Karnataka’s groundwater tells two different stories. Along the coast — Mangaluru, Udupi, Karwar — laterite aquifers give soft, often acidic, iron-tinged water. Move inland to Bengaluru, Tumakuru, Kolar or the northern districts, and borewells turn hard and salt-heavy, coating geysers and kettles in white scale. This guide covers the inland problem — hardness and iron — with the government numbers behind it, and what actually fixes each one.
What the national groundwater report says about Karnataka
The Central Ground Water Board’s Annual Groundwater Quality Report (released December 2024, based on 15,259 samples collected nationwide) is blunt about Karnataka:
- Karnataka is among the three worst states for nitrate, with over 40% of sampled sources exceeding the 45 mg/L limit — against a national average of 19.8%.
- Iron exceeded the limit in 13.2% of samples nationally — and coastal Karnataka’s laterite belt is a documented hotspot, with a Mangalore city study finding up to 3.08 mg/L in some wards — ten times the limit.
- Fluoride exceeded limits in 9.04% of samples across 263 districts — an interior-Karnataka concern (coastal Dakshina Kannada tested safe on fluoride).
Hard water: what the numbers mean
Hardness is dissolved calcium and magnesium, measured as CaCO₃. The BIS standard sets 200 mg/L as the acceptable limit (600 permissible), and the WHO classes water above 180 mg/L as “very hard”. Two honest points the sales pitches skip:
- Hard water is not toxic. The WHO sets no health-based limit for hardness — calcium and magnesium in water are actually nutrients. The damage is to your house and comfort, not directly to your body.
- The damage is real and expensive. Scale coats heating elements (geysers work harder and die younger), narrows pipes, clogs shower heads, stiffens laundry, leaves spots on utensils and makes soap refuse to lather. Skin and hair feel dry and dull after every wash.
Iron: the stain-maker of the laterite belt
Iron above the 0.3 mg/L limit announces itself: reddish-brown stains on buckets, toilets and clothes, a metallic taste, and slimy deposits in tanks. Like hardness, iron at these levels is an aesthetic and operational problem rather than a toxicity risk — but it fouls RO membranes and UV chambers fast, which is why it must be removed before your purifier, not inside it: aeration or oxidising media converts dissolved iron into particles, and a catalytic filter traps them.
Softener vs purifier: two different jobs
| Water softener | RO/UV purifier | |
|---|---|---|
| Fixes | Hardness & scale (whole house) | Drinking-water safety (one point) |
| How | Ion exchange: swaps Ca/Mg for Na | Membrane + disinfection removes salts, microbes |
| Protects | Geysers, pipes, appliances, skin & hair | Your family’s health at the tap |
| Makes water drinkable? | No — softened water still needs purification for drinking | Yes — that is its job |
A complete setup for a hard-water home is therefore a whole-home softener at the inlet (PURYN builds manual and automatic units from 1,000 to 9,000 LPH, sized on-site) plus an RO+UV purifier in the kitchen — the RO also takes care of nitrate, which matters given Karnataka’s numbers above.
How to know what you have
Symptoms suggest, tests confirm: white crust on taps and kettle = hardness; brown stains = iron; salty taste = chloride/TDS; no symptoms at all ≠ safe (nitrate and bacteria are invisible). A five-minute on-site test measures TDS, pH, hardness and iron — PURYN does it free anywhere in and around Mangaluru, and our teams service 15 cities across India. Bring us the numbers from any lab report and we will size the fix honestly — if your water does not need a softener or an RO, we will tell you so.
Book a free water test · Explore water softeners · Call +91 97398 63919

