scale, and cut down on the crusty white “souvenir” your faucets keep trying to grow.
Our Services in Clearfield
- Water softener installation: Help reduce mineral scale on fixtures, inside pipes, and throughout water-using appliances.
- Water heater repair and replacement: Hard water can leave scale and sediment behind, which can lower efficiency over time.
- Whole-home water filtration: Improve taste and address broader water-quality concerns throughout the house.
- Plumbing repairs: We handle leaks, fixture issues, and general residential plumbing service for Clearfield homeowners.
- Reverse osmosis systems: Add cleaner, better-tasting drinking water right at the kitchen sink.
Why Clearfield is different
Clearfield says it purchases most of its water from Weber Basin Conservancy District and supplements that supply during high-use periods with city-owned wells. The city also reports 10.5 million gallons of storage capacity in its tanks, which points to a system built around balancing outside supply, local production, and peak seasonal demand.
The city says its water system is primarily gravity-fed, with pressure-regulating valves throughout different pressure zones and one booster pump station used as needed to maintain pressure in the Freeport Center and areas south of Antelope Drive.
For homeowners, that means pressure and water conditions can feel a little different depending on where the home sits in the system.
Local plumbing notes
Clearfield’s public works page directly ties its conservation rates to the cost of maintaining water infrastructure, including repairing and replacing water lines before failures occur. Clearfield is not just managing water quality, it is also actively managing aging or stressed infrastructure and high seasonal demand.
The city also requires approved backflow protection for connections to potential contamination sources, including residential lawn sprinklers, and says those assemblies must be tested upon installation, after major repair, and at least annually. In a city with lots of family neighborhoods and irrigation use, that makes backflow, sprinkler tie-ins, and pressure protection more relevant than they may seem on the surface.
Clearfield homes
If your dishes spot easily, your shower glass films over fast, or your water heater seems to lose efficiency sooner than it should, Clearfield’s hard water is a likely part of the story. A properly sized softener can help protect the whole home, while reverse osmosis is a smart add-on when your main goal is better-tasting drinking water.
Because Clearfield blends purchased water with supplemental well water during heavier-use periods, an in-home water test is the best way to see what your house is actually getting. That gives you a cleaner answer than relying on a single citywide number and helps match the equipment to the water, not just a guess.



