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  • Commercial Water Purifier for Hotels in India: A Practical Guide

    Commercial Water Purifier for Hotels in India: A Practical Guide

    Water is one of the first things a guest touches and one of the last things a hotel thinks about. A glass on arrival, a bottle by the bedside, water at the restaurant table: each is a small moment that quietly shapes how the stay feels. For a hotel in India, getting guest water right means three things at once: it must be safe, it must taste clean, and increasingly it must come without a pile of single-use plastic. This guide is a practical look at how to deliver all three at scale, using the right mix of a commercial water purifier for hotels and plastic-free glass-bottle water.

    Why Guest Drinking Water Matters

    Drinking water sits at the intersection of safety, taste and reputation. A guest who falls ill, or who simply notices an off taste, remembers it, and often writes about it. In hospitality, that memory travels.

    Taste and First Impressions

    Guests judge water in seconds. A faint metallic or salty note, common when source water is hard or high in dissolved solids, registers immediately, even when the water is technically safe. Clean, neutral-tasting water signals a property that pays attention to detail. It is a cheap way to look premium and an expensive thing to get wrong.

    Safety and Liability

    A waterborne stomach upset during a stay is a real operational and reputational risk. Source water in many Indian cities and towns varies through the year, and borewell supplies in particular can carry hardness, nitrate or heavy metals that no amount of boiling alone will fix. If you draw on a borewell, our guide on whether borewell water is safe to drink is worth a read.

    Reviews and Brand

    Online reviews reward consistency and punish surprises. Water complaints are avoidable surprises. A reliable, plastic-free water programme is the kind of quiet detail that supports a strong rating without ever being the headline. It protects the brand instead of risking it.

    The takeaway: guest water is a brand-safety decision as much as an operational one. Safe, great-tasting, plastic-free water protects reviews, reputation and repeat stays.

    The Single-Use Plastic Problem

    For decades the default answer was the packaged plastic bottle: one on the desk, one by the bed, cases of them in the restaurant and at every banquet. It is convenient, and it is also the most expensive and wasteful way a hotel can serve water.

    The Cost That Repeats

    A packaged bottle has a low unit price but a high cost per litre that repeats with every guest, every day, forever. Multiply that across rooms, restaurant covers and events, and a hotel is paying a permanent premium for water it could treat on site at a fraction of the cost. The economics of treating your own water are the same logic we set out in our breakdown of the true cost of owning a water purifier, scaled up to a property.

    The Waste and the Handling

    Plastic bottles do not just cost money to buy. They cost money and labour to receive, store, chill, distribute and dispose of. Every bottle becomes waste, and a busy hotel generates an enormous quantity of it. That waste stream is increasingly visible to guests, to corporate clients and to event organisers.

    Guest and ESG Expectations

    Sustainability is no longer a fringe preference. Corporate travel bookers, MICE clients and a growing share of leisure guests actively prefer properties that have cut single-use plastic. Many hotel groups now carry ESG commitments where plastic reduction is a measurable target. Removing the plastic water bottle is one of the most visible, easily communicated wins available.

    Why Properties Are Switching

    Across hotels, offices and campuses, the move away from packaged water is as much about cost and plastic as about safety. Treating water on site removes the per-litre premium and the waste stream at once. Boon’s systems already serve more than 4,000 organisations worldwide, including 400+ hotels, on exactly this logic.

    Boon: ex-IIT Kanpur founders; backed by TDB (Govt. of India), NITI Aayog and Roca

    Glass-Bottle Water in Rooms and Restaurants

    The front-of-house answer to the plastic problem is a glass-bottle water station. This is Boon Refill, the plastic-free bottling solution built for hospitality. Instead of buying and disposing of packaged plastic bottles, the property purifies its own water on site and serves it in clean, reusable glass bottles.

    How It Works in Practice

    An on-site station purifies and bottles water into branded or plain glass bottles that go to guest rooms, restaurant tables, banquets and meeting rooms. Empty bottles return, are sanitised and are refilled. The plastic bottle simply disappears from the guest journey, replaced by something that looks and feels more premium.

