WA10 St Helens
Near or below the UK average. Limescale builds slowly.
At 63 ppm, St Helens ranks near the UK's softest water areas — compare it against the hardest areas.
What this means for your home
Based on 63 ppm in St Helens (slightly hard water).
- Minor limescale may appear in kettles over time
- Soap lathers reasonably well
- Appliances generally unaffected
- Good balance of mineral taste
Should you soften the water in St Helens?
A verdict and running-cost estimate based on WA10's 63 ppm reading, for a typical 4-person household.
Water is soft to moderate, so limescale and soap costs are low and a softener rarely pays back.
Appliance impact at 63 ppm: negligible: appliances reach full expected life. Sized for a 4-person home; regenerates roughly every 43 days (estimate). Figures are conservative estimates and vary with household size and usage.
Hardness data for WA10
Sourced from United Utilities's published water-quality reports and public records.
Hardness measurements
| Parts per million (ppm CaCO₃) | 63 |
| Degrees Clark (°Clark) | 4.4 |
| Degrees French (°fH) | 6.3 |
| Degrees German (°dH) | 3.5 |
| Calcium (mg/L Ca²⁺) | 25 |
Supplier and area
Read the hardness explainer (most North West water is soft or very soft) and download the factsheet for conversion tables.
Other areas near St Helens
Common questions about WA10
What is the water hardness in WA10 St Helens?
Which water company supplies WA10?
Is the water in WA10 safe to drink?
How can I reduce water hardness in WA10?
What does 63 ppm water hardness mean?
What size water softener do I need in WA10?
How much does it cost to run a water softener in WA10?
Your St Helens water action plan
Enter your email for the short list of things worth doing at 63 ppm, and the upgrades you can safely ignore.
Check another postcode
Compare hardness across areas before moving or buying a softener.