4 Reasons Why You Should Filter Your Child’s Shower Water
There’s something we don’t often think about when bathing our children — the water itself.
We obsess over the right skincare, the cleanest hair wash, the eczema-safe towels. But the truth is: tap water might be the biggest irritant of all.
Here’s why it matters — especially for little ones.
1. Children’s skin is up to 30% thinner than ours
A child’s skin barrier is still developing well into their early years. Compared to adult skin, theirs is more permeable, more delicate, and more vulnerable to external substances.
That means contaminants in water — even in small amounts — can absorb more readily and impact their skin and body disproportionately.
2. Chlorine is a disinfectant, not a moisturiser
Chlorine is added to tap water to kill bacteria. But it doesn’t discriminate.
When children shower in chlorinated water, that same chemical can strip natural oils, disrupt the skin microbiome, and even worsen conditions like eczema and dry scalp.
Inhaling chlorine vapour from hot showers is also a concern. Studies show it can irritate airways, especially in young children.
3. Heavy metals and developing bodies don’t mix
From copper to lead and other trace metals, ageing pipes and infrastructure can leach heavy metals into residential water — and you won’t see or smell them.
Children are more vulnerable to heavy metal exposure because their detox systems aren’t fully developed, and their lower body weight means a higher dose-to-impact ratio.
4. The skin absorbs more than you think
Especially during a warm shower, skin becomes more porous.
Some studies estimate that up to 64 percent of total chlorine exposure in the average home comes from the shower — not drinking water.
For children, whose skin is thinner and whose surface-area-to-body-weight ratio is higher, the absorption risk increases significantly.
So, what’s the solution?
A high-quality shower filter — like the Well Verti Wellness Pod — reduces chlorine, heavy metals, and other contaminants before they reach your child’s skin.
It’s a small switch that can make a real difference in their long-term skin health and wellbeing.
Because when it comes to our children, the smallest changes often matter the most.