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Hard water can sabotage your skin. Here's how

By Deepali Bhardwaj

Hard water can sabotage your skin. Here's how

Stubborn (chalk-like) stains on taps, buckets, showerheads and utensils

If minerals can corrode hard substances like tiles and fixtures, imagine their long-term impact on your skin and hair. Hard water strips natural moisture, leaving the skin irritated and hair, brittle and lacklustre.

Water is so basic, so routine, that we hardly ever question its quality. On the surface, hard water looks completely clean and harmless, but the truth is far more concerning.

Constant and daily exposure of skin and hair to hard water accelerates ageing, triggers hair thinning and worsens chronic skin conditions. When hard water reacts with soaps and shampoos, it leaves behind a residue -- or an invisible film that clings to the skin and forms a layer on your hair. This film blocks pores, dries out the skin, weakens hair roots and makes proper cleansing almost impossible.

So, if your skin feels tight, dry, or itchy, or if your hair looks dull, lifeless, or frizzy, the real villain may not be your branded skincare products -- but the water in your bathroom.

Hard water has been linked to: dull and dry skin, premature ageing, pigmentation, urticaria, psoriasis, dermatitis, folliculitis, various eczemas, and acne aggravation.

The mineral-heavy residue forms a film that prevents proper cleansing. It increases oxidative stress and weakens collagen, speeding up fine lines and wrinkles. Hard water-induced irritation triggers inflammation, which deepens discoloration.

Mineral deposits weaken hair roots, irritate follicles and increase breakage. It disrupts the scalp barrier, triggering irritation and flaky dandruff.

The mineral film blocks moisture from entering the hair shaft leading to dry frizzy hair.

Each strand's protective cuticle becomes rough and brittle once it gets coated with minerals. Hard water also irritates the scalp, causing deeper damage.

Chronic inflammation speeds up the process of follicle weakening, or shrinkage.

For those who have a family history of balding, hard water becomes a catalyst, accelerating visible and invisible effects.

Also read: Skincare is science and consistency, not a luxury shopping spree

One of the most effective ways to combat hard water damage is using alkalinised water. It neutralises harsh minerals, restores skin pH balance, and significantly reduces irritation.

However, whole-house alkaline systems can be quite expensive and require regular maintenance, making them inaccessible, or unaffordable for many households.

Whole-house softeners, ionizers, pH-adjusting filters do work exceptionally well, but they can be quite expensive and require maintenance. Not every household can install, or afford them.

Salt-based water softeners work through a process of exchange of minerals.

Hard water contains calcium and magnesium. When it goes through a softener, these minerals are exchanged for sodium from the salt. This exchange adds some amount of sodium to your tap water.

For most healthy people, this extra sodium should not be a big deal. But people with hypertension, or high blood pressure and who are on a low-salt diet, must pay attention to how much softened water they drink.

The amount of sodium added depends on how 'hard' the water is. The more the calcium and magnesium, more will be the amount of sodium that the softener will release into the water.

Thankfully, more affordable solutions like shower filters or RO systems with remineralisation still offer substantial protection and noticeably improve skin and hair health. So, the most economically viable, yet effective solution is installing an RO system in your bathing space.

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