Shower filters for daily chlorine reduction. Softer skin, healthier hair, cleaner air.
A shower filter is a point-of-use cartridge that threads on between your shower arm and shower head to reduce free chlorine in shower water. GoodFor is a Carlsbad, California water filtration brand. We carry the 8-Stage Shower Filter (from $49) — an entry-level, renter-friendly filter that reduces chlorine using KDF-55 and activated carbon media, with no tools and no plumber required.
The shower filter — and the shower-plus-tap bundle.
The 8-Stage Shower Filter reduces free chlorine at the shower head. The Shower & Faucet Bundle adds the GoodFor Faucet Filter so the kitchen tap is covered too. Both install in minutes with no tools.
8-Stage Shower Filter
An 8-layer shower filter that reduces free chlorine from shower water using KDF-55, activated carbon, and calcium sulfite media. Threads on between the shower arm and shower head in minutes — no tools, no plumber, fully removable when you move. The cartridge lasts 3–6 months depending on your water; Subscribe & Save covers up to 15% on replacements.
Shower & Faucet Bundle
Pairs the 8-Stage Shower Filter with the GoodFor Faucet Filter for the kitchen tap — free-chlorine reduction at the shower and at the sink in a single bundle. Both install in minutes with no tools and no plumbing changes. For full drinking-water purification (PFAS, lead, fluoride), pair with a reverse osmosis system.
Which approach is right for your water?
A shower filter is a point-of-use cartridge that reduces free chlorine at one shower head — the right starting point for renters, apartments, and anyone who wants a fast, low-cost upgrade. A whole-home system treats every tap in the house and is the more complete answer when your utility uses chloramine, when hard water and sediment are also a concern, or when you want filtered water at every shower and faucet.
| 8-Stage Shower Filter | Whole-Home System | |
|---|---|---|
| Starting price | From $49 | Custom quote (consultation) |
| What it treats | Free chlorine at the shower | Chlorine, chloramine, sediment, hard water minerals |
| Coverage | One shower head | Every tap, shower, and appliance in the home |
| Chloramine | Not verified — free chlorine only | Yes — Clearess® media is rated for chloramine |
| Media | KDF-55 + activated carbon + calcium sulfite | Clearess® media (whole-home) |
| NSF certification | Not NSF certified | NSF/ANSI certified systems available |
| Install | Threads on in minutes — no tools, no plumber | Professional install (included in full-service markets) |
| Renter-friendly | Yes — fully removable, no plumbing changes | No — point-of-entry plumbing connection |
| Cartridge / maintenance | Replace cartridge every 3–6 months | No recurring filter replacements (Clearess®) |
| Drinking water purification | No — shower use only | Pair with reverse osmosis for the kitchen tap |
| Best for | Renters, fast chlorine fix, skin & hair | Homeowners, chloramine, whole-house treatment |
By buyer profile — what to choose.
What does a shower filter actually do?
A shower filter is a point-of-use cartridge that installs between your shower arm and shower head to reduce free chlorine in shower water. Most municipal utilities add chlorine as a disinfectant — the EPA's National Primary Drinking Water Regulations set a maximum residual disinfectant level of 4 mg/L for chlorine — and Chlorine can also react with organic matter in the distribution system to form disinfection byproducts, which the EPA regulates under its Disinfectants and Disinfection Byproducts Rules. That chlorine is still present when the water reaches your shower. A shower filter reduces it at the point of use, just before the water touches your skin and hair.
GoodFor is a Carlsbad, California water filtration brand co-founded by CEO Jane Emma and Licensed Master Plumber Boris Jabotinsky (CSLB #1102129). We carry the 8-Stage Shower Filter (from $49) — an entry-level, renter-friendly filter and the most accessible product in the GoodFor lineup. It reduces free chlorine using an 8-layer media stack built around KDF-55 (a copper-zinc media that targets chlorine and inhibits bacterial growth inside the housing) and activated carbon (for chlorine and odor reduction), with calcium sulfite, tourmaline, and mineral-stone layers rounding out the cartridge.
Two honest limits are worth stating up front. First, a shower filter is not a chloramine solution. Many utilities use chloramine — chlorine combined with ammonia — rather than free chlorine. The EPA notes that more than one in five Americans receives chloramine-treated water. The 8-Stage Shower Filter reduces free chlorine; it does not have verified chloramine reduction. If chloramine is your primary concern, a whole-home system with Clearess® media is the more complete approach.
