Treated water dispensed by tap: complete guide for homes, offices, hotels and hospitality
Treated water dispensed by tap allows you to have filtered, chilled, ambient or sparkling water directly from a service point, without relying on bottles, jerrycans or continuous storage. It is an increasingly attractive solution for homes, offices, hotels, restaurants, coffee shops, gyms, educational centres and public spaces seeking convenience, quality, sustainability and control over consumption.
Quick summary
A treated-water-by-tap system takes mains water and conditions it through filtration, activated carbon, reverse osmosis, ultrafiltration, remineralization, chilling or carbonation, depending on the project. The result is a dispensing point that is more practical than bottled water, with less need for transport, fewer waste materials, less storage and a more convenient drinking experience for homes, offices and businesses.
The key idea: this article is a general guide, not a technical data sheet for fittings
This guide explains what treated water dispensed by tap is, how it works, what advantages it offers and what type of solution may fit each environment. If you need to identify tube sizes, connectors, John Guest fittings, CO₂ or carbonators, consult the specific technical guides linked later on. This way we avoid mixing the decision to install a water system with the technical connection details.
AquaTaps solutions for tap water
At Install Beer we work with AquaTaps solutions for filtered, chilled, ambient or sparkling water projects in homes, offices, hospitality and professional spaces. You can check the page on dispensing water by tap or the water dispensers collection if you are looking for a complete solution.
Guide contents
- What is treated water by tap
- How a treated water system works
- Most common treatment technologies
- Types of water that can be dispensed
- Advantages over bottled water
- Applications by environment
- How to choose the right system
- What to plan before installing
- Recommended maintenance
- Common mistakes
- Related guides
- Frequently asked questions
What is treated water dispensed by tap
Treated water dispensed by tap is mains water that passes through one or more treatment processes before being served from a tap, fountain, column or dispenser. Depending on the quality of the feed water and the desired result, the system can reduce tastes, odors, sediments, chlorine, scale, dissolved salts or other elements present in the water.
There is no single system suitable for all cases. A home may need a compact under-sink solution; an office may need chilled water for many people; a hotel may require water points in common areas; and a restaurant may want filtered and sparkling water for table service.
Improves taste, smell, and organoleptic quality with filters suited to the inlet water.
Allows you to serve water at drinking temperature without fridges, bottles or constant restocking.
Integrates carbonation with food‑grade CO₂ when you want sparkling water from a tap.
How a tap‑treated water system works
Operation depends on the type of unit, but the general layout is usually very similar: water comes in from the mains, is treated as needed, chilled or carbonated if applicable, and dispensed from a tap or service point.
1. Water inlet
The system is connected to an existing water outlet or to a line prepared for the unit.
2. Treatment
The water passes through filters, osmosis, ultrafiltration, or other systems depending on the desired quality.
3. Chilling or carbonation
If the project requires it, the water can be chilled or carbonated before service.
4. Dispense
Water is served from a tap, column, fountain or dispenser adapted to the environment.
Most common treatment technologies
The choice of technology depends on the feed water, the intended use and the type of consumer. It is not always necessary to install reverse osmosis; in many cases correctly sized filtration is enough. In other projects, especially when a very specific water profile is sought, osmosis or remineralization may be advisable.
| Technology | What it does | Where it usually fits | Practical note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sediment filter | Retains suspended particles. | Pretreatment, unit inlet, protection of downstream filters. | Useful as a first barrier when there are visible particles or carry-over. |
| Activated carbon | Helps improve taste and odor, especially against chlorine and compounds that affect flavor. | Home, offices, hospitality, cafés, and drinking water. | Very common in filtered water systems by tap. |
| Ultrafiltration | Filters very fine particles through a membrane. | Projects where advanced filtration is desired without removing as many salts as reverse osmosis. | It can be an interesting alternative depending on water quality. |
| Reverse osmosis | Significantly reduces dissolved salts and other elements present in the water. | Homes, offices, cafés and projects with specific quality requirements. | It is advisable to size it well and consider remineralization if necessary. |
| Remineralisation | Adjust the water profile after intensive treatments. | Drinking water, coffee, hospitality and projects where final taste is important. | Can improve the balance of the water when reverse osmosis is used. |
| Descaling or anti‑scale | Reduces or controls problems caused by hardness. | Areas with limescale, protection of equipment, coffee machines, chillers and machinery. | It does not always replace point-of-use filtration; it can complement it. |
| Cooling | Lowers the water temperature before serving. | Offices, hotels, restaurants, gyms and water coolers. | Key when you want constant chilled water without bottles. |
| Carbonation | Add food-grade CO₂ to obtain sparkling water. | Restaurants, hotels, premium offices and HORECA. | Requires carbonator, CO₂, correct pressure and technical maintenance. |
Types of water that can be dispensed
One of the strengths of these systems is that they allow the service to be adapted to real usage. Not all projects need the same thing: some only want ambient filtered water; others need chilled water; and others want to combine chilled, ambient and sparkling water from a single point.