    • Guest rooms: a sealed glass bottle on the desk and bedside, replenished at turndown, with no plastic in the room.
    • Restaurants and bars: still and sparkling water served in glass at the table, a presentation guests associate with quality.
    • Banquets and MICE: glass carafes and bottles at scale for events, a strong, visible sustainability statement for corporate clients.

    Why Glass Reads as Premium

    A glass bottle on the table elevates the table. It looks considered, it is reusable, and it lets the property tell a clear plastic-free story. For a hotel, the same water that used to be a recurring cost and a waste problem becomes part of the brand experience.

    Replace plastic bottles in your rooms and restaurants with on-site glass-bottle water, purified on your premises.

    Explore Glass-Bottle Water →

    Commercial RO for Kitchen and Volume

    Front-of-house glass bottles solve the guest-facing problem. Behind the scenes, a hotel also needs treated water in volume for the kitchen, the staff canteen, beverage stations and general back-of-house use. This is where a commercial RO plant comes in, and for hotels this is Boon Purify, our commercial range rated for roughly 100 to 2,000 LPH (litres per hour).

    Where the Volume Goes

    Kitchens need consistent, low-TDS water for cooking, for ice, for beverages and for the taste of everything from tea to soups. High hardness scales up equipment and shortens the life of expensive machines. A central RO plant feeds these points with treated water at the volume a busy property demands. If you are weighing treatment methods for the back-of-house, our explainer on RO vs UV vs UF sets out what each stage actually does.

    Handling Difficult Source Water

    Many Indian properties draw on borewell or mixed municipal supplies that are hard or high in dissolved solids. Boon Purify uses the same 8-stage UltraOsmosis at its core: multi-stage RO, UV and carbon stages with mineral balancing, rated for input up to 2,000 ppm TDS. That headroom matters when source water swings with the seasons.

    For kitchen, canteen and back-of-house volume, a commercial RO plant treats water at the scale a hotel runs at.

    See Commercial RO Plants →

    How to Size It for Your Property

    Sizing is where good planning saves money. Undersize the system and you run dry at peak occupancy; oversize it and you pay for capacity you never use. The right method is to size for peak demand, not average use.

    Estimate by Rooms and Covers

    Start with two numbers: your room count at full occupancy and your restaurant covers at a busy service. Add drinking and cooking water for both, then add a margin for banquets, events and high-season peaks. The table below is a rough planning guide; your actual figure depends on your menu, your laundry and how much water you serve in-room versus in the restaurant.

    Property Type Indicative Scale Typical Plant Size
    Boutique hotel or homestay Up to ~30 rooms, small restaurant ~100 to 250 LPH
    Mid-size business hotel ~30 to 120 rooms, full F&B ~250 to 1,000 LPH
    Large hotel or resort 120+ rooms, banquets and MICE ~1,000 to 2,000 LPH

    Source Water Changes the Answer

    These ranges are a starting point, not a quote. The single biggest variable is your source water: high input TDS, hardness or specific contaminants change both the configuration and the effective output. That is why an accurate size always comes from a site survey that measures your input water. You can get an early read on your area with our free water-quality and TDS tool.

    The takeaway: size for peak occupancy and busy service, add a margin for events, and confirm the figure with a survey of your actual source water.

    Hygiene, Consistency and Maintenance

    A water system is only as good as its weakest day. For a hotel, consistency is the whole point: the water on a fully booked weekend must be exactly as safe and clean as on a quiet weekday.

    What Maintenance Actually Involves

    A commercial system needs periodic filter and membrane changes, sanitisation of storage tanks and dispensing points, and regular checks on both input and output quality. For glass-bottle operations, bottle sanitisation is part of the routine. The frequency depends on your water and your volume, so a busy property on hard water needs closer attention than a small one on softer supply.

    Monitoring with WaterAI

    This is where WaterAI changes the picture. The app shows input and output water quality and filter health in real time, so the property and the service team can see exactly when attention is due, instead of waiting for a taste complaint or a failed test. That visibility is what turns maintenance from reactive into planned. WaterAI won the iF Design Award 2026.

    The BIS Benchmark

    India’s drinking-water standard, BIS IS 10500, sets the acceptable limit for TDS at 500 mg/L and total hardness at 200 mg/L, with fluoride at 1.0, arsenic at 0.01 and nitrate at 45 mg/L. A well-configured commercial system is built to keep output comfortably within these limits, and monitoring confirms it stays there day after day.

