water.sean8.com / whole-house

Whole-house filter — what to buy

The cost comparison, the trap to avoid, and the exact stack to install for a Ko Phangan rental — broad heavy-metals removal, not just lead.

The question

If the well-water test came back at lead 0.27 mg/L — 27× the safe limit (see lab report), an under-sink filter only protects the kitchen. Showers, washing-machine, dishwasher, bathroom sinks, garden hose — all still see raw contaminated water. Can the whole house be filtered, in a rental, at sensible cost? Yes — but the Thai market has a trap most buyers fall into.

A note on scope: "lead" gets the headline below because it's the parameter that actually failed in your data. The recommended stack (KDF-55 + catalytic carbon) is a broad heavy-metals + chlorine + organics filter — see "what this actually removes" below for the full coverage and the important gaps (arsenic, nitrate, fluoride, PFAS).

The trap — why most "3-stage whole-house" boxes don't work for lead

Walk into any Thai water-filter shop and ask for a 3-stage whole-house system. You'll be offered sediment + carbon + softening resin. That's the default Thai stack. It handles cloudiness, chlorine taste, and scale. It does not remove lead.

Worse — a commonly-sold local whole-house unit (sediment + chlorine + scale, marketed as a "hybrid" filter) was tested against your own well water in an ALS lab report commissioned by its installer:

SampleSetupLead (mg/L)vs. 0.01 limit
B1Well, no filter0.268727× over
B2Well + whole-house filter0.295630× over ⚠️
B4Well + whole-house + point-of-useND

The whole-house filter on its own does nothing for lead. Only the under-sink point-of-use unit captures it — and that only protects the kitchen tap, not the rest of the house.

The fix: insist on a cartridge containing KDF-55 (copper-zinc redox media) with NSF/ANSI Standard 53 certification for lead reduction. Without that explicit spec on the product sheet, the system will not remove lead. Full stop.

Cost comparison — every realistic option

OptionHardware (THB)InstallAnnualLead removal
A. Under-sink 3-stage 10" (kitchen only) 3,000–5,500 DIY 1,000–1,500 Kitchen tap only
B. Under-sink + shower filter + washer inline 8,000–12,000 Mostly DIY 2,000–3,000 Drinking, skin, laundry
C. DIY whole-house 20" Big Blue, 3-stage cartridge 8,000–14,000 2,000–4,000 3,000–5,000 Every tap
D. Local installer kit (Kat-Tech BIG F PRO 256) 69,900 Included ~2,000 No (sediment + UV only)
E. Local installer kit (Kat-Tech BIG F PRO 267) 77,900 Included ~2,000 No (sediment + UV only)
F. Aquasana Rhino (Thai resellers) ~150,000+ Included Low Yes (real KDF + carbon)
G. Tank-based backwash system (FRP tank + Fleck valve) 30,000–60,000 5,000–10,000 1,000–2,000 Yes — best for owned villa

D and E are the big trap. Local installers will quote you ~70k for systems that don't include KDF — you'll think you've solved the lead problem, but you haven't. Option C delivers the same coverage as F or G for a fraction of the cost, in a rental-friendly form factor.

The recommendation

Option C · DIY whole-house

3-stage 20" Big Blue with NSF-53 KDF-55 stage

Same coverage as the 100k-THB premium systems, in a form factor that you can remove and take with you when the rental ends. Sits at the main water inlet, before the house manifold. Cartridge-based (no electricity, no waste water, no backwash drain), 10-year housing life, 6–12 month cartridge swaps.

  1. Sediment pre-filter (Stage 1)

    5-micron PP spun polypropylene, 20" Big Blue size. Catches grit so the next stages last.
    150–300 THB any Thai brand
  2. KDF-55 + GAC lead-reduction cartridge (Stage 2) — the critical one

    Pentair / Pentek LR-FB20BB ("Lead Reduction, Fibredyne, 20" Big Blue"). 0.5 micron. NSF/ANSI 53 certified for lead. Imported via Lazada/Shopee or Thai water-treatment distributors. Refuse substitutes that don't show the NSF-53 paperwork.
    2,000–3,500 THB 12-month cartridge life
  3. Catalytic carbon block (Stage 3) — polish

    Coconut-shell catalytic activated carbon block, 20" Big Blue. Handles residual chlorine, organics, taste/odor. If you can get a 0.5-micron block with NSF-53 cyst reduction, it adds a microbiological barrier too.
    800–1,500 THB 12-month cartridge life
  4. 3× Big Blue 20" housing kit on a mounting bracket

    Opaque (not clear — light grows algae on the carbon stage), 1/2" or 3/4" BSP threaded inlet/outlet. The Cascade 3-stage Big Blue 20" kit on ok-filter.com runs around 4,990 THB and includes housings, bracket, and wrench.
    4,990–7,000 THB 10-year hardware life
  5. Ball valves, fittings, plumber time

    Two ball valves (so you can isolate the unit for cartridge swaps without shutting off the whole house), fittings, mounting hardware. Add a 4,000 THB DAB/Mitsubishi booster pump only if your supply is gravity-fed from a rooftop tank and pressure is marginal.
    500–1,000 THB parts 2,000–4,000 THB labor
Total installed: roughly 10,500–17,300 THB · Annual cartridges: ~3,000 THB · Fully reversible when the rental ends

What this stack actually removes (and doesn't)

The KDF-55 + catalytic carbon stack isn't a lead-specific tool. It's a broad heavy-metals + organics + chlorine filter. Here's the honest coverage table:

