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ZeroWater 20-Cup Ready-Pour 5-Stage Water Filter Pitcher 0 TDS for Improved Tap Water Taste - IAPMO Certified to Reduce Lead, Chromium, and PFOA/PFOS

  • Based on 14,245 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
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Arrives Sunday, Jun 2
Order within 7 hours and 11 minutes
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Style: 20-Cup Dispenser


Features

  • Filtered Water Dispenser: The 20 Cup 5-stage Ready-Pour Water Filter Dispenser is perfect for home or office; Ready-Pour technology lets you dispense delicious water while reservoir is still filtering without lifting due to one-hand, push and pour spout. Change filter when included meter reads 006.
  • 5-Stage Filtration: Removes virtually all total dissolved solids (TDS) for the purest tasting water; Total Dissolved Solids are organic and inorganic materials, such as metals, minerals, salts, and ions dissolved in water.
  • IAPMO certified and BPA free: The filter is IAPMO certified to reduce PFOA/PFOS, lead, chromium and mercury. All material is BPA free
  • Including: 20-cup Water Dispenser, 1 ZeroWater 5-Stage Filter with Ion Exchange Technology and a Free TDS Meter
  • Eco-Friendly: Save up to 110 single-use plastic bottles per filter or up to 660 bottles a year while enjoying the purest tasting water

Brand: ZeroWater


Special Feature: Change Filter Indicator, Compatible With Zero Water Replacement Filters, IAPMO Certified Water Filter Pitcher, Ergonomic Handle, Included TDS Meter See more


Product Dimensions: 10.63"L x 5.5"W x 11.75"H


Package Information: Bottle


Power Source: Manual Winding


Item Weight: 3.3 Pounds


Model Name: 20-Cup Ready-Pour Dispenser


Manufacturer: ZeroWater


Brand: ZeroWater


Special Feature: Change Filter Indicator, Compatible With Zero Water Replacement Filters, IAPMO Certified Water Filter Pitcher, Ergonomic Handle, Included TDS Meter


Product Dimensions: 10.63"L x 5.5"W x 11.75"H


Material: Plastic


Capacity: 4.7 Liters


Included Components: 20-Cup Dispenser, 5-Stage Water Filter, TDS Meter


Package Information: Bottle


Purification Method: Ion Exchange


Power Source: Manual Winding


Item Weight: 3.3 Pounds


Model Name: 20-Cup Ready-Pour Dispenser


Manufacturer: ZeroWater


Item Weight: 3.3 pounds


Country of Origin: Mexico


Item model number: ZD-20RP-N


Date First Available: January 7, 2020


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, Jun 2

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Worthwhile for peace of mind
The 5 stage filter is an unbeatable feature. Easy to set uo and attractive. Works as described, the water tastes fine. Highly recommended.
Reviewed in the United States on April 7, 2024 by Svengali

  • Nice water container
Nice product, however, I am unable to use it in my refractor as I had planned, since it is taller than I had thought. Lesson Learned, Measure first.
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2024 by Pamela Gallagher

  • Value for Money and performance
I have bought numerous filters, from faucet head ones to a plethora of one's that go in the fridge and honestly no other has gotten my water as clean as this one is. It takes a long time to filter through, but the wait is worth it. I have tested the water and there is SIGNIFICANT difference in the purification. And the convenience of the water spout is great. I love that I don't have to lift it out at all in order to get water from it. 10/10 for me and my house! ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2024 by Sunshine

  • Not ergonomic and expensive over time!
I've had this filter for a while now. I bought it to replace my Brita filter, of the same countertop style. I didn't like the way the Brita filter measured filter life. Every time you fill the lid, or check the water level, the Brita counts that as filter usage, and adjusts the replacement time accordingly. I was initially very pleased with the ZeroWater 20 Cup 5-stage Water Filter Dispenser. Now, however, I am a bit disappointed. I'm in an area where the tap water is not palatable at all! Hence the reason for needing a filter. Bottled water gets expensive, and the bottles are bad for the environment (even though I recycle). Issues: The ZeroWater never completely empties the holding tank into the filtered water tank. there is always water sitting in the top reservoir, no matter how long I leave it sitting. Not sure if this is by design, but it's a bit frustrating. The filters screw into the base of the fill reservoir, so you have to take the reservoir completely off the tank in order to replace the filter. Very awkward. Not great. The handle to dispense the water is also uncomfortable to use, especially for anyone with dexterity issues or arthritis (which my mother has). She has difficulty holding the button while the water dispenses. It will not turn like a spigot and just dispense until you turn it off. The position of the water dispensing/opening is also awkward. We have to pull the unit forward to dispense the water into a cup/bottle, to keep it from getting all over the countertop or floor. Also, the filters do not last long! The water in my area is hard water, so I'm sure that is exacerbating the issue. However, we are going through a filter about every 3 weeks, and only drink about 1gallon/128 ounces of water each day total. (We're working on that!). If we were drinking a gallon per day, per person as we should be, these filters wouldn't last a week. That's extremely expensive, given these filters range from $15 to $20 bucks each. We're supplementing this filter by getting bottled water from the store again, just to keep the cost down. Good stuff: When it works, its awesome! I prefer the taste of ZeroWater filtered water over that of the Brita Ultralife filters. However, it gets expensive fast. We even bought a case of filters, to get the price down, and they arrived wet, and left the water tasting worse than tap! We sent those back. Do the math on your water intake vs filtration needs and see if its worth it for your household. If money is no object, you may want to consider this or a Berki. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 4, 2023 by BunnyLove2

