Reverse Osmosis · Under-Sink · Carlsbad CA

Reverse Osmosis Water Filters for Under-Sink Install. From standard RO to the full hydration stack.

A reverse osmosis water filter is an under-sink system that forces tap water through a 0.0001-micron membrane to remove lead, PFAS, fluoride, arsenic, pharmaceuticals, and TDS. GoodFor, a Carlsbad water filtration brand, offers four RO systems — from a budget entry with built-in alkaline to our flagship Hydration Stack with remineralization and structuring.

GoodFor reverse osmosis purified water at the kitchen tap
NSF/ANSI 42 · 53 · 58 · 401 · 372 0.0001 Micron Membrane 97.5%+ TDS Reduction 99% PFAS Removal (MM8500) 96.3% Lead Reduction (MM8500) WQA Gold Seal Certified 10-Year Tank Warranty Assembled in USA Subscribe & Save NSF/ANSI 42 · 53 · 58 · 401 · 372 0.0001 Micron Membrane 97.5%+ TDS Reduction 99% PFAS Removal (MM8500) 96.3% Lead Reduction (MM8500) WQA Gold Seal Certified 10-Year Tank Warranty Assembled in USA Subscribe & Save
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Four reverse osmosis systems. One clear ladder.

Budget-friendly entry RO with built-in alkaline mineralization. Standard 4-stage RO. Advanced 5-stage RO with PFAS and pharmaceutical certification. Or the full Hydration Stack — RO plus remineralization plus structuring, the way the body recognizes water.

Most Popular · The Full Stack
The GoodFor Hydration Stack — MicroMax 8500 reverse osmosis with Sango Coral remineralization and UMH Pure structuring
WQA Gold Seal Certified and NSF/ANSI Certified
Flagship · Purify · Remineralize · Structure

The Hydration Stack

$2,499
Three components, one sequence · Subscribe & Save on replacements

The MicroMax 8500 reverse osmosis system, the GoodFor Sango Coral remineralization cartridge (70+ trace minerals from fossilized Okinawan coral), and the UMH Pure passive vortex structuring device — installed in sequence at one kitchen tap. Most RO systems stop at purification. The Hydration Stack goes further.

  • ComponentsMM8500 + Sango + UMH Pure
  • Trace minerals added70+
  • Ca:Mg ratioNatural 2:1
  • CertificationsNSF/ANSI 42, 53, 58, 401, 372 + TÜV EU
  • Storage tank3.2 gallons
Or shop a standalone system
GoodFor Pur-Alk Standard — 6-stage under-sink reverse osmosis system with built-in alkaline mineral filter
Entry · 6-Stage with Alkaline

GoodFor Pur-Alk Standard

$699
Budget RO with built-in alkaline mineralization
WQA Gold Seal Certified and NSF/ANSI Certified GoodFor MicroMax 7000 — 4-stage under-sink reverse osmosis system
Standard · 4-Stage RO

MicroMax 7000

$997
NSF-certified entry into under-sink RO
WQA Gold Seal Certified and NSF/ANSI Certified GoodFor MicroMax 8500 — 5-stage advanced reverse osmosis with PFAS and pharmaceutical certification
Advanced · 5-Stage RO

MicroMax 8500

$1,275
PFAS + pharmaceutical NSF/ANSI 401 certified
Pur-Alk Standard vs. MicroMax 7000 vs. 8500 vs. Hydration Stack

Which reverse osmosis system is right for you?

All four systems install under the kitchen sink, run on household water pressure, and are apartment-compatible with the dual-function kitchen faucet adapter — no countertop drilling required. The Pur-Alk Standard ($699) is the budget-friendly 6-stage entry with built-in alkaline mineralization. The MicroMax 7000 ($997) is NSF-certified 4-stage RO for everyday contaminants. The MicroMax 8500 ($1,275) adds NSF/ANSI 53 and 401 certification for PFAS and pharmaceuticals. The Hydration Stack ($2,499) takes the 8500 and adds remineralization plus structuring — the most complete drinking water setup we offer.

