Swedish tap water is among the cleanest in the world — yet the trace chlorine and chloramine added to keep it microbe-safe transform into trihalomethanes (THMs) the moment your shower heats up. Here is what happens to your skin, lungs, and hair, and exactly how to remove them at the showerhead.
Chlorine and chloramine in Swedish tap water form trihalomethanes (THMs) in hot shower steam. Inhalation during a 10-minute shower can deliver more THM exposure than drinking 2 litres of the same water. A calcium sulfite + activated carbon shower filter removes both free chlorine and chloramine effectively at shower temperatures.
Why Is There Chlorine in Swedish Water?
The Shower Effect: Why Hot Showers Are Worse
1. THM Formation
At temperatures above 30°C, chlorine reacts with organic matter in the water to form trihalomethanes (THMs) — a group of regulated carcinogens. The four principal THMs are chloroform (CHCl₃), bromodichloromethane (BDCM), dibromochloromethane (DBCM), and bromoform (CHBr₃). These are volatile. The moment you breathe in shower steam, you inhale THMs directly into your lungs — a far more efficient exposure route than ingestion. Research by the Karolinska Institutet confirms that Nordic drinking-water systems produce measurable THM levels during showering {{ln(karolinska_thm)}}.
2. Inhalation vs. Dermal Exposure
Research published in Environmental Science & Technology (Andersen et al.) found that inhalation during a 10-minute shower can account for more THM exposure than drinking 2 litres of the same water daily. The skin absorbs some chlorine directly — which is why chlorine-damaged skin worsens with hard, chlorinated water {{ln(hard_water_surfactant)}} — but inhalation is the primary concern.
| Exposure Route | Relative Risk | Primary Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Drinking (ingestion) | Moderate | First-pass hepatic metabolism reduces systemic dose |
| Dermal (skin absorption) | Moderate | Direct absorption through epidermis; barrier disruption {{ln(heavy_metals_toxicity_tchounwou)}} |
| Inhalation (shower steam) | High | THMs absorbed directly into bloodstream via alveolar capillary network |
| Combined (full shower) | Highest | All three routes active simultaneously |
What Chlorine and Chloramine Actually Do to Your Body
Skin
Chlorine's oxidising action strips the natural oils (sebum) from your skin's surface. This disrupts the skin barrier function, increases transepidermal water loss (TEWL), raises skin pH from its natural 4.5–5.5 to more alkaline levels, and accelerates dryness and irritation. For people with existing conditions — eczema, psoriasis, atopic dermatitis, rosacea — chlorinated water is a documented trigger for flare-ups. Danby et al. (JID 2018) demonstrated that water hardness and surfactant combination significantly worsens skin barrier function {{ln(hard_water_surfactant)}}, while Perkin et al. (JACI 2016) linked water hardness to increased childhood eczema prevalence {{ln(perkin_water_hardness_eczema)}}.
Hair
Chlorine damages hair at the protein level. The oxidising reaction with keratin degrades cysteine amino acids in the hair shaft, strips colour (particularly problematic for dyed hair), increases porosity making hair brittle and prone to breakage, and can cause the greenish tint sometimes seen in blonde hair exposed to chlorine.
Respiratory System
THMs formed in hot shower steam are small enough to penetrate deep into the lungs. Daily shower exposure over years contributes to cumulative THM dose. While acute effects are minimal, chronic low-level inhalation of THMs is associated with increased asthma prevalence in children, exacerbation of existing respiratory conditions, and long-term cancer risk — the EPA classifies chloroform as a probable human carcinogen. Karolinska Institutet research on Nordic water systems highlights that shower exposure extends beyond the bathroom via steam migration through the home {{ln(karolinska_thm)}}.
Does Stockholm Have Chlorine in Its Water?
How to Remove Chlorine from Shower Water
1. Activated Carbon Shower Filter
Granular activated carbon (GAC) adsorbs chlorine through surface chemistry. Effective in cold water, though performance degrades significantly at shower temperatures above 38°C because adsorption is an exothermic process that reverses as temperature rises.
Best for: Free chlorine removal in moderate-chlorine cold water.
Limitations: Poor performance with hot water; ineffective against chloramine.
2. Calcium Sulfite Shower Filter (Recommended)
Calcium sulfite (CaSO₃) chemically reduces both free chlorine and chloramine on contact — and unlike carbon, its effectiveness increases with water temperature because the reduction reaction is endothermic. This makes it the ideal medium for shower filtration where water is typically 38–42°C.
Best for: Both free chlorine and chloramine at all shower temperatures.
Limitations: Does not address organic compounds (pair with GAC for complete coverage — as in the Nordisk Duschvattenfilter).
3. Vitamin C Shower Filter
Ascorbic acid neutralises chlorine on contact through a rapid reduction reaction. Effective but has limited cartridge life and does not address chloramine as effectively as calcium sulfite. Also raises the pH of effluent water slightly.
Best for: Short-term or travel use with known chlorine-only water.
Limitations: Short cartridge life; poor chloramine removal.
| Media | Free Chlorine | Chloramine | Hot Water Performance | Cartridge Life (avg.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Activated Carbon (GAC) | Good | Poor | Degrades above 38°C | 3–4 months |
| Calcium Sulfite (CaSO₃) | Excellent | Excellent | Improves with temperature | 6–8 months |
| Vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid) | Good | Fair | Stable | 2–3 months |
| KDF (Copper-Zinc) | Good | Moderate | Stable | 5–6 months |
| CaSO₃ + GAC + KDF (Nordisk) | Excellent | Excellent | Excellent across range | 8 months |
The Bottom Line
Frequently Asked Questions
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Calcium Sulfite + KDF-55D + GAC. Engineered for Scandinavian hard, chlorinated water.
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