Updated: May 9, 2026.
Water Filter Buying Basics
Start with the full HealthGlean water filter guide, then use these background articles to match certification, filter type, and replacement timing to your water.
NSF/ANSI standards are useful, but they are easy to misunderstand. The number on a filter label is not a ranking, and certification to one standard does not mean the product removes every possible contaminant.
The practical move is to match the exact model and certification claim to the contaminant you care about. CDC recommends checking the filter label and looking up specific products to see what they are certified to remove.
The Common Standards
| Standard | What It Usually Means | Buyer Caution |
|---|---|---|
| NSF/ANSI 42 | Aesthetic effects such as chlorine taste, odor, and particulates | Taste improvement is not the same as broad health-effect contaminant reduction |
| NSF/ANSI 53 | Health-effect contaminant reduction claims, depending on the exact product | Check the listed contaminants; certification to 53 is not a universal removal promise |
| NSF/ANSI 58 | Reverse osmosis drinking-water treatment systems | RO can reduce many contaminants, but systems still need maintenance and may waste water |
| NSF/ANSI 401 | Certain emerging contaminants, such as selected pharmaceuticals or chemicals | The product must be certified for the specific reduction claim you care about |
What Certification Does Not Tell You
- It does not mean the product removes all contaminants in your water.
- It does not replace a private-well test or public water-quality report.
- It does not mean the filter works forever; cartridges have capacity limits.
- It does not make a pitcher safe during every drinking-water advisory.
- It does not guarantee the retailer listing matches the exact certified model.
How To Check A Claim
- Find the exact model number on the product page, packaging, or performance data sheet.
- Look for the standard and the specific contaminant-reduction claims.
- Check whether the claim is certified by an accredited body or only described as independent testing.
- Confirm the replacement cartridge model number, because systems and cartridges can have different claims.
- Use the HealthGlean water filter guide after you know which standard and contaminant claims matter.
PFAS Claims Need Extra Care
EPA says some point-of-use granular activated carbon, ion exchange, and reverse-osmosis systems can reduce PFAS when maintained correctly. EPA also recommends looking for NSF/ANSI 53 or NSF/ANSI 58 certification for PFAS reduction and checking the specific product listing.
That is a narrower claim than “removes PFAS.” If PFAS is your main concern, check the exact PFAS compounds listed and follow local water-utility or health-department guidance.
Sources And References
We checked these references on May 9, 2026. Product certification scope, filter life, model numbers, and public-health guidance can change, so verify the exact model and current label before buying or replacing a filter.
- CDC guide to choosing home water filters
- NSF standards for water treatment systems
- EPA identifying drinking water filters certified to reduce PFAS
Informational note: This article is general education and shopping guidance, not medical advice or emergency water-safety advice. Follow local officials during drinking-water advisories, and ask a qualified professional about private wells, immune-compromised households, or known contamination.