Second, a shower filter is not a drinking water filter. It is built for shower use only — it is not designed to treat water for consumption and does not remove PFAS, lead, fluoride, or dissolved solids. For purified drinking water at the kitchen tap, GoodFor's reverse osmosis systems are the right tool. The shower filter and an RO system make a natural pairing — chlorine reduction on the outside, certified purification on the inside.
Chlorine in shower water — and why people filter it out.
You shower every day. That makes the shower one of the most frequent points of contact between your body and treated tap water.
Skin and hair are the most common reason people buy.
Chlorine can strip the natural oils from skin and hair. Many customers report that their skin feels less dry and their hair feels softer after they start reducing chlorine in shower water. GoodFor does not make medical claims — but reduced chlorine exposure during showering is the reason most shower-filter shoppers start looking.
You don't just touch chlorine — you breathe it.
Hot shower water releases a portion of its chlorine as a gas, which is then inhaled in the enclosed space of the shower. Reducing free chlorine at the shower head lowers both skin contact and the chlorine that off-gasses into the air — which is why GoodFor frames the benefit as softer skin, healthier hair, and cleaner air.
Know whether your utility uses chlorine or chloramine.
A shower filter targets free chlorine. If your water is treated with chloramine, a shower filter will help but is not the complete answer. Your utility's annual consumer confidence report lists which disinfectant it uses — and for whole-house chloramine, a Clearess® whole-home system is the appropriate solution.
No tools. No plumber. No plumbing changes.
The 8-Stage Shower Filter installs inline between the shower arm and your existing shower head. It works with virtually all standard shower heads.
Unscrew Shower Head
Hand-loosen your existing shower head from the arm
Thread On Filter
Hand-tighten the filter onto the shower arm
Reattach Head
Screw your shower head onto the filter outlet
Run & Rinse
Run water briefly to rinse the line, then shower as normal
The whole job takes a couple of minutes and reverses as fast — so it travels with you when you move, with no marks left on the plumbing. Replace the cartridge every 3–6 months, or when a chlorine smell starts to return. New to building a filtered home? Our drinking water optimization page covers how shower, tap, and under-sink filtration fit together.
Reduce chlorine at the shower in minutes.
The 8-Stage Shower Filter ships nationwide and installs without tools. New customers get 10% off the first order at the email popup. For chloramine or whole-house treatment, a free consultation points you to the right system.
Dealing with chloramine or hard water? Talk to our team — every consultation is free.
Shower filters, answered.
What does a shower filter do?
A shower filter is a point-of-use cartridge that reduces free chlorine in shower water as it passes through, just before the water reaches the shower head. Most shower filters use a combination of KDF (a copper-zinc media) and activated carbon to target chlorine and reduce its odor. The GoodFor 8-Stage Shower Filter uses an 8-layer media stack — KDF-55, activated carbon, and calcium sulfite for chlorine reduction, plus tourmaline and mineral-stone layers. The goal is to lower chlorine contact with skin and hair, and to reduce the chlorine that off-gasses into the air during a hot shower. A shower filter does not soften hard water and is not a drinking water filter.
Do shower filters actually work?
Yes, for their intended purpose: reducing free chlorine. KDF-55 and activated carbon are well-established media for chlorine reduction, and a properly maintained cartridge measurably lowers free chlorine at the shower head. The most important factors are matching the filter to your water — it reduces free chlorine, not chloramine — and replacing the cartridge on schedule. A clogged or expired cartridge stops performing. The honest limit is scope: a shower filter treats one shower head and addresses chlorine, not the full range of contaminants a whole-home system or reverse osmosis system handles.
What is the best shower filter for chlorine?
The best shower filter for chlorine uses KDF media combined with activated carbon, since that pairing is the most established approach to free-chlorine reduction at shower-water flow rates and temperatures. The GoodFor 8-Stage Shower Filter (from $49) is built around KDF-55 and activated carbon, with additional calcium sulfite, tourmaline, and mineral-stone layers. It installs with no tools and the cartridge lasts 3–6 months. If your utility uses chloramine rather than free chlorine, no shower filter is a complete solution — a whole-home system is the appropriate route.
Will a shower filter help with dry skin and hair?
Many customers report softer skin and healthier-feeling hair after reducing chlorine in their shower water. Chlorine can strip the natural oils from skin and hair, and lowering chlorine exposure during showering is the most common reason people try a shower filter. GoodFor does not make medical claims about treating any skin or scalp condition — if you have eczema, dermatitis, or another diagnosed condition, that is a conversation for a clinician. What a shower filter does is reduce free chlorine, which is the variable most shoppers are trying to change.