Pur-Alk Standard MicroMax 7000 MicroMax 8500 Hydration Stack
Price$699$997$1,275$2,499
Filtration stages6-stage (with alkaline)4-stage (3 cartridges)5-stage (4 cartridges)5-stage RO + remineralization + structuring
Removes chlorineYes (dual carbon)Yes (NSF/ANSI 42)Yes (NSF/ANSI 42)Yes (NSF/ANSI 42)
Removes lead & dissolved metalsYesYes (NSF/ANSI 53)Yes (96.3%, NSF/ANSI 58)Yes (96.3%, NSF/ANSI 58)
Reduces dissolved pharmaceuticalsYesNot specifically certifiedYes (NSF/ANSI 401)Yes (NSF/ANSI 401)
PFAS removal (PFOA/PFOS)Not specifically certifiedNot specifically certified99% (NSF/ANSI 53)99% (NSF/ANSI 53)
Fluoride reductionNot specifically certifiedNot specifically certified96.5% (NSF/ANSI 58)96.5% (NSF/ANSI 58)
NSF/ANSI 401 (emerging contaminants)Not certifiedNot certifiedYesYes
Built-in alkaline / mineralizationYes — built-in alkaline filterNoNoYes — Sango Coral, 70+ minerals
Structures the waterNoNoNoYes — UMH Pure, last stage
Operates without electricityYesYesYesYes
Apartment-compatible (dual faucet)YesYesYesYes
Best forBudget buyers wanting RO + alkaline in one unitStandard municipal water, NSF-certified entryPFAS, pharma, advanced contaminantsThe most complete drinking water setup

By buyer profile — which system to choose.

Tightest budget — wants RO with built-in alkaline mineralization
Standard municipal water — wants NSF-certified entry RO
Concerned about PFAS, lead, fluoride, or pharmaceuticals
Wants the most comprehensive drinking water setup
Family of four or more drinking RO daily as primary hydration
Renter or apartment dweller — needs no-drill installation
Any of the four systems + dual-function kitchen faucet adapter
Already has whole-home filtration, wants drinking-water polish
Already owns an RO from another brand, wants the upgrade
Wants the broadest NSF certifications GoodFor offers
The Category, Explained

What is a reverse osmosis water filter?

A reverse osmosis water filter is an under-sink water purification system that uses household water pressure to force tap water through a semipermeable membrane with a pore size of approximately 0.0001 micron. The membrane physically blocks dissolved contaminants — including lead, PFAS, fluoride, arsenic, pharmaceuticals, and total dissolved solids — that pass straight through carbon-only filters. Purified water collects in a storage tank below the sink and is delivered through a dedicated faucet at the countertop.

Reverse osmosis is the most comprehensive consumer-grade contaminant removal method available. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, PFAS — sometimes called "forever chemicals" — do not break down in the environment and have been detected in U.S. drinking water systems. The EPA established Maximum Contaminant Levels for PFOA and PFOS in 2024. Reverse osmosis is one of the few certified methods of household removal.

GoodFor offers four reverse osmosis options at the kitchen sink — a budget entry-point with built-in alkaline mineralization, two NSF-certified standalone RO systems, and the full Hydration Stack:

The Pur-Alk Standard ($699) is a 6-stage system: sediment pre-filter, dual carbon dechlorination, RO membrane, post-carbon polish, and a built-in alkaline mineral filter as the final stage. It reduces chlorine, dissolved metals (lead, copper, cadmium, chromium), dissolved solids (sodium, selenium, arsenic, nitrates, nitrites), waterborne cysts, and dissolved pharmaceuticals — and is the only GoodFor RO with mineralization built into the unit, no separate cartridge required. The budget-friendly entry into under-sink RO.

The MicroMax 7000 ($997) is a 4-stage system with a carbon block pre-filter, ultra-filtration layer, RO membrane, and post-filter polish — certified to NSF/ANSI 42, 53, 58, and 372 for chlorine taste-and-odor, VOCs, lead, and standard contaminant reduction. It's the widely-used NSF-certified entry into under-sink RO.

The MicroMax 8500 ($1,275) is a 5-stage system that adds a dedicated PFAS carbon stage and a built-in ultra-filtration step. It carries the same NSF/ANSI 42, 53, 58, and 372 certifications plus NSF/ANSI 401 for emerging contaminants (BPA, estrone, ibuprofen, naproxen) and CSA B483.1 — the only GoodFor RO certified for pharmaceutical and PFAS reduction. PFOA/PFOS reduction is rated at 99%, lead at 96.3%, fluoride at 96.5%.

The Hydration Stack ($2,499) is the flagship. It pairs the MicroMax 8500 with the GoodFor Sango Coral remineralization filter — 340 grams of fossilized Okinawan coral that adds 70+ trace minerals at the natural 2:1 calcium-to-magnesium ratio — and the UMH Pure, a passive vortex structuring device hand-built in Austria. Three components in sequence: purify, remineralize, structure. New to the under-sink stack? Our drinking water optimization guide walks through how filtration, remineralization, and structuring fit together.

