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expired Posted by TheCheetosMan • Aug 1, 2023
expired Posted by TheCheetosMan • Aug 1, 2023

6-Cup Brita Water Filter Pitcher w/ 1 Standard Filter (White)

$14

$24

41% off
Amazon
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Update: This popular deal is still available

Amazon has 6-Cup Brita Water Filter Pitcher w/ 1 Standard Filter (White) for $13.98. Shipping is free with Prime or on orders $25+.

Thanks to Deal Hunter TheCheetosMan for finding this deal.

Note: Available to ship in 1-2 days.

Product Features:
  • This Denali water pitcher is made without BPA, easy to fill, fits in most fridges and can hold 6 cups of water, enough to fill 2 24-ounce reusable water bottles; Packaging may vary
  • This space efficient Brita Denali pitcher is fridge friendly, features an easy-fill lid to make refills a breeze; Height 9.37 inch ; Width 4.45 inch ; Length 9.8 inch ; Weight 0.996 pounds
  • Water without the single-use bottle waste; by using to Brita, you can replace up to 1,800 16.9 fl oz single-use plastic water bottles a year
  • Compatible with Elite and Standard water filters; for great tasting water, replace your Standard filter after 40 gallons or approximately every 2 months

Editor's Notes

Written by megakimcheelove | Staff
  • About this product:
    • Rating of 4.6 stars overall from over 24,000 Amazon customer reviews.
  • About this store:
  • Additional note:

Original Post

Written by TheCheetosMan
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Update: This popular deal is still available

Amazon has 6-Cup Brita Water Filter Pitcher w/ 1 Standard Filter (White) for $13.98. Shipping is free with Prime or on orders $25+.

Thanks to Deal Hunter TheCheetosMan for finding this deal.

Note: Available to ship in 1-2 days.

Product Features:
  • This Denali water pitcher is made without BPA, easy to fill, fits in most fridges and can hold 6 cups of water, enough to fill 2 24-ounce reusable water bottles; Packaging may vary
  • This space efficient Brita Denali pitcher is fridge friendly, features an easy-fill lid to make refills a breeze; Height 9.37 inch ; Width 4.45 inch ; Length 9.8 inch ; Weight 0.996 pounds
  • Water without the single-use bottle waste; by using to Brita, you can replace up to 1,800 16.9 fl oz single-use plastic water bottles a year
  • Compatible with Elite and Standard water filters; for great tasting water, replace your Standard filter after 40 gallons or approximately every 2 months

Editor's Notes

Written by megakimcheelove | Staff
  • About this product:
    • Rating of 4.6 stars overall from over 24,000 Amazon customer reviews.
  • About this store:
  • Additional note:

Original Post

Written by TheCheetosMan

Community Voting

Deal Score
+55
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Price Intelligence

Model: Brita Water Filter Pitcher for Tap and Drinking Water with 1 Standard Filter, Lasts 2 Months, 6-Cup Capacity, BPA Free, White

Deal History 

Sort: Most Recent
Post Date Sold By Sale Price Activity
03/31/25Amazon$15
1
02/04/25Amazon$15
2
12/21/23Amazon$17
1

Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 7/5/2025, 12:57 AM
Sold By Sale Price
Amazon$24.92

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Top Comments

thefoggybay
697 Posts
120 Reputation
Brita and PUR are sub par filters, esp. if you want to be protected from PFAs so in the news lately. Zero Water products are not much more and Clearly Filtered are about twice as much as Zero Water products but both have far superior 5 stage rather than 2 stage filter systems, and Zero Water is NSF certified (couldn't find if Clearly Filtered was so got Zero Water).

I did this research last week for what it's worth - hope that's helpful.
Wasser
3580 Posts
164 Reputation
Dunno man. Brita replacement filter $5, ZeroWater replacement filter $12.
Cymrian
293 Posts
66 Reputation
I agree, and to make my Zero Water last longer, I first run it through a Brita since they are way cheaper.

