TDS measures dissolved minerals, not safety Low TDS does not mean clean water Lead and PFAS are invisible to a TDS meter Carbon is not designed to change the TDS number NSF/ANSI 42 chlorine taste and odor reduction Your CCR tells you more than a TDS pen CoreXchange filtration media TDS measures dissolved minerals, not safety Low TDS does not mean clean water Lead and PFAS are invisible to a TDS meter Carbon is not designed to change the TDS number NSF/ANSI 42 chlorine taste and odor reduction Your CCR tells you more than a TDS pen CoreXchange filtration media

2026 water quality guide

What does TDS mean? Not what the pen says.

A cheap TDS meter counts the dissolved minerals in your water, then people read the number as a safety score. It is not. A low reading does not mean clean, a high reading does not mean dangerous, and a carbon filter is not built to change it. Here is what the number actually tells you.

Minerals TDS is mostly harmless calcium and magnesium, not contaminants
Low is not safe Lead, PFAS, and pesticides do not move a TDS meter
Carbon holds A carbon filter leaves minerals in, so the number barely shifts
NSF/ANSI 42 certified Calm, source-cited guide Carbon block filtration

The quick picture

TDS is a count of dissolved minerals. It is not a safety score, and it is easy to misread.

TDS means total dissolved solids: the combined weight of minerals, salts, and metals dissolved in your water, usually shown in parts per million. A TDS meter does not see any of that directly. It sends a tiny current through the water and estimates the total from how well the water conducts electricity, then a screen shows one number. Most of that number is ordinary minerals like calcium and magnesium, the same minerals that give spring water its taste and that your body uses. The trouble starts when the reading gets treated as a grade. It is not. A TDS meter cannot tell a healthy mineral from a trace of lead, and the contaminants people actually worry about, including PFAS, pesticides, and pharmaceuticals in the 2026 headlines, sit at concentrations far too low to move the number. So a clean-looking reading can hide a real problem, and a high reading can be nothing but harmless minerals. Understanding that one distinction changes how you shop for a filter.

Ca Mg
Minerals calcium and magnesium make up most of the reading
Meter counts total conductivity, not what is in it
Blind spot trace lead and PFAS slip past uncounted
01

It measures the total, not the type.

A TDS meter reports one conductivity number. It cannot separate healthy calcium and magnesium from a trace of something you would rather not drink.

02

The scary contaminants stay invisible.

Lead, PFAS, pesticides, and pharmaceuticals show up at concentrations far too low to move a TDS reading, and some carry no charge to measure at all.

03

Low is not a grade of clean.

Water can read a tidy 40 ppm and still hide a problem, while mineral-rich spring water reads high and is perfectly good. The number is not a safety score.

Why the number barely moves

Your carbon filter is not supposed to lower TDS. That is by design, not a defect.

This is the part that confuses people, and often the part a reverse-osmosis salesperson uses to make a carbon filter look broken. Activated carbon works by adsorption: chlorine and organic chemicals stick to its enormous internal surface as water passes through. It is not built to strip dissolved minerals, so calcium and magnesium pass right through and the TDS number stays about the same. A steady reading after carbon filtration is exactly what should happen. Only reverse osmosis or distillation drops TDS meaningfully, and they do it by removing the good minerals along with everything else. Epic's Pure XP is a carbon fiber block, NSF certified to Standard 42 for chlorine taste and odor and to NSF/ANSI/CAN 372 for lead-free materials, and independently lab-tested to reduce 99.9% of lead and tested against the NSF/ANSI P473 protocol for PFOA and PFOS. All of that happens whether or not a TDS pen ever twitches, because the pen is measuring the wrong thing.

Epic water filter materials and certification visual
500 ppm is the EPA guideline for TDS, and it is about taste, not safety EPA secondary, non-health drinking water standard.
0 charge many contaminants do not register on a conductivity meter Uncharged organics are not counted in TDS.
Minerals most of a TDS reading is calcium and magnesium Carbon leaves these beneficial minerals in place.
NSF 42 the standard for chlorine taste and odor Pure XP is NSF certified to Standard 42.

The simple checklist

Three calm ways to use a TDS number without being fooled by it.

1

Read it for what it is.

  • TDS is a total of dissolved minerals, mostly calcium and magnesium.
  • A low number is not a safety grade, and a high number is not an alarm.
  • There is no single healthy target to chase.
2

Do not judge a carbon filter by it.

