Central Illinois well water
Yellow or tea-colored water with a musty, earthy taste is one of the most common things well owners ask us about. It usually means tannins, and standard softening alone will not fix it. We test first, then build a system around what your water actually contains.
What we find in Central Illinois wells
Tannins are one of the more common things we test for in wells across Peoria, Tazewell, Woodford, and McLean counties, especially in areas with peat, marsh, or heavy organic content in the soil. Here is what to look for and what is actually happening in the water.
Tannins are organic compounds that leach into groundwater as rainwater passes through decaying leaves, peat, and other plant matter in the soil before reaching the aquifer. The result is water with a yellow, amber, or tea-like tint, even though the water is otherwise clear of sediment.
The same organic compounds that cause the color also affect taste and odor, often described as earthy, musty, or like steeped tea. This is separate from the rotten-egg smell of hydrogen sulfide and from metallic tastes caused by iron, though more than one can be present at once.
Tannins can leave a yellowish stain on porcelain fixtures, sinks, and light-colored laundry over repeated exposure. The staining is usually lighter and more yellow-toned than the reddish-brown staining iron leaves behind, which is one way we tell them apart before testing confirms it.
Standard water softening resin is built to exchange hardness minerals like calcium and magnesium for sodium. It is not designed to capture organic tannin molecules, so a conventional softener installed for hardness alone typically leaves tannin color and taste unaffected.
Wells with tannins frequently also have iron or hardness from the same geological conditions. Confirming which contaminants are actually present, and at what level, is what determines whether a single Ecomix-C system or a combination of treatment stages makes more sense.
Tannins are not regulated by the EPA as a health hazard and are generally treated as an aesthetic issue. That said, the same organic-rich conditions that produce tannins can sometimes accompany other water quality concerns, which is why we test broadly rather than treating for color alone.
Treatment systems
Tannin removal calls for a resin or process built for organics, not a standard softener. These are the approaches we use, matched to what your water test actually shows.
Ecomix-C is a multi-functional ion exchange resin formulated to capture tannins alongside hardness and iron in a single tank with one brine tank. For wells with combined tannin and hardness problems, which is common, this is typically the simplest and most cost-effective path rather than installing separate units.
Ask if Ecomix-C fits your water →Point-of-entry sediment filtration ahead of the tannin treatment stage protects downstream resin and equipment from particulate. Bag filters maintain more consistent flow over time than cartridge or string-wound filters, which restrict flow as they load up.
Ask about sediment filtration →For households that want the cleanest possible taste at the kitchen tap regardless of whole-home treatment, a certified RO system provides a final polishing stage. Certified under NSF/ANSI 58, IAPMO R&T, and CSA B483.1. American-made filters and membranes.
Learn more about RO systems →Tannins rarely show up alone. They are often found alongside iron and hardness from the same geological conditions. Competitors often address this with multiple separate treatment units, each requiring its own regenerant tank and service point. Ecomix-C is a multi-functional ion exchange resin that handles hardness, iron, manganese, and tannins in a single tank with a single brine tank.
What Ecomix-C addresses
Compared to multi-tank alternatives
Why testing comes first
Municipal water has published annual quality reports. Well water does not. The only way to confirm tannins, rather than iron or another contaminant producing a similar color, is to test for them specifically. Our lab panel includes tannin testing alongside iron, arsenic, lead, manganese, fluoride, and nitrate/nitrite.
We bring an in-house water analysis to your first visit at no cost. Our in-home analysis covers hardness, iron, TDS, pH, ammonia, and chlorine at no charge. We only recommend equipment, including Ecomix-C, when test results confirm it's the right fit.
Color alone does not confirm tannins. Iron, manganese, and sediment can all discolor water in different ways, and more than one can be present at once. We test for the specific contaminant before recommending Ecomix-C or anything else, so the system you get is sized for what is actually in your water.
If your well has never been tested, or if it has been several years since the last test, a current analysis is the starting point. Well water chemistry changes over time, particularly after weather events, drought, or changes in local land use.
(309) 258-2582 — call or text Mon-Fri 9am-4pm.
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173 Thunderbird Lane
East Peoria, IL 61611
Mon-Fri 9am-4pm
We serve well water customers throughout Peoria, Tazewell, Woodford, and McLean counties. Free water test on your first visit, no obligation.
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