64 Comments

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Aug 2, 2023
1,660 Posts
Joined Oct 2009
Aug 2, 2023
dealnabber
Aug 2, 2023
1,660 Posts

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Quote from thefoggybay :
Brita and PUR are sub par filters, esp. if you want to be protected from PFAs so in the news lately. Zero Water products are not much more
Yeah if you're ok with replacing the ZeroWater filter every 15 gallons. The filters are not cheap either (about $12 each if bought in bulk quantity, otherwise $15 each), so the costs add up very, very fast.
Last edited by dealnabber August 1, 2023 at 09:07 PM.
1
Aug 2, 2023
404 Posts
Joined Dec 2005
Aug 2, 2023
n00bcak3
Aug 2, 2023
404 Posts
Quote from thefoggybay :
Brita and PUR are sub par filters, esp. if you want to be protected from PFAs so in the news lately. Zero Water products are not much more and Clearly Filtered are about twice as much as Zero Water products but both have far superior 5 stage rather than 2 stage filter systems, and Zero Water is NSF certified (couldn't find if Clearly Filtered was so got Zero Water).

I did this research last week for what it's worth - hope that's helpful.
I went down the rabbit hole of water filters and comparing and contrasting various kinds of filters and technologies. I have a Brita filter pitcher. Learned that Brita and Pur were probably meh/par filters at best. Then I went into multistage filtration medias, reverse osmosis, UV treatments - pros and cons, costs, space saving, etc.

Long story short- I upgraded from a $20 Brita filter to a $1700 whole house 4-stage plus sediment filter from Springwell with a million-gallon filtration capacity. Lol

Also whomever said (reverse osmosis) RO is the best - I disagree. I stayed away from RO because the waste rate is like 70%+, it takes up a ton of space under the sink, you have to drill another hole in your countertops, and there's quite a bit of evidence that RO'ed water is actually worse for you than regular tap water. Hard pass on RO for me.
3
Aug 2, 2023
11,650 Posts
Joined Feb 2011
Aug 2, 2023
mojohnnybravo
Aug 2, 2023
11,650 Posts
Quote from n00bcak3 :
I went down the rabbit hole of water filters and comparing and contrasting various kinds of filters and technologies. I have a Brita filter pitcher. Learned that Brita and Pur were probably meh/par filters at best. Then I went into multistage filtration medias, reverse osmosis, UV treatments - pros and cons, costs, space saving, etc.

Long story short- I upgraded from a $20 Brita filter to a $1700 whole house 4-stage plus sediment filter from Springwell with a million-gallon filtration capacity. Lol

Also whomever said (reverse osmosis) RO is the best - I disagree. I stayed away from RO because the waste rate is like 70%+, it takes up a ton of space under the sink, you have to drill another hole in your countertops, and there's quite a bit of evidence that RO'ed water is actually worse for you than regular tap water. Hard pass on RO for me.
not only that, RO removes EVERYTHING from the water, the minerals we actually need also.
Aug 2, 2023
19,022 Posts
Joined Sep 2003
Aug 2, 2023
beowulf7
Aug 2, 2023
19,022 Posts
Quote from dealnabber :
Brita standard: 40 gallons
Brita Longlast/Elite: 120 gallons

ZeroWater: a paltry 15 gallons
Holy crap so not only is it a lot more expensive, its filtering capacitors greatly reduced. That's terrible.
1
Aug 2, 2023
1,660 Posts
Joined Oct 2009
Aug 2, 2023
dealnabber
Aug 2, 2023
1,660 Posts
Quote from beowulf7 :
Holy crap so not only is it a lot more expensive, its filtering capacitors greatly reduced. That's terrible.
Exactly. You pay ZeroWater an insanely overpriced $12 to $15 for a filter that stops working after just 15 gallons (they try to claim 20, but most reviewers get no more than 15). You'll be lucky to squeeze 2 weeks of use out of each. Terrible bang for your buck.
Last edited by dealnabber August 1, 2023 at 09:21 PM.
Aug 2, 2023
3,453 Posts
Joined Jan 2010
Aug 2, 2023
Zelo
Aug 2, 2023
3,453 Posts
Quote from Cymrian :
I agree, and to make my Zero Water last longer, I first run it through a Brita since they are way cheaper.
Thanks for the idea I just might go this route. How much time does it take to go through both filters and allow water to get cold?
Aug 2, 2023
293 Posts
Joined Oct 2014
Aug 2, 2023
Cymrian
Aug 2, 2023
293 Posts
Quote from Zelo :
Thanks for the idea I just might go this route. How much time does it take to go through both filters and allow water to get cold?
Maybe 10 minutes tops to go through both filters. Unsure how long for it to get cold in the fridge since I drink it at room temperature. Maybe another 30 minutes on top of that? So, 40 in total? I'm totally guessing, though. For sure, it is less than 10 minutes to go through both filters. It's pretty quick, and I replace my zerowater maybe once every 1.5 months? And Brita every 3 months ish. However, it is just me, and I don't use them all the time.