    BIS IS 10500, Drinking Water Specification

    Why Hotels Choose Boon

    Boon already serves more than 400 hotels and over 4,000 organisations worldwide. It was founded by ex-IIT Kanpur engineers and is backed by the Technology Development Board (Government of India), NITI Aayog and Roca. For a hotel, that track record matters: water is not a category to experiment with on guests.

    One Partner, Both Sides of the House

    Boon covers the full picture. Boon Refill delivers plastic-free glass-bottle water for rooms, restaurants and events, while Boon Purify handles back-of-house volume at 100 to 2,000 LPH. One partner, one standard of water, front and back.

    Technology Built for Difficult Water

    The 8-stage UltraOsmosis core combines multi-stage RO, UV and carbon stages with mineral balancing, rated for input up to 2,000 ppm TDS. It is built for the hard, high-TDS source water many Indian properties actually face.

    Monitoring and Installation Included

    WaterAI gives real-time visibility of input and output quality and filter health. Free professional installation by Boon technicians means the input water is measured and the output verified on site, so your water is matched and confirmed from day one rather than assumed.

    Want a water plan sized to your property, covering both glass-bottle guest water and back-of-house volume? Talk to the Boon team.

    Request a Hotel Water Plan →

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the best water solution for a hotel in India?

    Most hotels use a combination. A commercial RO plant treats water at the point of entry for the kitchen, laundry and back-of-house volume, while glass-bottle water stations supply guest rooms, restaurants and banquets without single-use plastic. The right mix depends on your room count, restaurant covers and source water. Treating your own supply on site is almost always cheaper per litre than buying packaged water, and it removes the plastic waste entirely, which is why hotels increasingly choose on-site purification over bottled deliveries.

    How do I size a commercial water purifier for my hotel?

    Start with your peak demand, not your average. Estimate drinking and cooking water by rooms and restaurant covers, then add a margin for banquets and full occupancy. As a rough guide, a small boutique hotel may need a plant around 100 to 250 LPH, a mid-size property 250 to 1,000 LPH, and a large hotel or resort 1,000 to 2,000 LPH. The figure also depends on your source water quality, so a site survey that measures input TDS and contaminants gives the accurate size.

    Is glass-bottle water cheaper than buying packaged bottles for hotels?

    Over time, yes. Packaged plastic bottles carry a high cost per litre that repeats with every guest, every day. An on-site glass-bottle station purifies your own water and serves it in reusable glass, so the cost per litre is a small fraction of packaged water once the system is in place. It also removes the storage, handling and disposal that plastic bottles create. For a property serving water at scale, the running cost falls sharply while the guest experience improves.

    What maintenance does a hotel water purifier need?

    A commercial system needs periodic filter and membrane changes, sanitisation of storage and dispensing points, and regular checks on input and output water quality. The frequency depends on your water and your volume. With Boon, the WaterAI app monitors input and output quality and filter health in real time, so the property and the service team can see when attention is due, rather than waiting for a problem. This keeps water consistent and avoids surprises during peak occupancy.

    Can a commercial purifier handle hard or high-TDS hotel water?

    Yes. Many Indian properties draw on borewell or municipal water that is hard or high in dissolved solids. Boon’s 8-stage UltraOsmosis is rated for input up to 2,000 ppm TDS and combines multi-stage RO, UV and carbon stages with mineral balancing. BIS IS 10500 sets the acceptable TDS limit at 500 mg/L and total hardness at 200 mg/L, and the system is built to bring high-TDS source water within safe, good-tasting limits. A site survey confirms the right configuration for your supply.

    Why do hotels choose Boon for water?

    Boon already serves more than 400 hotels and over 4,000 organisations worldwide. It was founded by ex-IIT Kanpur engineers and is backed by the Technology Development Board (Government of India), NITI Aayog and Roca. Hotels choose Boon for the combination of commercial RO for volume, glass-bottle stations for plastic-free guest water, WaterAI monitoring for consistency, and free professional installation where technicians measure input water and verify output. It is a single partner for both back-of-house volume and front-of-house guest experience.

