Window Washing Guide
GUIDE / WATER ATLAS / TEXAS
WATER ATLAS · SOUTH

Water hardness in Texas

TYPICAL RANGE
180–600 mg/L
10.5–35.1 grains/gal
BANDS SPANNED
Hard → Extremely Hard
DOMINANT SOURCE
Blended surface and groundwater

Hard to very hard statewide on a mix of surface water and deep aquifers; hill-country well water runs the hardest residential water in the lower 48.

HOW IT BREAKS DOWNvery hard

Texas is one of the harder large-state water profiles in the country and contains the single hardest residential water most cleaners will encounter on a working route: private well supplies in the Edwards Plateau and the hill country west of Austin can run 500-600 mg/L. Municipal supplies are more moderate but still firmly in hard-water territory — Austin runs 200-240, Houston 180-220, San Antonio 350-400, Dallas-Fort Worth 200-260. The state has no soft-water major metro. Cleaning protocols built for the Midwest do not transfer here without adjustment, and the well-water households west of I-35 require their own protocol that the published trade literature does not cover.

A blended system means hardness moves with the blend. Two addresses on the same utility can read differently, and the same address can read differently across a year, depending on which source is carrying the load that season.

What that means for the glass

Texas spans 3 hardness bands, which means there is no single answer for the whole state — the method changes as you move across it. Both ends are below.

HardSOFT END

121–180 mg/L

This is the band where the water starts writing on the glass. Wash with tap — the surfactant holds the minerals in suspension while you work, so the wash pass is not the problem — then rinse with distilled and pull that. The rinse is the whole intervention: it replaces the mineral-bearing water sitting on the glass with water that has nothing in it to leave. This single change resolves most of the "I cleaned it and it still looks bad" complaints in this range, and it does not require buying a system.

Very HardMIDDLE

181–250 mg/L

A distilled rinse stops being an improvement and becomes the method. Tap water left to dry on glass at this concentration deposits a visible film within minutes, and the film is cumulative: each cleaning that ends in tap water adds a layer that the next cleaning has to get through first. Glass on a sprinkler line or under a runoff drip needs a maintenance interval, not just a better wash — the deposit is arriving faster than a cleaning schedule built around dust would predict.

Extremely HardHARD END

251+ mg/L

The hardest water in North America — Phoenix, Las Vegas, West Texas, much of the limestone Midwest. At this concentration calcium carbonate precipitates out of any water that touches the glass and dries, so what you are looking at is essentially limestone, growing one molecular layer at a time. Tap water cannot be part of the final pass under any circumstance, including "just a quick rinse." Above roughly 300 mg/L, buying distilled by the gallon stops making economic sense against a DI filter or a pure-water pole system, and a residential owner cleaning their own glass twice a year is usually better served by a service that already owns one.

By city

Hardest first — the order that matters, because the hard end is where the method has to change. Each figure is a service-area typical for the named utility. Within Texas the spread runs from Houston at 200 mg/L to El Paso at 420 — a difference big enough that the same bottle of cleaner behaves differently in each.

CITY / UTILITYBANDMG/L
El PasoEl Paso Water · blended surface and groundwaterExtremely Hard42024.5 gpg
San AntonioSan Antonio Water System · groundwaterExtremely Hard37521.9 gpg
DallasDallas Water Utilities · surface waterVery Hard23513.7 gpg
AustinAustin Water · surface waterVery Hard22012.9 gpg
Fort WorthFort Worth Water · surface waterVery Hard21512.6 gpg
HoustonHouston Public Works · surface waterVery Hard20011.7 gpg

This page is about Texas's water and nothing else. For how cleaning actually works in Texas across the year — climate, seasonal timing, the local contaminants, the housing stock — see the Texas cleaning guide.

For a figure at your own address rather than your city, the Hard Water Scorer takes a ZIP code. If you run a pure-water system, the TDS diagnostic reads the other end of the same problem.

Nearby in the South

Florida
110–290 mg/L
Oklahoma
80–500 mg/L
Louisiana
90–280 mg/L
Arkansas
80–340 mg/L

Where these numbers come from

USGS national hardness survey data and utility Consumer Confidence Reports, 2023 vintage. City figures are service-area typicals for the named utility, not readings from any one tap. State ranges are the lowest and highest typical municipal values across the state, so they bracket the populated area rather than describing an average resident. Where a state blends sources seasonally, the range is wider than any single address will ever see.

Private wells are outside all of it. A well is whatever the rock under it says, and the only number that describes one is a test of that tap. Have a reading that disagrees with this table? Send it to us — a number that contradicts the table is worth more than one that confirms it.