Why Reverse Osmosis

What carbon misses — and the RO membrane catches.

Carbon filters do excellent work on chlorine, taste, and odor. They do not remove dissolved metals, fluoride, or PFAS. That's the gap RO fills.

01

PFAS pass through carbon. RO catches them.

PFAS — perfluoroalkyl and polyfluoroalkyl substances — are synthetic chemicals used since the 1940s in non-stick coatings, firefighting foam, and water-resistant fabrics. The EPA set Maximum Contaminant Levels for PFOA and PFOS in 2024. The MicroMax 8500 is certified to NSF/ANSI 53 for 99% PFOA/PFOS reduction.

02

Lead enters through pipes, not the source.

Lead in drinking water comes primarily from aging service lines, solder, and fixtures — not the water supply itself. The EPA notes that homes built before 1986 are at elevated risk. The MicroMax 8500 reduces lead by 96.3%; the MicroMax 7000 is also NSF/ANSI 53 certified for lead.

03

Fluoride is too small for carbon to grab.

Most U.S. municipal water supplies add fluoride at roughly 0.7 ppm. Standard carbon filters do not effectively remove it. Reverse osmosis is the most effective consumer method for fluoride reduction — the MicroMax 8500 is certified to NSF/ANSI 58 for 96.5% fluoride reduction. Whether to remove fluoride is a personal decision; RO gives you that option.

Installation

How a reverse osmosis system fits under your sink.

All four systems install under the kitchen sink, run on household water pressure, and deliver through a dedicated faucet at the countertop. No electricity required.

01

Cold Water Line

Connects to your existing supply via a saddle valve or T-fitting

02

RO Filtration

4-stage (MM7000), 5-stage (MM8500), or 6-stage (Pur-Alk) — the contaminant removal stage

03

Storage Tank

Pressurized 2.8–3.2 gallon tank holds purified water ready for use

04

Add-Ons (Optional)

Sango Coral remineralization, UMH Pure structuring — inline, in sequence

05

Dedicated Faucet

Long-neck faucet at the sink. Drain line tees into existing drainage

A licensed plumber can install any of these systems in about 60 to 90 minutes. GoodFor's licensed master plumber team handles installation directly in Southern California, Houston, Austin, Tampa, and Miami/Fort Lauderdale. Outside those markets, every order ships nationwide with 24/7 Installation & Service Concierge — your local plumber gets a free video call with ours plus standing access for the life of the system. Renters and apartment dwellers: all four systems can be installed with the dual-function kitchen + RO faucet adapter — no countertop drilling, no needle valves, no special plumbing. The unit removes in about 20 minutes at lease end.

Four Doors. One Tap.

Clean drinking water, at the kitchen sink.

All four systems ship nationwide. All four install under one cabinet. The Pur-Alk Standard is the budget entry with built-in alkaline. The MicroMax 7000 is the NSF-certified standard RO. The MicroMax 8500 is the certified advanced RO. The Hydration Stack is the full setup — and the one most customers choose.

Not sure which fits your water? Talk to our team — every consultation is free.

Frequently Asked Questions

Reverse osmosis, answered.

What is a reverse osmosis water filter?

A reverse osmosis water filter is an under-sink water purification system that uses household water pressure to force tap water through a semipermeable membrane with a pore size of approximately 0.0001 micron. The membrane blocks dissolved contaminants — lead, PFAS, fluoride, arsenic, pharmaceuticals, and total dissolved solids — and allows purified water to pass through into a storage tank below the sink. The purified water is delivered through a dedicated faucet at the countertop. Reverse osmosis is the most comprehensive consumer-grade contaminant removal method available, and is one of the few methods certified by NSF/ANSI for PFAS reduction at the household level.

Which reverse osmosis system is best for home use?

The best reverse osmosis system depends on your water and your priorities. For the tightest budget — and for buyers who want mineralization built into the unit — the GoodFor Pur-Alk Standard ($699) is a 6-stage RO with a built-in alkaline mineral filter. For standard municipal water and NSF-certified entry RO, the MicroMax 7000 ($997) is a 4-stage system covering chlorine, lead, and standard contaminant reduction. For homes concerned about PFAS, fluoride, pharmaceuticals, or emerging contaminants, the MicroMax 8500 ($1,275) adds NSF/ANSI 53 certification for 99% PFOA/PFOS reduction and NSF/ANSI 401 for pharmaceutical reduction. For households that want the complete drinking water setup — purification plus mineral restoration plus structuring — the Hydration Stack ($2,499) combines the MicroMax 8500 with the Sango Coral remineralization filter and the UMH Pure structuring device.

