State hardness guide

Texas water hardness guide

Reviewed Texas city profiles, hardness notes, and provider context for household water decisions.

How to use this Texas guide

Texas is too large for a single hardness answer. Houston has system-specific tables, El Paso has source-backed hard-water context, and other major cities depend on local utility reporting.

Use this guide to compare reviewed city profiles, then confirm the actual provider for the address. For softener sizing, scale problems, or appliance concerns, a direct hardness test is usually the cleanest next step.

Best next step

Open the city profile first. If the page gives a source-backed value, use it as a planning clue. If the page says to confirm with the utility or test, do not treat the city name as a final answer.

Reviewed Texas cities

CityHardnessWhat matters locally
AustinConfirm with utility or testAustin Water context is clear; test directly if exact hardness matters.
Corpus ChristiConfirm with utility or testSource and supply details matter alongside routine report results.
DallasConfirm with utility or testDallas Water Utilities context without a safe public hardness value.
El Paso175 mg/LOfficial average is useful, but source ratios can change.
Fort WorthConfirm with utility or testNorth Texas provider and wholesale context matter near service edges.
FriscoConfirm with utility or testPurchased-water and regional supply context can matter.
Houston43.4-180 ppm / mg/L as CaCO3System-specific hardness ranges make address/system matching important.
San AntonioConfirm with utility or testSAWS context; direct testing for hardness-sensitive equipment.

City notes

Why state averages can mislead

Water hardness is local. Averages can hide major differences between surface water and groundwater, city and county utilities, seasonal source changes, and building-level plumbing.