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frontpagephoinix | Staff posted Yesterday 01:53 PM
frontpagephoinix | Staff posted Yesterday 01:53 PM

Bluevua Countertop Reverse Osmosis Water Filter System + Extra Carafe

+ Free S&H

$338

$439

23% off
Amazon
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Bluevua Reverse Osmosis Drinking Water System via Amazon has Bluevua Countertop Reverse Osmosis Water Filter System + Extra Carafe (RO100ROPOT(UV)) on sale for $338.02. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for finding this deal.

Details:
  • Capacity: Includes an extra borosilicate glass carafe for double water storage
  • Filtration: 6-stage advanced RO system with 0.0001μm membrane, UV light, and remineralization filter; reduces TDS, PFOA, PFOS, Chlorine, Fluoride, Arsenic, Lead, and more
  • Design: Plug-and-play countertop system with no installation required; high-quality borosilicate glass carafe prevents secondary pollution
  • Efficiency: 2:1 pure-to-drain water ratio; auto power-saving standby mode when idle
  • Monitoring: LED display tracks filter life and water quality
  • Sustainability: ClimatePartner certified; reduces plastic waste by providing bottled-quality water at home

Editor's Notes

Written by Neo45 | Staff

Original Post

Written by phoinix | Staff
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Bluevua Reverse Osmosis Drinking Water System via Amazon has Bluevua Countertop Reverse Osmosis Water Filter System + Extra Carafe (RO100ROPOT(UV)) on sale for $338.02. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for finding this deal.

Details:
  • Capacity: Includes an extra borosilicate glass carafe for double water storage
  • Filtration: 6-stage advanced RO system with 0.0001μm membrane, UV light, and remineralization filter; reduces TDS, PFOA, PFOS, Chlorine, Fluoride, Arsenic, Lead, and more
  • Design: Plug-and-play countertop system with no installation required; high-quality borosilicate glass carafe prevents secondary pollution
  • Efficiency: 2:1 pure-to-drain water ratio; auto power-saving standby mode when idle
  • Monitoring: LED display tracks filter life and water quality
  • Sustainability: ClimatePartner certified; reduces plastic waste by providing bottled-quality water at home

Editor's Notes

Written by Neo45 | Staff

Original Post

Written by phoinix | Staff

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15 Comments

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Yesterday 10:29 PM
59 Posts
Joined Feb 2013
MrKQQL143Yesterday 10:29 PM
59 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank MrKQQL143

One of the best investments you can make for improving your overall health.
1
Today 10:32 AM
61 Posts
Joined May 2016
fuzzyprabhakToday 10:32 AM
61 Posts
Thanks
Today 10:37 AM
189 Posts
Joined Dec 2004
cgauxusToday 10:37 AM
189 Posts
Ditto.... best investment have 2 of them.

The filters last 2years.
Today 10:38 AM
17 Posts
Joined Jul 2016
etfreindToday 10:38 AM
17 Posts
How is this different- https://a.co/d/0fb0zxiC
Today 10:50 AM
22 Posts
Joined Feb 2017
JeremyB3000Today 10:50 AM
22 Posts
Quote from etfreind :
How is this different- https://a.co/d/0fb0zxiC
Looks like maybe the less expensive one you linked lacks UV sterilization & the 2nd carafe.
Today 10:52 AM
22 Posts
Joined Feb 2017
JeremyB3000Today 10:52 AM
22 Posts
Is this the best brand of countertop RO system? Are there others I should consider?
Today 10:54 AM
533 Posts
Joined Sep 2011
jweezyfosheezyToday 10:54 AM
533 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank jweezyfosheezy

Quote from JeremyB3000 :
Is this the best brand of countertop RO system? Are there others I should consider?
I have the Aquatru RO system, 3rd party tested and at the time one of the best. Haven't been looking up RO systems so I can't speak on this brand.
1