What is the GoodFor Pur-Alk Standard?

The GoodFor Pur-Alk Standard ($699) is a 6-stage under-sink reverse osmosis system with built-in alkaline mineralization. The six stages are: a sediment pre-filter (Stage 1), two dual-pass carbon dechlorination stages (Stages 2 and 3), an RO membrane (Stage 4), a post-carbon block polish from the storage tank (Stage 5), and an alkaline mineral filter as the final stage (Stage 6). It reduces chlorine, dissolved metals (lead, copper, cadmium, chromium), dissolved solids (sodium, selenium, arsenic, nitrates, nitrites), waterborne cysts, and dissolved pharmaceuticals. The Pur-Alk Standard is the budget-friendly entry into under-sink RO and the only GoodFor RO with mineralization built into the unit rather than a separate cartridge. It operates without electricity on household water pressure, fits under any standard kitchen sink, and is apartment-compatible with the dual-function kitchen faucet adapter.

What's the difference between the MicroMax 7000 and the MicroMax 8500?

The MicroMax 7000 is a 4-stage RO with three physical cartridges (a combined sediment/UF cartridge, an RO membrane, and a post-carbon polish). It's certified to NSF/ANSI 42, 53, 58, and 372 — covering chlorine, lead, VOCs, and standard RO performance. Price: $997.

The MicroMax 8500 is a 5-stage RO with four physical cartridges plus an integrated UF stage built into the manifold. It adds a dedicated PFAS-grade GAC carbon stage and carries additional certifications: NSF/ANSI 401 for emerging contaminants (BPA, estrone, ibuprofen, naproxen) and CSA B483.1. The MM8500 is the only GoodFor RO certified for PFAS (PFOA/PFOS at 99% reduction) and pharmaceutical removal. Price: $1,275. It's also the RO component inside the Hydration Stack.

How does reverse osmosis work?

Reverse osmosis works by pushing water against a semipermeable membrane under pressure. Normal osmosis moves water across a membrane from low-solute concentration to high-solute concentration; reverse osmosis runs the process backward, forcing water from the contaminated (high-solute) side to the purified (low-solute) side. Household RO systems use the natural pressure in your cold water line — typically 40 to 100 psi — to push water through the membrane. Dissolved contaminants are physically blocked by the membrane and flushed to drain. Purified water collects in a sealed storage tank and is delivered through a dedicated faucet on demand. No electricity is required.

What contaminants does reverse osmosis remove?

A properly certified reverse osmosis system reduces or removes the following contaminants. Reductions cited here are for the GoodFor MicroMax 8500, tested and certified to NSF/ANSI 58:

Heavy metals and dissolved solids: Lead (96.3%), arsenic pentavalent (97.3%), arsenic trivalent (98.9%), copper (98.8%), selenium (over 99.1%), radium 226/228 (80%), TDS (93.8%).

Disinfection byproducts and additives: Chlorine (NSF/ANSI 42), fluoride (96.5%).

Emerging contaminants: PFOA/PFOS (99%), BPA (95%), estrone (96%), ibuprofen (~95%), naproxen (96%), nonylphenol (92%) — all certified to NSF/ANSI 401.

Microbiological and particulate: Cryptosporidium and Giardia cysts (via the ultra-filtration stage), turbidity (over 99.1% at 11 NTU influent).

Does reverse osmosis remove PFAS, lead, and fluoride?

Yes — properly certified RO systems remove all three. The GoodFor MicroMax 8500 is certified to NSF/ANSI 53 for 99% PFOA/PFOS reduction, NSF/ANSI 58 for 96.3% lead reduction, and NSF/ANSI 58 for 96.5% fluoride reduction. The MicroMax 7000 is NSF/ANSI 53 certified for lead reduction but is not specifically certified for PFAS or fluoride. Both the MicroMax 8500 and the Hydration Stack address the full panel of NSF/ANSI 53, 58, and 401 contaminants. The U.S. EPA established Maximum Contaminant Levels for PFOA and PFOS in 2024.

Is reverse osmosis water unhealthy without remineralization?

