Water Softener & Plumbing Services
in EAGLE MOUNTAIN, UT
Eagle Mountain has one of the more complex water stories in Utah County because the city uses both groundwater and imported surface water. Its 2025 drinking water report says the city supplies customers from five groundwater wells plus surface water provided by Central Utah Water Conservancy District.
This is important for homeowners because mixed water sources can lead to noticeable variations in taste, mineral content, and overall feel, depending on which sources are supplying the system.

Sharp Water Solutions already serves Eagle Mountain through its Utah County coverage, and this city is a strong fit for water treatment because fast growth and source changes can make the water feel less predictable from one neighborhood or season to the next. Public hardness listings for Eagle Mountain are also inconsistent, so a home water test is more reliable than guessing from a chart.
Our Services in Eagle Mountain
- Water softener installation: Help reduce scale and protect plumbing, fixtures, and appliances where mineral-heavy groundwater is part of the supply mix.
- Water heater repair and replacement: Mineral buildup can reduce efficiency and add wear inside tanks and water lines 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 across Eagle Mountain.
- Reverse osmosis systems: Add cleaner, better-tasting drinking water right at the kitchen sink.
Why Eagle Mountain is different
Eagle Mountain’s 2025 report shows a wide spread in mineral-related measurements across its sources. Total dissolved solids ranged from 148 to 1320 ppm in 2025, sulfate ranged from 14 to 251 ppm, sodium ranged from 7 to 182 ppm, and nitrate ranged from 0.792 to 6.5 ppm.
For homeowners, that helps explain why Eagle Mountain water can sometimes seem perfectly ordinary and other times seem noticeably more mineral-heavy, especially after source changes.
The city has also had very public examples of source-related taste changes. In 2023 reporting on a well switch, KSL said Eagle Mountain changed from Well No. 1 to Well No. 5 for maintenance, and state officials said the water remained safe even though total dissolved solids rose and the taste changed enough that residents noticed. That is a very Eagle Mountain kind of issue: not necessarily a safety emergency, but definitely the kind of source shift homeowners can taste, smell, and complain about over dinner.
Local tips for Eagle Mountain homes
Eagle Mountain’s current report also puts real emphasis on plumbing-system protection inside the home. The city says improper cross-connections such as unprotected hoses or lawn sprinkler systems can affect both water quality and health, and it asks residents not to allow those connections at their homes. That makes backflow awareness, sprinkler setup, and general plumbing quality more important here than many homeowners realize.
The city also reports that it is a non-lead water system based on its initial lead service line inventory, and it says 2024 lead sampling found a 90th percentile result of 1.5 ppb with zero sites exceeding the action level. At the same time, the city reminds residents that home plumbing materials still matter, so point-of-use drinking water treatment and good plumbing maintenance can still be worthwhile depending on the house.



