What 6.2 GPG Means for Your Home

At 6.2 GPG, Lafayette water sits in the moderate range — not terrible, but enough to notice. You'll see light spotting on glassware after the dishwasher runs. Shower doors get a faint film. Soap doesn't lather quite as freely as you'd expect.

The Battelle Memorial Institute research shows measurable efficiency losses starting around 5 GPG. At Lafayette's level, your water heater is working roughly 7% harder than it would on soft water, and appliance lifespans are shortened — though not as dramatically as in very hard water cities.

Most plumbers in Lafayette will say a salt-free conditioner is adequate at this hardness level. It prevents scale from adhering to surfaces without adding sodium to your water. If you want to go further, a traditional softener works too — but the payback period is longer at moderate hardness since the annual damage is lower.

Hard Water Signs in Lafayette: What to Look For

At 6.2 GPG, Lafayette water is in the moderate range. You may notice subtle signs: light spotting on glassware after the dishwasher runs, a faint mineral film on shower doors, or slightly reduced soap lather. These are less severe than in hard water cities, but still worth monitoring. The USGS classifies Lafayette's water as moderate — below the threshold where aggressive treatment is typically needed.

What a Lafayette Plumber Would Recommend

Recommended: Pelican NaturSoft Salt-Free Conditioner

At moderate hardness, a salt-free system prevents scale without adding sodium. No backwash, no drain line, no electricity, no salt bags. Prevents up to 99.6% of scale at this hardness level. 600K-gallon cartridge lasts most households 5+ years.

$1,200–$1,800

Check Current Price →

Also Consider: SpringWell Whole-House Filter

If contaminants are the bigger concern, a whole-house carbon filter addresses chlorine, THMs, and other chemicals while a conditioner handles the hardness. Can be paired together.

$800–$1,400

Check Current Price →
Water hardness test strip showing very hard reading in a glass of tap water — recommended for Lafayette, LA hard water at 6.2 GPG
Treatment options for Lafayette water at 6.2 GPG — see recommendations above

How to Test Your Lafayette Water Hardness

While this page reports the average hardness for Lafayette as measured at the distribution system, your specific tap hardness can vary slightly depending on your neighbourhood's pipe age, proximity to the treatment plant, and whether your home has any in-line filtration already installed.

The most accurate DIY option is a TDS meter (total dissolved solids, ~$15 on Amazon) combined with a hardness test strip kit (~$10). Strips give you a GPG reading within seconds. For a lab-accurate result, most water treatment companies in Lafayette offer free in-home water tests — though be prepared for a sales pitch. The NSF International also maintains a database of certified water testing labs if you want an independent result.

The EPA's drinking water standards don't regulate hardness (it's not a health hazard), but the EWG Tap Water Database provides utility-level data including contaminants detected above health guidelines — worth checking for Lafayette's specific utility alongside hardness data.

Quick test option: Water hardness test strips (~$10) — results in 30 seconds, accurate enough for deciding whether to invest in treatment.

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