A transplant is an investment — in time, money, and confidence. In the weeks afterward, the scalp is healing and more sensitive than usual, and the water you shower in is part of the environment your new hair grows back into.

Australian tap water is treated to be safe to drink. To keep it safe across long pipe networks, many utilities — including Sydney and Brisbane — use chloramine, a more stable compound than free chlorine. Helpful for public health; less ideal for a healing scalp showered in it daily.

The question isn't whether you have a filter — it's whether your filter was built for chloramine at all.

Why most filters miss chloramine

Most shower filters are designed around free chlorine. Chloramine is harder to reduce, and the only shower-filter standard (NSF/ANSI 177) tests free chlorine only — it doesn't measure chloramine at all. So a "certified" badge can say nothing about the contaminant that matters most in much of Australia.

What we do differently

Trichopure uses an Advanced 4-Stage Filtration system, led by catalytic carbon — a media specially engineered to target chloramine during the short contact time of a shower — followed by KDF 55 for heavy metals, calcium sulphite for remaining chlorine, and CV mineral balls to condition the water. It fits standard connections, so protecting your investment doesn't mean re-plumbing your bathroom. INDEPENDENT FINISHED-PRODUCT CHLORAMINE DATA TO FOLLOW.

Educational content. Individual results may vary. Trichopure supports hair, scalp and skin by helping reduce water contaminants; it is not a medical treatment.