Denise Bell, Licensed Esthetician · 15 years
Founder, 5 Circle Skin Care — Westlake, Austin TX
Austin's water carries enough dissolved minerals to leave a fine residue on your skin after every wash. That film raises your skin's surface pH, weakens the barrier, and blocks the products you paid good money for from absorbing. The fix usually isn't a new serum — it's changing how you cleanse and rinse. Here's exactly what to do.
Is Austin's water actually hard?
Here's the honest version, because the internet will give you five different numbers. Austin Water officially classifies the city supply as moderately hard — averaging around 4.9 grains per gallon, roughly 84 ppm. That's softer than San Antonio or Dallas, which run notoriously high.
But "moderate" on a utility report and "moderate" on your face are two different things. Central Texas sits on limestone, and plenty of at-the-tap tests — especially out here in Westlake and the Hill Country, where homes pull from harder sources — read well above the city average. So I'll put it plainly: if you're seeing chalky spots on your shower glass and your cleanser won't lather the way it did back home, your skin is meeting those minerals too. The exact grain count matters less than what it's doing to your barrier.
alt text: "Hard water mineral spotting on a shower door in Austin, Texas"
What hard water does to your skin barrier
Two things happen, and both are invisible until your skin starts complaining.
First, it leaves a residue. The calcium and magnesium in hard water bind to the foaming agents in most cleansers and form an insoluble film — the same "soap scum" you scrub off your tub, except now it's on your face. It doesn't fully rinse away. It sits there.
Second, that film changes your skin's chemistry. Healthy skin lives at a slightly acidic pH, around 4.7 to 5.5 — that's the acid mantle doing its job. Mineral residue pushes that pH up, and research has linked hard water to a weakened skin barrier and a higher risk of eczema and sensitivity, especially when you're using a high-foaming cleanser. A compromised barrier means more water loss, more flaking, and more reactivity.
The serum didn't stop working. It's sitting on top of a mineral film instead of sinking in.
That's the whole "$200 serum" mystery. Your actives can't get where they're going through a layer of soap scum. You're not under-buying. You're under-rinsing.
3 signs your routine is fighting your water
- Your skin feels tight or "squeaky" right after cleansing. That squeak isn't clean — it's stripped. A good cleanse should leave skin soft and comfortable, never taut.
- You're layering hydrating products and still flaky or dull. If serums and moisturizers aren't "taking," a mineral film is likely blocking them at the door.
- Products pill, ball up, or won't absorb. When what you apply rolls off instead of sinking in, the surface underneath is the problem — not the product on top.
Recognize two of the three? Your water is in the routine whether you invited it or not. The good news: this is one of the cheapest skin problems to fix.
What to actually change
You don't need to re-buy your whole shelf. You need to change how you clean the canvas. Four moves, in order of impact:
1. Swap your foaming cleanser for an oil or low-foam cleanser
This is the big one. Oil cleansers don't react with hard-water minerals the way foaming surfactants do, so there's no scum to leave behind — they lift makeup, SPF, and the day's grime and rinse clean. My Naked Cleansing Oil was built for exactly this: it melts everything off without stripping, so your barrier stays intact and your next steps can actually work.
2. Add a weekly reset to lift the buildup
Once a week, clear the deck. A gentle clay-and-acid treatment lifts the mineral residue and dead cells that dull your skin and block absorption, so your serums land on fresh skin again. My Aqua Masque does this without leaving you tight. (New to exfoliating acids? Here's my plain-English guide to AHA vs BHA.)
3. Seal the barrier while skin is damp
A barrier that's been fighting hard water needs help holding water in. Right after cleansing, while your skin is still slightly damp, lock everything in with a moisturizer that supports the barrier rather than just coating it. My Glacial Moisturizer is my go-to for dry, reactive, hard-water skin.
4. The cheap hardware wins
A quality shower filter reduces some of the minerals and chlorine that dry you out — worth it if you're reactive. And if you already have a whole-home softener, your skin is a quiet beneficiary. But to be clear: you do not need to buy a water softener for your face. The cleanser swap does most of the work.
| Step | The problem in hard water | The swap |
|---|---|---|
| Cleanse | Foaming cleansers bind with minerals and leave residue | Oil or low-foam cleanser |
| Exfoliate | Buildup dulls skin and blocks absorption | Weekly clay + gentle acid reset |
| Hydrate | Weakened barrier loses water fast | Barrier-supporting moisturizer on damp skin |
| Rinse | Mineral-heavy tap water re-deposits film | Shower filter (optional final splash of filtered water) |
My Westlake client protocol
This is the routine I actually put reactive, hard-water clients on. Simple on purpose — consistency beats complexity every time.
Naked Cleansing Oil
Melts off the day and the mineral film without stripping — no scum, no tightness.
Ritual Masque
Lifts buildup and dead cells so your serums actually absorb again.
Shop the masqueGlacial Moisturizer
Barrier-supporting hydration built for dry, reactive, hard-water skin.
Shop the moisturizerAustin hard water & skin: FAQ
Does Austin have hard water or soft water?
Austin Water classifies its supply as moderately hard — about 4.9 grains per gallon (~84 ppm). But Central Texas sits on limestone, and many at-the-tap and Hill Country readings run higher. For your skin, what matters isn't the exact number; it's that there are enough minerals to leave a residue after every wash.
Can hard water cause breakouts or acne?
Not on its own — but the mineral-and-cleanser residue it leaves behind can sit on skin, mix with oil, and disrupt the barrier in a way that makes congestion and irritation more likely, especially with a high-foaming cleanser.
Can hard water make eczema or dryness worse?
Yes. Research links hard water to a weakened barrier and higher eczema risk, largely because minerals interact with foaming cleansers to raise the skin's pH. If you have diagnosed eczema, treat this as one factor among many and work with your dermatologist.
Do I need a water softener for my skin?
No. A whole-home softener is a plumbing decision, not a skincare one. Switching to a low-foam or oil cleanser, adding a weekly reset, and sealing your barrier protects your skin far more cheaply. A softener or shower filter is a nice bonus if you already have one.
Will a shower filter actually help my skin?
A good shower filter can cut some minerals and chlorine/chloramine that dry the skin, so many reactive-skinned people notice a difference. It won't fully soften the water, so pair it with the cleansing and barrier changes rather than relying on it alone.
Denise Bell, Licensed Esthetician

This article is educational and reflects an esthetician's professional experience — it isn't medical advice. If you have a diagnosed skin condition such as eczema or rosacea, please work with your dermatologist.