Ideal for homes, kitchens, small offices, or points where chilling is not required.
Very useful in offices, gyms, waiting rooms, hotels, cafés and restaurants.
Basic option to improve daily consumption without relying on bottles.
Recommended when a more intense reduction of salts and a specific water profile is sought.
Interesting solution for hospitality, hotels and offices that want to offer a premium alternative.
It can be used as a base for coffee, infusions, cooking, cocktails, or prepared drinks.
Advantages over bottled water
Tap-treated water not only improves convenience. It also changes daily logistics: it reduces recurring bottle purchases, handling, occupied space, restocking, waste and dependence on deliveries. In businesses with constant consumption, this difference can be especially important.
| Advantage | What it provides | Where it’s most noticeable |
|---|---|---|
| Sustainability | Reduces the use of single-use bottles and containers. | Offices, hotels, restaurants, gyms and public spaces. |
| Convenience | Water is available from the tap or dispenser without constant restocking. | Homes, kitchens, break rooms and bars. |
| Less storage | Frees up space previously used for bottles, jugs or crates. | Small premises, kitchens, storage rooms and offices. |
| Better service control | Allows you to define what water is offered: ambient, chilled, filtered or sparkling. | Hospitality, hotels, and offices with high turnover. |
| Professional image | It reinforces a perception of care, modernity and sustainability. | Restaurants, hotels, offices and customer-facing spaces. |
| Operational savings | Can reduce costs associated with purchasing, transporting, restocking, and managing containers. | Environments with recurring and steady consumption. |
Applications by environment
The same treated water by tap concept can be applied in very different ways. The key is to choose the system according to consumption, available space, desired temperature, type of water, maintenance and the experience you want to offer.
| Environment | Typical need | Recommended solution |
|---|---|---|
| Home | Water for daily consumption, cooking, coffee, infusions and reducing bottles. | Under-sink filter, reverse osmosis or filtered water tap depending on water quality and preferences. |
| Offices | Water available for employees and visitors throughout the day. | Cold/ambient water dispenser, network-connected fountain, or system with sparkling water if a premium experience is sought. |
| Hotels | Service in breakfasts, common areas, meeting rooms, or rooms. | Fountains, filtered water taps, bottle fillers or chilled and sparkling water solutions. |
| Restaurants | Water service at the table, kitchen, and beverage preparation. | Professional system with filtration, chilling and optional sparkling water according to the menu and operation. |
| Coffee shops | Water for drinking, coffee, infusions and equipment. | Filtration adapted to the incoming water and to the use of the machinery. |
| Gyms and sports centres | High consumption, fast replenishment and convenient service for the user. | High-capacity fountains or dispensers with chilled water. |
| Educational or healthcare centres | Convenient access to water for users, staff, and visitors. | Point-of-use coolers connected to the mains with filtration and periodic maintenance. |
Do you want to explore a tap-treated water solution?
Install Beer can help you assess which type of system best fits your consumption, space, water quality, user type and need for ambient, chilled or sparkling water.
See AquaTaps solutions View water dispensersHow to choose the right system
Before choosing a dispenser or treated water system, it is advisable to define the actual use. A common mistake is to buy based only on price or looks, without considering consumption, technical access, filters, maintenance, temperature, carbonation, or the unit’s capacity.
| Question | Why it matters | Example decision |
|---|---|---|
| How many people will use it? | It determines flow rate, chilling capacity and equipment size. | A home is not the same as an office with 80 people. |
| Do you want cold water? | Requires a chiller or dispenser with cooling capacity. | Highly recommended in offices, hotels, and restaurants. |
| Is sparkling water required? | Requires carbonator, food-grade CO₂, and appropriate technical configuration. | Interesting for restaurants, hotels and premium offices. |
| What is the quality of the inlet water? | Determine whether filtration is enough or whether reverse osmosis, anti-scale or another treatment is advisable. | Water hardness, taste and odor determine the system. |
| Where will it be installed? | The available space determines equipment, ventilation, access and maintenance. | Under-sink, under-counter, plant room or common area. |
| Who will carry out the maintenance? | Filters and equipment need regular check-ups. | In HORECA it is advisable to plan technical service from the outset. |
What to plan before installing
A tap-treated water installation should not be improvised. Although some units are compact, you must check the water supply, pressure, drain if applicable, power outlet, ventilation, space for filters, accessibility and pipe routing.
- Nearby water supply.
- Space for filters or equipment.
- Drain if there is osmosis or equipment that requires it.
- Power outlet for coolers, pumps or carbonators.
- Sufficient ventilation if there is refrigeration equipment.
- Access for maintenance.
- Type of premises or dwelling.
- Approximate number of users.
- Intended use: drinking, kitchen, coffee, table, bottles.
- Preference: ambient, chilled, or sparkling.