    Boon for hotels: plastic-free glass-bottle water for rooms and restaurants, commercial RO for kitchen and volume, WaterAI monitoring and free professional installation. One partner, front and back of house.

    Explore Boon for Hotels →

  • Commercial Water Purifier for Restaurants and Cafes in India

    Commercial Water Purifier for Restaurants and Cafes in India

    In a restaurant or cafe, water is not a background utility. It is the main ingredient in your coffee, your tea, your stocks and your ice, and it is the fluid that runs through your most expensive machines. Get it wrong and your flavour wanders, your equipment scales up, and your monthly bills creep higher than they should. This guide explains what a commercial water purifier for restaurants actually does for taste, equipment life, volume, hygiene and cost, and how to size one correctly for an Indian kitchen.

    The takeaway: good water is cheaper, tastier and safer over the life of a food business. The right commercial purifier protects your equipment, keeps recipes consistent, and costs far less per litre than water cans.

    Why Water Decides Taste in Food Service

    A brewed coffee is roughly 98 percent water. Tea, soups, stocks, sauces and bread dough are mostly water too. So whatever is dissolved in your supply is dissolved in the final cup or on the final plate. If the water is heavy with dissolved solids, hard with calcium and magnesium, or carrying a whiff of chlorine, all of that shows up in the taste.

    Coffee and Tea

    Specialty coffee is the most sensitive of all. Water that is too hard mutes the bright, fruity notes; water with high dissolved solids tastes flat or chalky; chlorine adds an off edge. Baristas who chase a clean, repeatable shot quickly learn that the water matters as much as the beans. Tea behaves the same way, with hard water often leaving a dull, cloudy brew and a film on the surface.

    Ice, Cooking and Dough

    Ice made from poor water carries the same taste straight into cold drinks and cocktails, and cloudy or off-tasting ice is something guests notice. In the kitchen, hard or high-TDS water changes how dough develops, how vegetables cook and how stocks clarify. The point is simple: when the water is clean, balanced and consistent, every recipe tastes the way the chef intended, every service.

    For the chemistry behind dissolved solids and what the safe limits are, our explainer on TDS, BIS and WHO guidelines is a good primer.

    Hard Water, Scale and Equipment Damage

    This is where poor water hits your balance sheet directly. Hard water is rich in dissolved calcium and magnesium. When it is heated or evaporated, those minerals come out of solution and settle as scale, a hard, chalky crust. In a food business that scale builds up inside exactly the machines you cannot afford to lose.

    • Espresso machines and coffee boilers: scale coats heating elements and group heads, slows recovery between shots, shifts brew temperature and eventually blocks valves.
    • Dishwashers and glasswashers: scale leaves spots and film on glassware and shortens the life of heating elements and jets.
    • Ice makers: scale reduces output, makes ice cloudy and forces more frequent servicing.
    • Combi ovens, steamers and boilers: scale insulates heating surfaces, so they use more energy to do the same job and fail sooner.

    Every layer of scale means more energy used, more frequent breakdowns, more service visits and a shorter working life for equipment that is expensive to replace. A commercial RO removes the dissolved minerals that cause scale before they ever reach the machine. If your supply is on the harder side, our guide on choosing a water purifier for hard water in India goes deeper.

    What the BIS Standard Says

    The BIS drinking-water standard, IS 10500, sets the acceptable limit for total hardness at 200 mg/L and for total dissolved solids at 500 mg/L, with a higher permissible TDS ceiling where no better source exists. Many Indian municipal and borewell supplies run above these values, which is why scale is such a common problem in commercial kitchens.

    BIS IS 10500; groundwater context: CGWB / India-WRIS, Govt. of India

    Volume and Consistency in a Busy Kitchen

    A home purifier and a restaurant purifier solve the same problem at very different scales. A busy kitchen draws water all day for drinking, coffee, tea, ice, cooking, prep and dishwashing, and the demand spikes hard during the lunch and dinner rush. A unit that cannot keep up will leave you waiting for the tank to refill exactly when you are slammed.

    Consistency matters just as much as volume. Your supply quality can shift with the season, with the monsoon, and with whether you are on municipal water or a tanker. A commercial system with proper treatment and storage smooths all of that out, so the water reaching your machines and your guests is the same on a quiet Tuesday and a packed Saturday.