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Aug 2, 2023
1,133 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
Aug 2, 2023
caranddriver
Aug 2, 2023
1,133 Posts
Trying one as I could use a smaller water pitcher for small fridge and my older Brita pitcher white plastic top is crumbling.

Has anyone seen review actually testing elite vs standard Brita filter?
Aug 2, 2023
2,489 Posts
Joined Aug 2008
Aug 2, 2023
Avi20072008
Aug 2, 2023
2,489 Posts
ZERO water got greedy. Soon they will lose everything.
Aug 2, 2023
1,677 Posts
Joined Feb 2007
Aug 2, 2023
techie333
Aug 2, 2023
1,677 Posts
Quote from n00bcak3 :
I went down the rabbit hole of water filters and comparing and contrasting various kinds of filters and technologies. I have a Brita filter pitcher. Learned that Brita and Pur were probably meh/par filters at best. Then I went into multistage filtration medias, reverse osmosis, UV treatments - pros and cons, costs, space saving, etc.

Long story short- I upgraded from a $20 Brita filter to a $1700 whole house 4-stage plus sediment filter from Springwell with a million-gallon filtration capacity. Lol

Also whomever said (reverse osmosis) RO is the best - I disagree. I stayed away from RO because the waste rate is like 70%+, it takes up a ton of space under the sink, you have to drill another hole in your countertops, and there's quite a bit of evidence that RO'ed water is actually worse for you than regular tap water. Hard pass on RO for me.
Sir this is a Wendys....
3
8
Aug 2, 2023
77 Posts
Joined Nov 2005
Aug 2, 2023
prettywomen
Aug 2, 2023
77 Posts
Does anybody have any information on Waterdrop filter/pitcher available on Amazon?
Aug 2, 2023
116 Posts
Joined Dec 2021
Aug 2, 2023
VioletCaption5716
Aug 2, 2023
116 Posts
Quote from Wasser :
Dunno man. Brita replacement filter $5, ZeroWater replacement filter $12.
One is effective, the other is inexpensive. Choose wisely.
3
Aug 2, 2023
134 Posts
Joined Jan 2005

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Aug 2, 2023
3,580 Posts
Joined Jan 2006
Aug 2, 2023
Wasser
Aug 2, 2023
3,580 Posts
Quote from VioletCaption5716 :
One is effective, the other is inexpensive. Choose wisely.
Quote from et5142 :
There is always the option of not being a snowflake and just drinking tap water, too. no cost, and good for the immune system.
I figure between filtering out everything, and drinking from streams and lakes how they used to, there's gotta be a sensible middle way. For me, that's using the cheap-ish Brita filters and tap water. Wave

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Aug 2, 2023
404 Posts
Joined Dec 2005
Aug 2, 2023
n00bcak3
Aug 2, 2023
404 Posts
Quote from et5142 :
There is always the option of not being a snowflake and just drinking tap water, too. no cost, and good for the immune system.

I used to be along this line of thinking as well - damn pussies who can't even drink water straight from the tap - what a joke.

But now I've got a pregnant wife with a little one on the way (obviously) - so the thought of lead, PFAs/PFOAs, and pesticides in our drinking water seemed like easy justification for water filtration and a small measure to take if it meant less risk of birth defects or longer term ailments. Lead is definitely known to cause birth defects and learning disabilities in kids. PFAs/PFOAs are still being studied but preliminary studies don't seem very comforting.

We've got a dog and some of the chemicals in normal tap water is known to be bad for them as they age - I think relating to organs and joints.

And then from an economical standpoint - medical bills aside, the removal of various minerals like calcium, magnesium, chlorine, etc in the water lines also allow appliances to run longer due to less sediment and fouling of water lines on refrigerators, dishwashers, hot water heaters, washing machines, etc. which would theoretically extend their operational lifetimes.

I'm in Atlanta and I've noticed a water stains in the shower and in sinks turning orange in color over time prior to filtration - which means Georgia clay sediment is definitely in the water. We had a big freeze last winter (Pipe-pocalypse), which broke lots of water pipes around the city lasting from Christmas and into the New Year which I'm sure introduced of contaminants into the water system - that lead to several boil water advisories.

I know I sound like a water filter sales brochure, and maybe I am a snowflake, but quality water coming from my house for drinking, cooking, brushing teeth, and even showering gives me a little bit of peace of mind. To me, this is low hanging fruit.
Last edited by n00bcak3 August 2, 2023 at 09:49 AM.

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