- Photos of the installation space.
- Location of water and power supply.
Maintenance of a treated water system by tap
Maintenance is key for the system to work stably and for the water to maintain the expected quality. The frequency depends on consumption, the quality of the inlet water, the type of filter, the unit installed and the usage environment.
| Task | Why it matters | Indicative frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Filter replacement | It prevents saturation and maintains treatment performance. | According to manufacturer, consumption and water quality. |
| Connection check | Allows you to detect leaks, wear or stress in tubing. | At each intervention or preventive maintenance. |
| Cleaning the service point | Maintains hygiene and a good appearance at the tap or dispenser. | Regulate, especially in public spaces. |
| Cooler check-up | Ensures the correct temperature and good performance. | Depending on use and installation conditions. |
| CO₂ check if there is sparkling water | Allows you to maintain stable, safe carbonation. | Depending on consumption and unit configuration. |
| Taste and odour control | Helps detect exhausted filters or changes in the feed water. | Ongoing by the user and periodic by technical service. |
Common mistakes when choosing tap-treated water
| Error | Consequence | How to avoid it |
|---|---|---|
| Choosing only by price | The unit may fall short in flow, chilling capacity or maintenance. | Assess actual consumption, water type and environment. |
| Not testing the incoming water | The treatment may not be suitable. | Check taste, smell, hardness and user needs. |
| Do not plan for technical space | Awkward installation and difficult maintenance. | Allow space for filters, equipment, and access. |
| Not planning maintenance | Loss of performance and worse consumption experience. | Define filter reviews and changes from the start. |
| Ordering sparkling water without considering the installation | There may be insufficient space, CO₂, pressure, ventilation or equipment capacity. | Assess carbonator, CO₂ cylinder, consumption, and point of service. |
| Not distinguishing between home and professional use | A domestic unit may not withstand intensive use. | Size according to number of users and service peaks. |
Related guides to avoid mixing concepts
This article explains the general concept of tap‑treated water. For more specific topics, you can consult these complementary guides:
Guide more oriented to restaurants, hotels and professional table or bar water service.
Specific article on the internal operation of water dispensing equipment.
Technical guide to sizes, fittings, tubing, CO₂, carbonators and professional connections.
Specific guide for domestic fittings, under-sink filters and reverse osmosis.
Do you want to install treated water on tap?
Tell us if you need ambient, cold, filtered, reverse-osmosis, or sparkling water, and in what environment it will be installed. We will guide you towards the most suitable system for a home, office, hotel, restaurant, or professional space.
Request AquaTaps advice Contact Install BeerFrequently asked questions about treated water dispensed by tap
What is treated water dispensed by tap?
It is mains water that passes through a treatment system before being served from a tap, fountain or dispenser. Depending on the installed equipment, it can be filtered, osmotised, chilled, ambient or sparkling.
What is the difference between filtered, osmotised and treated water?
Treated water is the general term. Filtered water usually refers to water that passes through filters to improve taste, smell, or particles. Osmotized water passes through a reverse osmosis membrane that more intensely reduces salts and other dissolved elements.
Can cold and sparkling water be dispensed from the same system?
Yes, there are systems that can serve chilled, ambient and sparkling water from one or several taps. For sparkling water you need a carbonator, food-grade CO₂ and appropriate technical configuration.
What advantages does it have over bottled water?
It reduces bottles, storage, transport, restocking and waste. It also allows you to have filtered or chilled water continuously available, offering a more convenient experience for users, customers or employees.
Which system is suitable for an office?
It depends on the number of people, consumption, space and type of water desired. In offices, a mains‑connected dispenser with filtration and chilled water usually works well; in premium offices you can also add sparkling water.
Which system is suitable for a restaurant or hotel?
In hospitality it is advisable to assess consumption, table service, chilled water, sparkling water, installation area, maintenance and unit capacity. A professional system with filtration, chilling and carbonation may be required.
What maintenance does a treated water dispenser need?
It usually requires filter replacement, connection checks, cleaning of the dispensing point and performance control. Frequency depends on consumption, water quality and equipment type.
Is professional installation necessary?
In simple systems it can be a relatively compact installation, but in offices, hotels, hospitality venues or sparkling water systems, professional installation is recommended to ensure proper flow, safety, accessibility and maintenance.
Does Install Beer install tap-treated water systems?
Yes. Install Beer provides tap water dispensing solutions, filtration, chilling, sparkling water, installation, and maintenance for homes, offices, hospitality, and professional spaces.
Is AquaTaps suitable for homes, offices, and hospitality?
Yes. AquaTaps groups treated-water-by-tap solutions for different environments, from homes and offices to hotels, restaurants and professional projects.
Technical note: this guide is informative and general. The final choice of system must be made by assessing the quality of the incoming water, expected consumption, available space, desired type of water, applicable regulations, installation, maintenance and technical compatibility of the unit.