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Water BODY HANDBOOK
Water · §389
Water Remineralization
Reverse osmosis strips almost everything dissolved out of your water — including the calcium and magnesium that hard tap quietly contributes to your day, and the same minerals the tongue reads as "water". Bare RO tastes flat because there is nothing in it for the tongue to find. Remineralization puts a small amount back three ways: drops in the pitcher, a pinch of mineral salt, or a small cartridge after the RO membrane. The case is real but small — taste in the glass, a slice of your daily calcium and magnesium, a soft long-term signal on heart disease — and the cost is under thirty dollars a year.
Do · Daily Evidence Mixed Chapter Water

If you drink RO or distilled water at home, the fix is five seconds per pitcher or a one-time cartridge install. The win shows up in the glass first — water that tastes like water — and over years as a slice of your calcium and magnesium and a faint cardiovascular tailwind. None of it is dominant; all of it is real; the cost is under thirty dollars a year. Skip if you drink moderately hard tap water — there is nothing to fix.

Reverse-osmosis membranes pull out 95 to 99 percent of what's dissolved in tap water. What's left has very low total dissolved solids — typically 5–50 mg/L, versus 100–400 mg/L for most municipal tap. The tongue reads that absence as flat; the WHO's own work on drinking-water acceptability pegs the palatable range at 100–300 mg/L and calls anything below 50 mg/L "insipid" WHO 2003. The other thing the membrane removes is the small calcium and magnesium contribution that hard tap water makes to your day — roughly 10 to 20 percent of the recommended daily intake for both, depending on local water hardness and how much you drink WHO 2009. Distilled water sits even lower; deionized water sits near zero.

Remineralization adds the same ions back. The downstream is straightforward: drops and salt blends do it per pitcher, a cartridge does it passively in line with the RO unit, and the calcium and magnesium absorb in your gut about as well as the calcium in milk and the magnesium in food Heaney 2006 Verhas et al. 2002. The water also stops being aggressive toward what it touches — saliva, dental enamel, copper pipes — because the dissolved minerals leave less room for it to dissolve more.

What you give up if you don't bother

Drinking bare RO as your main water for years isn't going to hurt you in any acute way. The losses are small and quiet. Glasses of water that consistently taste a little off, so you reach for sparkling or coffee or soda when you would otherwise have drunk water. Around 5 to 20 percent less calcium and magnesium in your day than you'd get from hard tap, depending on baseline diet and how much you drink WHO 2009. And a long-tail population signal: regions with hard, magnesium-rich tap water see roughly 25 percent less death from heart disease and stroke than soft-water regions in the pooled hardness literature, with the share that's actually due to drinking water (rather than regional diet or climate) still an open question Catling et al. 2008. None of that will show up at a check-up; none of it is the thing that gets you. It's the kind of small, durable downside that's only worth fixing because the fix is so cheap.

What the science actually says

Three threads of evidence. Taste comes first because it's the part you'll notice the same day. The WHO's drinking-water acceptability work is unambiguous that water below 50 mg/L of dissolved solids reads as flat to most people and that adding minerals back shifts blind preference toward the remineralized sample WHO 2003.

Bioavailability is the second thread. The minerals in mineral water absorb as well as the minerals in food — stable-isotope tracking of calcium in mineral water finds it indistinguishable from milk calcium, and the magnesium in a typical sulphate-rich mineral water absorbs at about half the dose given, which is the same fraction the gut pulls out of dietary magnesium Heaney 2006 Verhas et al. 2002. The minerals from a remineralization cartridge or drops behave the same way; what matters is the calcium and magnesium content, not what package they arrived in.

The third thread is what WHO does with all of this. Their desalination engineering guidance recommends that desalinated water entering municipal distribution be brought back up to roughly 30 mg/L calcium and 10 mg/L magnesium before it's piped out — partly to stop the water from corroding the metal it touches and partly because the dietary-mineral contribution is worth preserving at population scale WHO 2011. Home RO is the same logic at one household instead of one city.

How to actually do it

Three options. Pick by how hands-on you want to be.

Aim for 50–200 mg/L of total dissolved solids in the finished water. Below that range it still tastes flat; above it tastes mineral-heavy without any health benefit, and you'll abandon the protocol within a week.

When to skip the salt route

If you're on dialysis or have a calcium- or magnesium-handling disorder, talk to the nephrologist before stacking water-source minerals on top of clinical management. For the median healthy adult the amounts involved — tens of milligrams of calcium and a handful of milligrams of magnesium per litre — are too small to interact with anything.

What you'll read online that isn't right

"RO water leaches minerals from your body." The viral version, where bare RO actively pulls electrolytes out of your blood, has no support. The kernel of truth is smaller and more boring: switching from hard tap to bare RO removes the small mineral contribution the water used to make to your day, and the fix is to put the minerals back rather than to fear-monger about leaching WHO 2009.

"Alkaline water is the same as remineralized water." Different thing. Alkaline ionizers raise pH, often by electrolysis, without reliably adding back the calcium and magnesium that hard tap delivers. The separate health claims around alkaline water are weak; if the goal is the dietary-mineral contribution, an alkaline machine isn't the route.

"Distilled is the purest, therefore healthiest." WHO reads it the other way around. Long-term consumption of demineralized water as the only water source produces small mineral deficits and corrodes the plumbing it sits in; remineralization is what they recommend at population scale Kozisek 2005.

How people get this wrong

Three failure points show up over and over. Doses get overshot and the water tastes chalky or salty, so the whole protocol gets abandoned within a week — measure rather than eyeball, and stay near the bottom of the recommended range until your tongue calibrates. A "trace mineral" drop gets bought from a brand without third-party heavy-metal testing, and the supposed cure quietly adds lead and arsenic to your water — only buy from brands that publish a current certificate of analysis. A post-filter cartridge gets installed and then forgotten about for three years, at which point it's a biofilm-laden flow restriction making the water actively worse than bare RO — put cartridge replacement on the same yearly calendar as smoke detector batteries.

What changes when you start

The first glass tastes like water again — not in a dramatic way, in the same way good bread tastes like bread instead of nothing. Within a week, people who pour their RO into your remineralized pitcher will pause and ask what filter you're running. You won't feel a change in energy, sleep, or skin — the calcium and magnesium you've added back are too small a contribution for the body to register over the noise of food. Over a decade of consistent use the projected gain is the long-tail signal the hardness literature points at: a single-digit percent shift in cardiovascular risk and a modest contribution to lifetime calcium balance for bone Catling et al. 2008 Costi et al. 1999. None of it is dramatic; the honest pitch is taste first, with a small long-tail bonus on heart and bone you'll never notice as it accrues.

Adjacent rabbit holes

If this entry caught you, the threads worth pulling next are whole-house contaminant filtration (lead, PFAS, chlorine — the reason most households have RO in the first place), pre-mixed natural mineral water as a ready alternative (Gerolsteiner, Evian, San Pellegrino sit in the same chemistry as a well-remineralized RO), fluoridation policy, and the broader question of whether your food is hitting daily calcium and magnesium without the water doing any of the work. Alkaline water and "structured water" claims aren't worth your time.

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