    The takeaway: size for your peak hour, not your average day, and build in storage. Running out of treated water during service is the one failure a food business cannot afford.

    Hygiene and Safety When You Serve the Public

    When you serve food and drink to the public, the water you use is part of your hygiene obligation. Water used for drinking, for ice, for washing produce and for cooking should be safe, and that responsibility sits with the business. Contaminated water does not only risk illness, it risks your reputation and your licence.

    A multi-stage commercial system handles this on two fronts. RO removes dissolved contaminants such as excess salts, nitrate, fluoride, arsenic and heavy metals where present, while a UV stage deals with microbiological safety by inactivating bacteria and viruses. If you want to understand how these stages differ and where each one fits, our comparison of RO vs UV vs UF purifiers lays it out clearly.

    The honest framing is this: a commercial purifier helps you meet your duty to serve safe water, and it gives you a system you can monitor and verify rather than simply hope is working.

    Table Water Without Single-Use Plastic

    Plenty of restaurants and cafes still put bought plastic bottles on the table. It is a recurring cost, a storage headache and a growing pile of plastic that runs against the sustainability expectations of more and more guests. There is a cleaner way to serve table water.

    A glass-bottle water station lets you bottle your own purified still and sparkling water in reusable glass, on site, on demand. Guests get clean, good-tasting table water, the table looks more premium, and you cut both the per-bottle cost and the single-use plastic at once. This is exactly what Boon Refill provides for hotels and hospitality venues. For the broader cost-and-plastic case, see our piece on bottled water vs an RO purifier.

    Want plastic-free still and sparkling table water you bottle yourself? See how Boon Refill glass-bottle stations work for hospitality.

    Explore Boon Refill →

    Sizing a Commercial RO by Covers and Equipment

    The right size for your purifier comes down to two things: how many covers you serve and what equipment you run. Sizing is measured in litres per hour (LPH), and you should plan around your peak demand, not your daily average.

    Boon Purify commercial RO plants run from roughly 100 to 2,000 LPH, which covers everything from a small cafe to a hotel kitchen or cloud kitchen. As a rough starting point:

    Venue Type Typical Demand Indicative Capacity
    Small cafe or coffee bar Coffee, tea, ice, limited cooking Around 100 to 250 LPH
    Casual dining restaurant Drinking, coffee, cooking, dishwashing Around 250 to 500 LPH
    Busy restaurant or cloud kitchen High covers, heavy ice and dishwashing Around 500 to 1,000 LPH
    Hotel kitchen or large premises Multiple outlets, banquets, high peaks 1,000 to 2,000 LPH

    These are starting figures, not a final spec. The accurate way to size a plant is to measure your input water quality, add up your equipment load, and plan for your busiest hour with storage to spare. Boon engineers do this on site as part of a quote, so the plant is matched to your actual kitchen rather than a generic estimate.

    Not sure what capacity your kitchen needs? Boon will size a commercial RO plant to your covers, equipment and input water.

    See Boon Purify RO Plants →

    Cost vs Buying Water Cans, and Monitoring

    Many food businesses start out buying 20-litre cans for drinking and cooking water. It feels cheap per can, but the real number is the cost per litre, and that repeats every single day. Add delivery delays, storage space, the labour of lifting and stacking, and a steady stream of plastic, and cans become an expensive habit.

    A commercial RO works the other way round. There is an upfront cost and periodic filter changes, but the cost per litre of purified water is a small fraction of cans, and the water is produced on demand at the point of use. For most restaurants and cafes the plant pays for itself within a year or two, after which the saving only grows. Our breakdown of the true cost of owning a water purifier shows how to run these numbers.

    Factor Buying Water Cans Commercial RO Plant
    Cost per litre over time High, repeats daily Low, after upfront cost
    Supply reliability Depends on delivery On demand at the tap
    Storage and labour Space and lifting needed Plumbed in, no stacking
    Plastic and waste High Minimal
    Quality visibility None per can Monitored in real time

    That last row matters in food service. Boon plants connect to the WaterAI app, which shows your input and output water quality and filter health in real time. You can see at a glance that the water reaching your espresso machine and your guests is within spec, rather than discovering a problem only when something tastes off or a machine fails. WaterAI won the iF Design Award 2026.

