Calculate the annual operating cost of a reverse osmosis system including membrane replacements, pre/post filters, wasted water, and electricity.
Reverse osmosis (RO) systems produce some of the cleanest drinking water available at home, removing 95–99% of dissolved contaminants. However, they come with unique operating costs: membrane replacements every 2–3 years, pre- and post-filter changes, and significant water waste. For every gallon of purified water, a standard RO system sends 2–4 gallons down the drain.
Understanding the full operating cost helps you evaluate whether RO is the right choice for your household. The upfront system cost ($150–600 for under-sink models) is just the beginning. Annual operating costs include membrane replacement (amortized), four or more filter changes, and the cost of wasted water.
This calculator breaks down all RO operating expenses so you can see the true cost per gallon and compare it to alternative filtration methods or bottled water.
This analytical approach supports both immediate cost reduction and long-term sustainability goals, helping organizations balance economic and environmental priorities in their energy management.
RO systems waste 2–4 gallons for every gallon produced. This calculator reveals the full operating cost including wasted water, filter replacements, and membrane amortization. Regular monitoring of this value helps energy teams detect usage anomalies early and address equipment malfunctions or operational issues before they drive utility costs higher. Having accurate metrics readily available streamlines utility bill analysis, budget forecasting, and investment planning for energy efficiency projects and renewable energy installations.
Annual = Membrane/Years + Filters/Year × Price + (Produced × Waste_Ratio × 365 × Rate)
Result: $237/year
Membrane: $60 / 2 = $30/year. Filters: 4 × $12 = $48/year. Wasted water: 3 gal/day × 3 ratio = 9 gal waste/day × 365 = 3,285 gal/year. Water cost: 3,285/1000 × $6 = $19.71. Plus produced water: 1,095/1000 × $6 = $6.57. Total ≈ $104/year just consumables + ~$26 water.
RO forces water through a semipermeable membrane with pores so small that only water molecules pass through. Dissolved salts, metals, bacteria, and chemicals are rejected and flushed away. Pre-filters protect the membrane from sediment and chlorine damage.
At a 3:1 waste ratio and 3 gal/day production, an RO system wastes 3,285 gallons per year. At $6/1,000 gallons (plus sewer), that's about $20–40 in wasted water. A permeate pump ($60–100 one-time) can cut this waste by 75%, paying for itself in 2–3 years.
RO is the best choice when you need to remove dissolved solids (TDS), heavy metals, fluoride, nitrates, or pharmaceutical residues that carbon filters cannot address. If your only concern is chlorine taste, a simpler carbon filter is more efficient.
Standard RO systems waste 2–4 gallons for every 1 gallon produced. High-efficiency systems with permeate pumps reduce this to 1:1 or even 0.5:1, saving thousands of gallons per year.
RO membranes typically last 2–3 years with proper pre-filtration. Some high-quality membranes last 5 years. Replacement cost is $30–80 for residential systems.
Most RO systems have 3–5 filter stages: sediment pre-filter (every 6–12 months), carbon pre-filter (every 6–12 months), the RO membrane (every 2–3 years), and a carbon post-filter (every 12 months). Keeping detailed records of these calculations will streamline future planning and make it easier to track changes over time.
Yes. RO water is among the safest and cleanest drinking water. Some people add a remineralization filter to restore beneficial minerals (calcium, magnesium) that RO removes along with contaminants.
Per gallon, RO costs $0.05–$0.15 including waste water. Simple carbon filters cost $0.03–$0.10/gallon but remove fewer contaminants. For the level of purification RO provides, it is very cost-effective.
Yes. A permeate pump ($60–100) significantly reduces waste. Connecting waste water to irrigation or laundry also offsets the loss. Some zero-waste RO systems recirculate concentrate.