  • Water taste great
I got the 20 cup dispenser and the water tasted great. The tap water tasted so strong of chlorine and other things. This completely cleaned all of that out and it tastes great. The dispenser I got began leaking after a week and I emailed zero water directly. Their customer service was top notch and I got a new dispenser in a few days. I love this thing ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2024 by Daniel b.

  • How to extend life of filters.
UPDATE 4 (final): I could not get these filters to last longer than about 30% by using the prior (old) filter to pre-filter to a new one. So I bought a reverse osmosis system ($200) which gets TDS down to 18 ppm and other reported this same amount (about 225 ppm TDS input). But my daughter still said it tasted a little bad. So I'm using a zero filter to filter the output from the reverse osmosis and it's 0 ppm. The strange thing is that I'm using an old zero water filter that was starting to show 5 ppm. It went to 0 ppm after a few days and for I think 2 months now, it's output is still 0 ppm. (about 0.5 gallons per day) UPDATE: After starting this, I used the TDS meter to check the output of the top filter once a day. It slowly raised to 6 and then I stopped checking. A week later (about 1 week after I started doing it) the TDS showed 250 while the tap water was 200. It also tasted bad (out of the top filter, not the bottom). So it seem to have "breakthrough" a lot worse than I expected [see up date 3 below]. The day before I squeezed the sides of the top filter to get air out and I wonder if that let gunk that had been caught over the previous several weeks and in the top part of the filter had got around the sand by flowing down the sides. UPDATE 2: I broke the used filter apart to try to see why it started having TDS as high as the tap water. Inside, on the first 1/3 or 1/4 is an activated carbon layer. The rest is "sand". I didn't see any other stages, just the sand that looks interesting and weird when light reflects off of it. There's a thin white "filter" at the bottom, but that's just keeping the sand from coming out. I looked at it under a microscope & knew what it is. I visited a 3M plant in Alabama where they made it & took home a sample. They're really small, very smooth, hollow glass beads that they sprinkle on paints to make things like traffic signs reflective to on-coming lights. There's only a certain angle that solid rain drops reflect light to make a rainbow. The optics of a hollow sphere reflect back to the light. They may use it as a filter because the smooth round shape is easy to clean (if not bought perfectly clean form the manufacturing process), and no super-fine particles are in it like natural sand, although the diameter varies a lot to pretty small which helps in compacting & filtering. It's neat stuff. UPDATE 3: Seeing what it is, I rinsed the old "sand" in a pan with clean water from the new filter. The TDS of the rinse went from about 100 ppm to 0 ppm in 6 rinses. I also tried soap and hot water. At first it seems to filter down to 20 ppm, but then in only 1 cycle of water it was up to 150 ppm, so the top 1/2 layer of activated carbon (and I think sand) that I had removed must have been doing a lot more. See image. After TDS meter says 4 ppm after a few weeks (250 ppm tap water) my daughter complains (she's super sensitive) that it's not perfect anymore. So to extend life of filter I move it to the top holder and put a new filter in bottom. Top drains into bottom so old filter pre-cleans before going to new filter, so it should last a LOT longer. I'm just now trying it, so I don't know but simple math says it should last at least 10x longer. It depends on what the "breakthrough profile" which depends on the concentration. For example, the output water of the top filter could suddenly jump from 6 ppm to be more like tap water. Or the small particles coming through the top should find it easier to make their way through the new filter, so it could make it through faster in the bottom. Then there's the "fishy smell" people talk about. If that's something in the filter form using it too long, then the top filter could start causing that and possibly it's something that the bottom filter can't filter out. But my impression is the the fishy smell was in the rest of the container and they just need to clean it, especially the valve. Maybe just run 1 part bleach to 10 parts water through it for a couple of minutes instead of trying to take it apart. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 18, 2022 by Scott Roberts Scott Roberts

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