    Why Restaurants and Hotels Choose Boon

    Boon is a water-technology company founded by ex-IIT Kanpur engineers and backed by the Technology Development Board (Government of India), NITI Aayog and Roca. Its systems serve more than 4,000 organisations worldwide, including over 400 hotels, so the technology is proven in exactly the high-volume, hygiene-critical settings that food service demands.

    Boon Purify and Boon Refill

    For the kitchen, Boon Purify commercial RO plants from 100 to 2,000 LPH deliver the volume and consistency a busy service needs, with the scale-control that protects your espresso machines, dishwashers and ovens. For the table, Boon Refill glass-bottle stations let you serve still and sparkling water in reusable glass with no single-use plastic.

    8-Stage UltraOsmosis

    Boon’s core technology is an 8-stage UltraOsmosis process that combines multi-stage RO, UV, carbon stages and mineral balancing, rated for input water up to 2,000 ppm TDS. That means clean, balanced, good-tasting water even on demanding Indian supplies.

    WaterAI and Free Installation

    The WaterAI app gives you real-time visibility of input and output quality and filter health, the iF Design Award 2026 winner. And Boon technicians provide free professional installation, measuring your input water and verifying output, so your system is matched and confirmed from day one.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Why does water quality affect the taste of coffee and food?

    Coffee is roughly 98 percent water and tea, soups, stocks and dough are mostly water too, so whatever is dissolved in your supply ends up in the cup and on the plate. High TDS, hardness, chlorine or off odours dull flavour, leave a flat or bitter taste, and make results vary from batch to batch. A commercial purifier gives you consistent, balanced water, so your recipes taste the same every single time and your baristas and chefs are not fighting the water.

    Does hard water damage espresso machines and other kitchen equipment?

    Yes. Hard water leaves scale inside espresso machines, boilers, dishwashers, ice makers and combi ovens. Scale narrows pipes, coats heating elements, slows the machine and eventually causes breakdowns, which means costly repairs and downtime during service. BIS recommends total hardness up to 200 mg/L for drinking water, and many Indian supplies run well above that. Treating the water with a commercial RO and the right hardness control protects your equipment and extends its working life.

    What size commercial water purifier does a restaurant need?

    It depends on your covers per day and your equipment load. A small cafe may need only 100 to 250 litres per hour, while a busy restaurant, cloud kitchen or hotel kitchen can need 500 to 2,000 litres per hour once you add drinking water, coffee, ice, cooking and dishwashing. Boon Purify commercial RO plants run from roughly 100 to 2,000 LPH. The right approach is to size by peak demand, not average, so you never run dry during a rush.

    Is a commercial RO cheaper than buying water cans?

    For most food-service businesses, yes, over time. Water cans have a low price per can but a high cost per litre that repeats every day, plus delivery delays, storage space and stacks of plastic. A commercial RO has an upfront cost and periodic filter changes, but its cost per litre is a small fraction of cans, and it produces water on demand at the point of use. Within a year or two it usually pays for itself, after which the saving keeps growing.

    How can a restaurant serve table water without single-use plastic?

    A glass-bottle water station lets you bottle your own purified still and sparkling water in reusable glass on site, so guests get clean, branded table water with no single-use plastic bottles. Boon Refill provides exactly this for hotels, restaurants and cafes. It removes the recurring cost and waste of bought bottled water, supports your sustainability goals, and gives the table a more premium look.

    Why do restaurants and hotels choose Boon?

    Boon is a water-technology company founded by ex-IIT Kanpur engineers and backed by the Technology Development Board (Government of India), NITI Aayog and Roca. Its systems serve more than 4,000 organisations worldwide, including over 400 hotels. Boon Purify commercial RO plants and Boon Refill glass-bottle stations are built for the volume, consistency and hygiene that food service demands, with WaterAI monitoring and free professional installation that measures input water and verifies output.

    Ready to fix the water behind your coffee, kitchen and table? Boon will size a commercial RO plant to your venue and verify it on site. Talk to the team for a quote.

    Get a Commercial Quote →