  • Carbon targets chlorine and organics, not dissolved minerals.
  • Expect the TDS reading to stay about the same after filtering.
  • To check carbon, test for chlorine or follow the replacement schedule.
3

Test for what actually matters.

  • Start with your annual Consumer Confidence Report from the utility.
  • For lead or a specific chemical, use a certified lab test of your tap.
  • Then match a filter to the results, not to a mineral meter.

Inside the cartridge

Carbon pulls out chemicals and leaves the minerals, so TDS stays put.

The mechanism explains the reading. Water flows through a solid block of compressed activated carbon, and chlorine and organic chemicals adsorb onto the carbon's vast internal surface instead of passing into your glass. Dissolved minerals like calcium and magnesium are not organic chemicals and do not adsorb, so they flow straight through, which is why a TDS meter shows almost no change. That is the filter working as intended, not failing. The same block reduces chlorine taste and odor, the aesthetic effect covered by NSF/ANSI Standard 42, and Pure XP is NSF certified to Standard 42 along with NSF/ANSI/CAN 372 for lead-free materials. Its lead and PFAS reduction results are independently lab-tested, evaluated against NSF/ANSI 53 and the P473 protocol, not NSF certified, and Epic keeps that distinction clear. The one rule that keeps it working: replace the cartridge on schedule, because saturated carbon stops adsorbing.

01
Adsorption The carbon fiber block adsorbs chlorine and organic chemicals as water flows through its compressed core.
02
Minerals stay Calcium and magnesium pass through untouched, so the TDS number barely moves. That is by design.
03
Honest boundary To lower TDS you need reverse osmosis or distillation, which also strip the beneficial minerals.
Tap water in
Layer 1: Nano fiber media
Layer 2: Carbon fiber block core
Filtered water out

A look inside

Ignore the pen. Filter for what matters.

Read TDS honestly Skip the meter panic Filter chlorine and organics Keep the good minerals Replace on schedule

Choose your setup

Filter for the contaminants that matter, not the TDS number.

Pure XP is a carbon fiber block, NSF certified to Standard 42 for chlorine taste and odor and built to reduce chlorine and organic chemicals while leaving the minerals in. Use the direct buttons below to add the exact product to cart.

Epic Pure XP Pitcher
Recommended

Pure XP Pitcher

Everyday carbon block filtration that reduces chlorine and organics while keeping minerals.

  • Carbon fiber block for chlorine taste, odor, and organic chemicals
  • Independently lab-tested to reduce 99.9% of lead
  • NSF certified to Standard 42 and NSF/ANSI/CAN 372
Buy Pure XP Pitcher
Epic Pure XP Dispenser
Best for families

Pure XP Dispenser

The same Pure XP carbon filtration with more ready-to-pour capacity.

  • Same NSF Standard 42 certified Pure XP media
  • Great for fridge or counter routines
  • Fits households that refill often
Buy Dispenser
Epic Nano XP Pitcher
Microbiological pick

Nano XP Pitcher

Adds microbiological and microplastics reduction while maintaining fluoride.

  • NSF certified to Standard 42 + NSF/ANSI/CAN 372
  • Tested to reduce over 99.9% of microplastics
  • Adds microbiological reduction; still follow boil advisories
Buy Nano XP
Epic Smart Shield Max under-sink water filter
Best under sink

Smart Shield Max

Tap-first filtration for kitchens where you want the counter clear.

  • CoreXchange double-layer media
  • Up to 750 gallons per filter
  • Under-sink convenience
Buy Smart Shield Max

Fast decision guide

Pick by the problem, not by the pen.

Carbon block is for the everyday chemistry of your tap, chlorine, taste, odor, and organics. Reverse osmosis is the option if lowering TDS is truly your goal.

Epic Pure XP water filter in everyday kitchen use
Pure XP
Choose this for chlorine taste and odor, organics, and lead. Everyday carbon block that leaves the good minerals in.
Nano XP
Choose this for microbiological plus microplastics concerns. Good when fluoride and mineral retention is part of the decision.
Dispenser
Choose this when everyone in the house keeps refilling. Same simple behavior, more ready water.
Max
Choose this when you want filtration at the sink. Best for a cleaner counter and tap-first flow.
Need Pure XP Nano XP Max
Chlorine taste and odor Strong Strong Strong
No install Yes Yes No
NSF certifications 42/372 42/372 N/A

Quick answers

The TDS meter FAQ, minus the wall of text.

What does TDS in water mean?

