Water Softener Size Calculator
Size a water softener from water hardness, household size, and daily usage. Enter values for instant results with step-by-step formulas.
Formula
Required Grains = People x Daily Gallons x Effective Hardness (GPG) x Days Between Regeneration
Where Effective Hardness equals water hardness in GPG plus (iron PPM x 5). Daily gallons is the per-person water consumption (typically 75-100 gallons). The result gives the total grain capacity needed between regeneration cycles. Select a system at or above this capacity.
Worked Examples
Example 1: Family of 4 with Very Hard Water
Problem: A family of 4 using 80 gallons per person per day. Water hardness is 15 GPG with 1 PPM iron. Regeneration every 7 days.
Solution: Effective hardness = 15 + (1 x 5) = 20 GPG\nDaily water usage = 4 x 80 = 320 gallons/day\nDaily grains to remove = 320 x 20 = 6,400 grains/day\nWeekly grains = 6,400 x 7 = 44,800 grains\nRecommended capacity: 48,000 grain system\nSalt per regeneration: 48,000 / 4,000 = 12 lbs\nMonthly salt: 12 x (30/7) = 51.4 lbs
Result: Recommended: 48,000 grain water softener | ~51 lbs salt/month | ~$7.70/month salt cost
Example 2: Couple with Moderate Hardness
Problem: A household of 2 people using 75 gallons each per day. Water hardness is 8 GPG with no iron. Regeneration every 7 days.
Solution: Effective hardness = 8 GPG (no iron)\nDaily water usage = 2 x 75 = 150 gallons/day\nDaily grains to remove = 150 x 8 = 1,200 grains/day\nWeekly grains = 1,200 x 7 = 8,400 grains\nRecommended capacity: 16,000 grain system\nClosest standard size: 24,000 grain\nSalt per regeneration: 24,000 / 4,000 = 6 lbs\nMonthly salt: 6 x (30/7) = 25.7 lbs
Result: Recommended: 24,000 grain water softener | ~26 lbs salt/month | ~$3.86/month salt cost
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I determine the right size water softener for my home?
Water softener size is measured in grain capacity, which indicates how many grains of hardness the unit can remove before it needs to regenerate. To calculate the right size, multiply your household size by daily water usage per person (typically 75-100 gallons), then multiply by your water hardness in grains per gallon (GPG), and finally multiply by the number of days between regeneration cycles (typically 7 days). For example, a family of 4 using 80 gallons per person per day with 15 GPG hardness needs to remove 4 x 80 x 15 = 4,800 grains per day, or 33,600 grains per week. A 32,000-40,000 grain system would be appropriate for this household.
What is water hardness and how do I measure it?
Water hardness refers to the concentration of dissolved calcium and magnesium minerals in your water supply, measured in grains per gallon (GPG) or parts per million (PPM). One GPG equals 17.1 PPM. Water below 1 GPG is soft, 1-3.5 GPG is slightly hard, 3.5-7 GPG is moderately hard, 7-10.5 GPG is hard, and above 10.5 GPG is very hard. The most accurate way to measure hardness is with a laboratory water test, which many water softener companies offer for free. You can also purchase inexpensive test strips from hardware stores that give approximate readings. Contact your municipal water utility for their annual water quality report, which includes hardness data, though this does not account for hardness added by your home plumbing.
How does iron in water affect softener sizing?
Dissolved iron in your water supply must be accounted for when sizing a water softener because the ion exchange resin removes iron along with calcium and magnesium. Each 1 PPM of dissolved iron is equivalent to approximately 5 GPG of additional hardness in terms of resin demand. If your water tests at 15 GPG hardness and 2 PPM iron, your effective hardness is 15 + (2 x 5) = 25 GPG, which significantly increases the required softener capacity. Iron levels above 5-7 PPM require a dedicated iron filter installed before the softener because high iron concentrations can foul the resin beads permanently. Red or orange staining on fixtures and laundry is a visible sign of iron in your water.
How often should a water softener regenerate?
Most water softeners should regenerate every 3-7 days depending on water usage and hardness levels. Regenerating too infrequently allows hardness minerals to break through and enter your treated water. Regenerating too frequently wastes salt and water. Modern demand-initiated regeneration (DIR) systems use a meter to track actual water usage and regenerate only when the resin capacity is nearly exhausted, which is the most efficient approach. Timer-based systems regenerate on a fixed schedule regardless of actual usage, which can waste salt during low-use periods or allow breakthrough during high-use periods. A family of four with very hard water typically regenerates every 5-7 days with a properly sized system.
What type of salt should I use in my water softener?
Water softener salt comes in three main forms: rock salt, solar salt, and evaporated salt pellets. Evaporated salt pellets are the highest purity at 99.5-99.9 percent sodium chloride and dissolve most cleanly, preventing buildup and bridging in the brine tank. Solar salt is produced by evaporating seawater and is 99.5 percent pure, available as crystals or pellets. Rock salt is the least expensive but only 98-99 percent pure, containing insoluble minerals that accumulate as sludge in the brine tank and require periodic cleaning. For most homeowners, evaporated salt pellets provide the best balance of performance and convenience despite costing slightly more. Potassium chloride is an alternative for people on sodium-restricted diets, though it costs 2-3 times more than sodium chloride.
How much salt does a water softener use per month?
Salt consumption depends on your water hardness, daily usage, and regeneration frequency. A typical household of 4 with moderately hard water (10 GPG) uses approximately 40-50 pounds of salt per month. With very hard water (20+ GPG), consumption can reach 80-100 pounds per month. Each regeneration cycle uses approximately 6-12 pounds of salt depending on system capacity. High-efficiency systems with demand-initiated regeneration use 20-30 percent less salt than timer-based systems because they only regenerate when necessary. At current prices of about $5-$7 per 40-pound bag, monthly salt costs typically range from $5-$15 for average hardness and $10-$25 for very hard water.