Short definition
An inline filter is a strainer or cartridge filter installed in the supply line that removes sediment, particulates, or specific contaminants from the water. Common applications: a whole-house sediment filter at the inside main shutoff, point-of-use filtration under a kitchen sink, and refrigerator water-line filters. Cartridges are rated by micron size and contaminant type.
What it is
The filter housing is a cylindrical body with screw-off cap that holds a replaceable cartridge. Water enters one end, passes through the cartridge media, and exits the other end. Common cartridge ratings:
- 5 micron sediment. General sediment removal — sand, silt, rust particulates. The standard whole-house first stage.
- 1 micron sub-micron. Fine sediment, some bacteria reduction.
- 0.5 micron carbon block. Activated carbon for taste, odor, chlorine, chloramine reduction.
- NSF/ANSI 53-certified. Lead reduction.
- NSF/ANSI 42-certified. Taste and odor reduction.
For more demanding water, multi-stage systems combine cartridges (sediment + carbon, or sediment + carbon + sub-micron). Reverse-osmosis (RO) systems add a semi-permeable membrane stage that removes dissolved solids beyond what cartridge filters reach.
The housing is either clear (so you can see when the sediment cartridge is fouled) or opaque (UV-protected for carbon stages, since UV degrades activated carbon).
Why it matters to a homeowner
Where inline filters earn their keep:
- Aging service line shedding rust. A sediment filter at the meter intercepts rust particulates before they reach fixtures, cartridges, and appliances. Common WA application in pre-1970 homes with original galvanized service lines.
- Iron- and manganese-rich well water. Olympic Peninsula and Mason County wells often need multi-stage filtration with sediment plus iron-removal media.
- Chloramine reduction in SPU service area. Seattle Public Utilities uses chloramine as the primary disinfectant residual; some homeowners run a whole-house or point-of-use carbon filter to reduce it for taste.
- Refrigerator and icemaker. Inline filters for these are usually rated for taste, odor, and chlorine reduction with a 6-month replacement interval.
- Lead reduction. Pre-WWII lead service lines in older Tacoma and Seattle neighborhoods can be addressed with NSF/ANSI 53-certified point-of-use filters as an interim step before service-line replacement.
Common variants and what an inline filter isn’t
- Whole-house vs. point-of-use. Whole-house treats all water at the supply entry; point-of-use treats one fixture only. Choice depends on what you’re addressing — sediment is whole-house; lead reduction is often point-of-use under the kitchen sink.
- Single-cartridge vs. multi-stage vs. RO. Increasing complexity, increasing capability, increasing cost.
- Sediment cartridge vs. carbon cartridge. Different jobs — sediment for particulates, carbon for chemistry.
- Inline filter vs. softener. Filters remove particulates and specific contaminants; softeners ion-exchange away calcium and magnesium hardness.
Common failure modes
- Cartridge clogged from heavy sediment load. Flow drops dramatically; replace the cartridge. Track replacement intervals — most cartridges have a 3–6 month service life under typical use.
- Housing crack from over-tightening or freeze damage on an exterior install.
- O-ring leak from a worn seal during cartridge replacement.
- Bypass valve left in bypass mode. Water flows around the filter, defeating the purpose. Verify the bypass after any service.