The showerhead that came with your house was chosen by a builder for one reason: cost. It was the least expensive option that met code requirements. It was not selected for spray quality, water filtration, comfort, or the health of your skin and hair. Replacing it is a five-minute project that changes the physical experience of every shower — and depending on the showerhead you choose, it can also change what the water is doing to your body.
What to Look For in a Showerhead
Filtration: What the Water Is Doing to Your Skin
Spray pattern and coverage. A quality showerhead distributes water evenly across a wider area than a builder-grade model. Rain-style showerheads (typically six to ten inches in diameter) provide broad, gentle coverage that feels like natural rainfall. Handheld showerheads on a slide bar add flexibility — for rinsing, for directing water to specific areas, for cleaning the shower itself, and for accessibility as the body changes with age. The ideal setup is both: a fixed rain-style head and a handheld on a diverter valve.
Flow Rate and Spray Pattern
Filtration. A filtered showerhead reduces chlorine, chloramine, and sediment at the point of use. Chlorine in hot shower water volatilizes into gas — chloroform — that is inhaled in the enclosed shower space. It also strips natural oils from the skin and hair, contributing to dryness, irritation, and dullness. A KDF/carbon shower filter addresses both the inhalation and the skin contact pathways. The filter cartridge should be replaced every six months or per the manufacturer’s recommendation.
Choosing and Installing the Right Showerhead
Flow rate. Federal regulations limit showerheads to 2.5 gallons per minute (GPM) at 80 PSI. Many quality showerheads perform well at 2.0 GPM or even 1.75 GPM — delivering a satisfying spray experience while reducing water and energy use. Low flow does not mean low pressure. Modern showerhead engineering can produce an excellent spray pattern at reduced flow rates. Look for WaterSense certification, which indicates the showerhead meets EPA water efficiency criteria without sacrificing performance.
Where To Start
- Replace the builder-grade showerhead with a quality filtered model. A rain-style head with a carbon/KDF filter cartridge addresses water quality and shower experience simultaneously.
- Add a handheld showerhead on a slide bar. Flexibility for rinsing, cleaning, and accessibility. This is one of the most useful features in any shower and one of the least expensive to add.
- Replace the filter cartridge every six months. The filter is doing the work — the showerhead is the housing. A spent cartridge is not filtering anything.
The showerhead is the fixture you interact with most intimately every day. It shapes the quality of the water that touches your skin, enters your lungs, and starts your morning. Five minutes with a wrench and the right replacement is one of the highest-return upgrades in the entire home.
When was the last time you thought about your showerhead — not the shower, but the showerhead itself — and whether a better one exists?
