Water Softeners in West Palm Beach, FL

Serving Palm Beach County

Love your home’s water quality with a new water softener. We provide excellent installation and service in West Palm Beach.

Benefits of Water Softeners in West Palm Beach, FL

Reasons to Choose SoFlo Clean Water

  • Add life to your appliances.
  • It will benefit your skin and hair.
  • Fewer plumbing repairs.
  • Benefit from cleaner dishes and brighter laundry.
  • About SoFlo Clean Water

    Your Local Palm Beach County Professionals

    We are a water softener provider in West Palm Beach, FL. With years in the business serving Palm Beach County, we focus on providing quality and customized service.

    Water Softener Installation

    Our Simple Process

  • Consultation: You have our undivided attention, and we will recommend the best system.
  • Installation: We will install your new water softener.
  • Maintenance: We will make sure it works before saying goodbye.
  • Ready to get started?

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    About SoFlo Clean Water

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    Water Softener Systems

    Improve Your Water Today with SoFlo Clean Water

    A water softener can be a game changer in your home. It provides cleaner water, shields appliances, and upgrades your daily life. Contact us at 561-539-1393 to learn more.

    The beginning of the historic period in south Florida is marked by Juan Ponce de León’s first contact with native people in 1513. Europeans found a thriving native population, which they categorized into separate tribes: the Mayaimi in the Lake Okeechobee Basin and the Jaega and Ais people in the East Okeechobee area and on the east coast north of the Tequesta. When the Spanish arrived, there were perhaps about 20,000 Native Americans in south Florida. By 1763, when the English gained control of Florida, the native peoples had all but been wiped out through war, enslavement, or European diseases.

    Other native peoples from Alabama and Georgia moved into Florida in the early 18th century. They were of varied ancestry, but Europeans called them all “Creeks.” In Florida, they were known as the Seminole and Miccosukee Indians. The Seminoles clashed with American settlers over land and over escaped slaves who found refuge among them. They resisted the government’s efforts to move them to the Indian Territory west of the Mississippi River. Between 1818 and 1858, three wars were fought between Seminoles and the United States government. By 1858, there were very few Seminoles remaining in Florida.

    The area that was to become West Palm Beach was settled in the late 1870s and 1880s by a few hundred settlers who called the vicinity “Lake Worth Country.” These settlers were a diverse community from different parts of the United States and the world. They included founding families such as the Potters and the Lainharts, who would go on to become leading members of the business community in the fledgling city. The first white settlers in Palm Beach County lived around Lake Worth, which at the time was an enclosed freshwater lake, named after Colonel William Jenkins Worth, who had fought in the Second Seminole War in Florida in 1842. Most settlers engaged in the growing of tropical fruits and vegetables for shipment to the north via Lake Worth and the Indian River. By 1890, the U.S. Census counted over 200 people settled along Lake Worth in the vicinity of what would become West Palm Beach. The area at this time also boasted a hotel, the “Cocoanut House”, a church, and a post office. The city was platted by Henry Flagler as a community to house the servants working in the two grand hotels on the neighboring island of Palm Beach, across Lake Worth in 1893, coinciding with the arrival of the Florida East Coast railroad. Flagler paid two area settlers, Captain Porter and Louie Hillhouse, a combined sum of $45,000 for the original town’s site, stretching from Clear Lake to Lake Worth.

    Learn more about West Palm Beach.