✅ Removed well

ContaminantBy which mediaMechanism
Lead (Pb)KDF-55 + carbonRedox plating onto media surface
Mercury (Hg)KDF-55 + carbonRedox + adsorption
Copper (Cu)KDF-55Redox
Nickel (Ni)KDF-55Redox
Chromium-6 (Cr⁶⁺)KDF-55Reduces to less-mobile Cr³⁺
ChlorineKDF-55 + carbonRedox / catalytic decomposition
ChloramineCatalytic carbonCatalytic (regular carbon fails here)
Iron / H₂S (partial)KDF-55Redox (KDF-85 is better for high iron)
VOCs, pesticides, herbicidesCatalytic carbonAdsorption
Pharmaceutical residuesCatalytic carbonAdsorption
Microplastics >5 µmSediment + carbon blockMechanical filtration
Bacterial / algal growth in housingKDF-55Bacteriostatic copper-zinc surface

❌ NOT removed — important caveats

ContaminantWhy notWhat to add
Arsenic (As)KDF doesn't capture it; carbon adsorbs poorlyActivated alumina or Bayoxide E33 stage
Nitrate (NO₃⁻)Negatively charged, passes throughRO at point of use, or anion exchange resin
Fluoride (F⁻)Same as aboveBone char or activated alumina, or RO
PFAS (forever chemicals)Some catalytic carbon helps; not certifiedHeavy-duty PFAS-rated GAC, or RO
Sodium, dissolved saltsPass through small mediaRO at point of use
Radioactives (U, Ra)Pass throughSpecialized media (rare requirement)
Calcium / magnesium hardnessPass through (not the goal here)Ion-exchange softener — your water is already soft, skip

For drinking water, the gaps above are fully covered by your existing Philips RO at the kitchen tap. RO membranes reject ~95–99% of all dissolved ions, including arsenic, nitrate, and fluoride. So the whole-house Big Blue handles bathing / dishes / laundry / general use, and the point-of-use RO handles drinking + cooking — together they cover almost everything.

What was — and wasn't — tested in your data

The recommendation is shaped by what your two lab reports actually measured. They tested for a narrow panel:

TestedTap (A1, raw)Well (B1, raw)Limit
Lead (Pb)ND0.2687 ⚠️0.01
Arsenic (As)0.00010.00030.01
Iron (Fe)ND0.090.3
Manganese (Mn)0.0020.14 (upper-ish)0.3
Chloride10.920.5
pH, TDS, turbidity, coliform, E. coliAll passed except tap coliform 2.2 MPN/100mL

Not in the report — recommend testing next round

Ask the lab for "ICP-MS / EPA 200.8 full metals panel + EPA 300.0 anions". ALS Bangkok and SGS Thailand both run these. Roughly 3,000–5,000 THB combined. That turns "I'm guessing what's in my water" into actual knowledge.

Where to buy in Thailand

Housing kit (sediment + KDF housing + carbon housing on bracket):

KDF-55 + GAC cartridge (Stage 2 — the critical one):

Local KPG installation help — for the plumber side, not the cartridges:

Install notes

Verify it actually works — don't trust the seal

Cheap KDF cartridges from no-name brands often fail NSF performance tests. After install, do not assume — measure.

  1. Buy a TDS pen (HM Digital TDS-3 or any Lazada equivalent, ~200 THB). Useful as a baseline sanity check, but it cannot detect lead specifically.
  2. Run the system for 2 weeks (cartridges need to settle and pre-flush).
  3. Send a sample to a real lab. The Suratthani Rajabhat lab that did your original B1–B4 panel — ~1,500–3,000 THB for a basic metals analysis. Sample from any household tap downstream of the filter. Lead should drop to ND (below 0.0005 mg/L). If it doesn't, the KDF cartridge is fake or undersized.
  4. Optional interim: lead test strips (HACH or Industrial Test Systems) — qualitative, less accurate, ~500 THB for 50 strips. Useful as a fast sanity check between full lab runs.

Which option fits your situation?

I'm in a short-term rental (< 6 months left)

Skip whole-house. Do option B instead: kitchen under-sink + shower filter + washing-machine inline. ~8–12k THB total, fully portable, takes 1 hour to install, comes with you when you leave. Use your existing RO for drinking + produce.

I'm in a multi-year rental (your situation) — pick this

Option C — DIY whole-house Big Blue 20" with the Pentek LR-FB20BB cartridge. ~12,500 THB installed, fully reversible, removable when you leave. Protects every tap including showers, dishwasher, and washing machine in one shot. Single 12-month cartridge replacement cycle.

Keep your existing Philips RO + remineralizing pitcher for drinking — that doesn't change.

I own the villa and plan to stay 5+ years

Option G — tank-based backwash system. Single FRP tank (1054 or larger) filled with KDF-55 + catalytic carbon media, automatic Fleck or Clack backwash valve, sediment pre-filter, optional UV sterilizer. ~30–60k THB hardware + ~5–10k install. 10-year media life, lowest cost per year over the long haul. Pro install by Kat-Tech or similar.

The water source is village/municipal tap, not well

Whole-house lead filtration is over-engineering — village tap tested clean for lead. The relevant problem on tap is microbial (coliform at 2.2 MPN/100mL).

Best stack: kitchen RO (already have it), kitchen under-sink filter for produce/dishes, hot wash setting on the washing machine for skin-contact laundry. Total spend ~5,000 THB, fully reversible.

Check with the landlord which source feeds your house. The two sources in your test data behave very differently.

Don't bother with

See also: the lab report · household water uses · the original drinking-water decision