Drinking RO water in normal quantities is not harmful for healthy adults. RO removes nearly all dissolved minerals along with contaminants, however, leaving water slightly acidic (pH 6.0–7.0) and mineral-empty. The World Health Organization's 2009 report on calcium and magnesium in drinking water formally noted the public health significance of these minerals for cardiovascular and metabolic function. According to the NIH Office of Dietary Supplements, most adults in the U.S. do not meet recommended magnesium intake from diet alone, so water that contributes to mineral intake rather than being mineral-empty has practical value. For households where RO is the primary source of drinking and cooking water, many practitioners support adding mineralization. GoodFor offers two paths: the Pur-Alk Standard ($699) includes an alkaline mineral filter built directly into the unit as Stage 6, or the Sango Coral cartridge ($289) can be added inline to any RO system — it adds 70+ trace minerals at the natural 2:1 calcium-to-magnesium ratio and is the second stage of the Hydration Stack.

How much water does reverse osmosis waste?

Reverse osmosis flushes a portion of incoming water to drain to carry away the rejected contaminants — there is no way around this; the contaminants have to go somewhere. The GoodFor MicroMax 7000 operates at a recovery rate of approximately 30.6%, meaning roughly 3 gallons of input water produces 1 gallon of purified water, with the remaining flowing to drain. Higher input pressure improves the recovery rate. In practical terms, for a typical household consuming 3 to 5 gallons of drinking and cooking water per day, drain water from RO is a small fraction of overall household water use — typically a few percent of total daily consumption, often less than what a single load of dishes uses. The water savings versus bottled water (in production, packaging, and transport) are substantially greater than the drain water cost.

Do I need a plumber to install a reverse osmosis system?

A licensed plumber is strongly recommended, though not strictly required. Installation involves tapping into the cold water supply line, connecting to the drain, and drilling a hole in the countertop or sink deck for the dedicated faucet (unless using the apartment-friendly dual-function faucet that uses your existing faucet hole). A typical professional install takes 60 to 90 minutes. In GoodFor's full-service markets — Southern California, Houston, Austin, Tampa, and Miami/Fort Lauderdale — installation is handled directly by our licensed master plumber team led by co-founder Boris Jabotinsky (CSLB #1102129). Outside those markets, every order ships nationwide with 24/7 Installation & Service Concierge — your local plumber gets a free video call with ours and standing access for the lifetime of the system.

How often do RO filters need to be replaced?

Replacement intervals depend on the system and household usage. The MicroMax 7000 has staggered intervals: the carbon block / UF cartridge replaces every 6 to 12 months depending on chlorine load, the RO membrane lasts 2 to 3 years, and the post-filter replaces every 12 months. The MicroMax 8500 uses a simplified maintenance schedule — all four cartridges replace together on the same 12-to-18-month interval, so a single service visit handles the entire system. Both systems have a design capacity of approximately 2,500 gallons per cycle; gallons through the system, not the calendar, ultimately drives the cycle. Subscribe & Save is available on all replacement cartridges.

What's the difference between under-sink RO and countertop RO?

Under-sink RO systems install under the kitchen sink, connect to the cold water supply line, and deliver purified water through a dedicated faucet. The storage tank lives under the cabinet. Countertop RO systems sit on the kitchen counter, fill manually or via a hose connection, and dispense from a built-in spigot or tank. Under-sink systems are higher capacity, hidden, and dispense water on demand without manual refilling, but require professional installation. Countertop systems are portable, easier to install (some are renter-friendly with no plumbing changes), and lower capacity. For full-time household drinking water use — especially for families — an under-sink system like the GoodFor MicroMax 7000 or MicroMax 8500 is the more practical choice.

Can the Hydration Stack be configured with the MicroMax 7000 instead of the 8500?

The standard Hydration Stack at $2,499 ships with the MicroMax 8500 as the RO component — the version certified for PFAS, pharmaceuticals, and emerging contaminants. A budget-friendly version can be configured with the MicroMax 7000 in place of the 8500, paired with the same Sango Coral cartridge ($289) and UMH Pure. This configuration delivers purification, remineralization, and structuring — but without the NSF/ANSI 53 PFAS certification or NSF/ANSI 401 pharmaceutical certification of the standard Stack. If you'd like to configure a custom Stack, book a free consultation and our team will scope it against your water data.

Can I add a remineralization filter to my existing RO system from another brand?

Yes. The GoodFor Sango Coral cartridge ($289) is designed to work with any reverse osmosis system — not only GoodFor's MicroMax 7000 or 8500. It's available in both ¼" and ⅜" John Guest quick-connect push-fit sizes — the two universal under-sink RO line standards — so it pairs with virtually any existing setup. Pairing it with the UMH Pure structuring device gets you Hydration-Stack-level drinking water without replacing the RO system you already own. This is the upgrade path most customers with an existing RO choose.

Technically reviewed by Boris Jabotinsky, Licensed Master Plumber (CSLB #1102129) · Last Updated May 27, 2026