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Today 12:40 PM
1,183 Posts
Joined Dec 2009
K9stylToday 12:40 PM
1,183 Posts
I bought this May 2025 for $327 without the extra carafe. Been using it everyday ever since, without using the mineral filter to add minerals back into it. I figure I have enough minerals from the other things I consume that I don't need to remineralize the water. Basically it's been a little bit of an adjustment from a big berkey that I came from. I make water in batches now, filling the carafe. It's a little inconvenient but not that big a deal. I just end up pouring extra water into an empty picture in my refrigerator and repeatedly making batches. The machine does waste a lot of water, about half of the water ends up being tossed each time you make a batch. For me, I end up using it to water plants or wash fruit so I don't just pour it down drain. Overall I'm really happy with it and it seems to work well
2
Today 12:48 PM
1,525 Posts
Joined Aug 2007
paulk11087Today 12:48 PM
1,525 Posts
Quote from K9styl :
I bought this May 2025 for $327 without the extra carafe. Been using it everyday ever since, without using the mineral filter to add minerals back into it. I figure I have enough minerals from the other things I consume that I don't need to remineralize the water. Basically it's been a little bit of an adjustment from a big berkey that I came from. I make water in batches now, filling the carafe. It's a little inconvenient but not that big a deal. I just end up pouring extra water into an empty picture in my refrigerator and repeatedly making batches. The machine does waste a lot of water, about half of the water ends up being tossed each time you make a batch. For me, I end up using it to water plants or wash fruit so I don't just pour it down drain. Overall I'm really happy with it and it seems to work well
Any reason you switched from a berkey water filter?
Today 01:32 PM
2,522 Posts
Joined Feb 2016
zhalieToday 01:32 PM
2,522 Posts
sponsored?
1
Today 02:13 PM
359 Posts
Joined May 2018
WhatDatToday 02:13 PM
359 Posts
Ordered. Used bottled water all the time. Ran the numbers of 4 gallons bottled water/day for drinking/cooking. This unit pays for itself in 2-3 months.
2
Today 02:24 PM
3,211 Posts
Joined May 2008
ListedGuruToday 02:24 PM
3,211 Posts
How would this compare to getting a RO system installed at my house? I looked into having an RO system installed a few years ago and I think the cost was around $1000 and the filters last about a year and run $150 or so to replace (IIRC). I forget how many filters there are but I know it was a series of filters. There would be a tap next to the sink that would dispense the water into a glass or whatever you need to fill. I would assume an installed RO system here at my house would also waste a lot of water?

We are currently using a Brita pitcher with the Elite filters and the water does taste and smell way better than the tap water we have here (municipal, not well water).

Thoughts?
Today 03:22 PM
15,847 Posts
Joined Jan 2010
Ride_The_SkyToday 03:22 PM
15,847 Posts
How is this compared to Waterdrop? I really find this kind of upfront investment too high to take a chance with these, but if you drink a lot of water it might be worth overall.
Today 03:27 PM
83 Posts
Joined Jul 2015
wreckemtechToday 03:27 PM
83 Posts
Quote from ListedGuru :
How would this compare to getting a RO system installed at my house? I looked into having an RO system installed a few years ago and I think the cost was around $1000 and the filters last about a year and run $150 or so to replace (IIRC). I forget how many filters there are but I know it was a series of filters. There would be a tap next to the sink that would dispense the water into a glass or whatever you need to fill. I would assume an installed RO system here at my house would also waste a lot of water?

We are currently using a Brita pitcher with the Elite filters and the water does taste and smell way better than the tap water we have here (municipal, not well water).

Thoughts?
If your tap water quality is decent, then a whole house RO system is likely overkill. The total cost (install + maintenance) simply isn't worth it. Also you will have a reduction in water pressure on any taps fed from the RO system. For people with really hard tap water, the cost of whole house RO is offset by the savings on plumbing problems from scaling).

An under sink RO system seems like the best value if you just want very clean water for drinking and cooking.

These countertop solutions seem like a limited use case. Probably a good option for renters or when there's not enough room under the sink for a built in system.

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Today 03:38 PM
619 Posts
Joined Nov 2017
TonyD7909Today 03:38 PM
619 Posts
For those of you who own this unit, how do you re-add minerals to the water to make it taste really good? I bought this same exact unit 3? years ago and I had to get an extra mineral pitcher because the Bluevua strips the water of all mineral content.

That secondary mineral pitcher produced "meh" tasting water. I have had amazing well water in the past and could never get this water to taste anywhere near it. Thanks for any tips you can provide.

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