Do shower filters remove chloramine?
The GoodFor 8-Stage Shower Filter reduces free chlorine and does not have verified chloramine reduction. This matters because many municipal utilities use chloramine — chlorine combined with ammonia — as their disinfectant rather than free chlorine. The EPA reports that more than one in five Americans receives chloramine-treated water. If chloramine is your primary concern, a shower filter will provide some benefit but is not the complete answer; a whole-home system with Clearess® media is the appropriate solution. Your utility's annual consumer confidence report tells you which disinfectant it uses.
Is the GoodFor shower filter NSF certified?
No. The 8-Stage Shower Filter is not NSF certified to any standard. It uses industry-standard KDF-55 and activated carbon media, and its performance claims are based on those media specifications rather than independent NSF/ANSI certified testing. We state this plainly because it is true and because it helps you choose the right product. If NSF/ANSI certification is a requirement for you — for example, for verified chlorine, chloramine, or contaminant reduction — GoodFor's whole-home systems include NSF/ANSI-certified options, and the MicroMax reverse osmosis systems are certified for drinking water purification.
How long does a shower filter cartridge last?
The 8-Stage Shower Filter cartridge lasts approximately 3–6 months, depending on your water usage and chlorine levels. Higher chlorine concentrations exhaust the media faster. A practical sign it is time to replace the cartridge is when a chlorine smell starts to return during showering; at the latest, replace it at the six-month mark. Subscribe & Save sets up recurring cartridge delivery and saves up to 15%, so you are not tracking the date manually.
Do I need a plumber to install a shower filter?
No. The 8-Stage Shower Filter installs by hand in a couple of minutes — you unscrew your existing shower head, thread the filter onto the shower arm, and reattach the shower head onto the filter outlet. No tools, no plumber, and no plumbing modifications. This is part of what makes it renter-friendly: it installs and removes without any change to the fixed plumbing, so it comes with you when you move. (Whole-home systems are different — those involve a point-of-entry connection that GoodFor's licensed plumbing team handles in full-service install markets.)
Does a shower filter remove fluoride?
No. Shower filters, including the GoodFor 8-Stage Shower Filter, are not designed to remove fluoride, and most shower filters on the market do not. Fluoride removal generally requires reverse osmosis or specialized media, and it is primarily relevant to drinking water rather than shower water, since fluoride concerns relate to ingestion. If fluoride in your drinking water is the issue, a reverse osmosis system is the appropriate tool — RO is certified to reduce fluoride at the kitchen tap.
Does a shower filter help with hard water?
A chlorine shower filter does not soften hard water or remove the calcium and magnesium minerals that cause scale. Softening hard water requires a water softener or whole-home conditioning system, not a point-of-use shower cartridge. If hard water is causing scale on your fixtures or affecting your skin and hair, the right solution is a whole-home approach — a free consultation can confirm whether your home would benefit from softening or conditioning. A shower filter's job is chlorine reduction, not water softening.
Does a shower filter work with my existing shower head?
Yes. The 8-Stage Shower Filter installs inline between the shower arm — the pipe coming out of the wall — and your existing shower head, using standard threaded connections. It works with virtually all standard shower heads, so you keep the shower head you already have. There is no need to buy a special head or replace your fixture.
Is a shower filter a drinking water filter?
No. The 8-Stage Shower Filter is designed for shower use only and is not intended to treat water for drinking. It reduces free chlorine for skin, hair, and air contact during showering, but it does not remove contaminants relevant to drinking water such as PFAS, lead, fluoride, pharmaceuticals, or dissolved solids. For purified drinking water, GoodFor's MicroMax 7000 and 8500 reverse osmosis systems install under the kitchen sink and are certified for those contaminants. Many households use both — a shower filter for the bathroom and an RO system for the kitchen.
Shower filter or whole-home system — which do I need?
Choose a shower filter if you want a fast, low-cost way to reduce free chlorine at one shower head, if you rent, or if skin and hair are your main concern — it installs in minutes with no plumbing changes. Choose a whole-home system if your utility uses chloramine, if hard water and sediment are also issues, or if you want filtered water at every shower, sink, and appliance in the house. Whole-home systems treat water at the point of entry and use Clearess® media rated for chloramine, with NSF/ANSI-certified options. The two are not mutually exclusive: a whole-home system handles the house, and many homes add reverse osmosis for certified drinking water at the kitchen tap.