TDS stands for total dissolved solids, the combined amount of dissolved minerals, salts, and metals in your water, usually reported in parts per million. A TDS meter does not identify what those solids are. It runs a small current through the water and estimates the total from how well the water conducts electricity. Most of what it counts is harmless minerals like calcium and magnesium, so the number alone tells you very little about whether your water is safe.

Does a low TDS reading mean my water is safe?

No. A low TDS reading only means there are fewer dissolved minerals in the water, not that it is free of contaminants. Many of the pollutants people worry about, including lead, PFAS, pesticides, and pharmaceuticals, are present at levels far too low to move a TDS meter, and some do not carry an electrical charge at all. Water can read a clean-looking 40 ppm and still contain a health concern, and water with a high reading can be perfectly safe minerals.

Why did my carbon filter not lower the TDS number?

Because a carbon filter is not designed to. Activated carbon works by adsorption, pulling chlorine and organic chemicals out of the water, but it leaves dissolved minerals like calcium and magnesium in place. That is by design, not a defect. A steady or barely changed TDS reading after carbon filtration is exactly what you should expect. Only reverse osmosis or distillation strips minerals enough to drop the number, and they remove the beneficial minerals along with everything else.

What is a good TDS level for drinking water?

There is no single healthy number. The EPA lists a secondary, non-health guideline of 500 ppm for TDS, and that is about taste and appearance, not safety. Plenty of excellent spring and mineral waters sit well above 500 ppm, and very low TDS does not make water healthier. Chasing a specific TDS target is the wrong goal, because the meter cannot tell good minerals from a trace contaminant.

Does a TDS meter tell me if my filter is working?

Not for a carbon filter. A TDS meter is a poor test of carbon performance because carbon targets chlorine, taste, odor, and organic chemicals rather than dissolved minerals, so the reading barely moves even when the filter is doing its job. To check a carbon filter, test for what it actually reduces, such as chlorine, or follow the replacement schedule. A TDS pen only tracks the total mineral content going in and out.

Can a TDS meter detect lead, PFAS, or pesticides?

No. A TDS meter cannot identify individual contaminants and will not warn you about lead, PFAS forever chemicals, pesticides, or pharmaceuticals. These show up in tap water at trace concentrations that are invisible to a conductivity reading. Recent 2026 studies estimate PFAS in a large share of U.S. tap water, and none of it would register on a TDS pen. For those concerns you need a certified lab test or your utility's report, not a mineral meter.

How do I actually know what is in my water?

Start with your annual Consumer Confidence Report, which lists the contaminants your utility detected. For lead or specific chemicals, use a certified laboratory test of your own tap, since problems can come from your home plumbing after the water leaves the plant. Then match a filter to the results you care about. A carbon block like Epic's Pure XP reduces chlorine taste and odor and is independently tested for lead and PFOA and PFOS, and it does that whether or not the TDS number changes.

Ready to make it simple?

Stop reading the pen. Filter for what the number cannot see.

Pure XP for chlorine taste and odor, organics, and lead, NSF certified to Standard 42. Nano XP for microbiological and microplastics priorities. Dispenser for more household capacity.

TDS, or total dissolved solids, is the combined amount of dissolved minerals, salts, and metals in water; a TDS meter estimates it from electrical conductivity and does not identify individual substances, per the EPA secondary drinking water standards, which list a non-health guideline of 500 ppm for TDS based on taste and appearance. A low reading does not indicate safety and a high reading does not indicate harm, because most TDS is harmless minerals like calcium and magnesium, while contaminants such as lead, PFAS, pesticides, and pharmaceuticals occur at trace levels that do not meaningfully change the reading. A 2023 U.S. Geological Survey study estimated at least one PFAS in roughly 45% of U.S. tap water, none of which a TDS meter would detect. Activated carbon reduces chlorine and organic chemicals but is not designed to lower TDS; only reverse osmosis or distillation reduces dissolved minerals substantially. Product claims are based on Epic Water Filters published testing and certification information: Pure XP is NSF certified to Standard 42 and NSF/ANSI/CAN 372, and is independently lab-tested to reduce 99.9% of lead and evaluated against NSF/ANSI 53 and the NSF/ANSI P473 protocol for PFOA and PFOS; these performance results are independently tested, not NSF certified. A point-of-use filter supplements, but does not replace, your utility's treatment or monitoring. Product performance can vary by water quality, usage, and filter replacement schedule. Last updated July 2026.