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Numbers First, Taste Second: A Data-Heavy Review of Two Popular Water Filter Jugs

Some people buy a water filter jug because it looks nice on the counter; others arrive with a TDS meter already in hand. If you’re in the second group, you probably care less about color options and more about what actually disappears from your tap water. At home, the test questions are straightforward: what’s the TDS of your unfiltered tap, how far does the jug bring that number down, do you see a real difference in kettle and coffee-machine scale, how long does each filter truly last in litres and days, and how much hands-on maintenance does the jug demand in real life? For data-minded people, a filter jug is basically a small experiment that just happens to live in the fridge door.

BRITA Marella 2.4L Starter Pack

All-Rounder with the innovative BRITA filtration technology: 150 litres of filtered water with just one cartridge, fitting in standard fridge doors.


In this long-term “kitchen test”, two jugs stayed on duty: the BRITA Marella 2.4L Starter Pack and the ZeroWater 2.4L jug with TDS meter. The Marella is the more conventional piece of kit: 2.4 L total capacity with about 1.4 L of filtered water in the lower chamber, a footprint tuned for standard fridge doors, a flip-lid for easy filling, a covered spout and a simple digital indicator in the lid that reminds you when time is up on the cartridge. Each MAXTRA PRO filter is rated for up to 150 L or around four weeks, and uses multi-stage filtration (natural activated carbon, ion-exchange media and a fine mesh) to reduce chlorine, tackle limescale, catch visible particles and bring down metals such as lead and copper. The jug is BPA-free, with a dishwasher-safe body and a lid/indicator that you wash by hand, so weekly cleaning doesn’t feel like a chore. The ZeroWater 2.4 L jug looks similar on the outside—slim, around 2.3–2.4 L in capacity—but is much more aggressive under the hood. It runs a 5-stage ion-exchange system with independent certification to reduce lead, chromium, mercury, fluoride and PFOA/PFOS, and the marketing promise is removal of up to about 99.6% of total dissolved solids. The included digital TDS meter is central to the experience: you measure your tap, then your filtered water, and swap the cartridge once the filtered reading hits 006 ppm or above. In soft-water areas, filters can last a long time; in high-TDS regions, they can burn out surprisingly fast. The jug itself is BPA-free, with a slim, tight-lidded design that doesn’t spill easily when you shuffle it around crowded shelves.

ZeroWater 2.4L Jug

FIVE STAGE WATER FILTRATION: Unlike many water filters and filtration jugs, ZeroWater filters use 5 stages of filtration, to bring you cleaner, better tasting water.


Quick spec snapshot

Test Category

BRITA Marella 2.4L

ZeroWater 2.4L (with TDS meter)

TDS impact (feel)

Strong drop, clearly better taste, but not absolute zero

Very large drop; often near 000 ppm while the filter is “fresh”

Limescale & appliances

Good softening and scale reduction in kettles and jugs

Excellent in hard water; scale is almost absent while filters last

Filter lifespan behaviour

Predictable ~150 L / ≈4 weeks per cartridge

Highly variable; fully dependent on local TDS

Ease of use & cleaning

Very simple; fridge-friendly and dishwasher-safe body

Also simple, but requires regular TDS checks and more involvement

Cost per litre (subjective)

Low and stable over time

Medium to high; best value in challenging, high-TDS water

From a pure “tester” perspective, the Marella scores higher on three things: predictability, low maintenance and cost per litre. It doesn’t chase extreme numbers, but it reliably makes tap water nicer to drink, clearly slows scale and is easy for anyone in the household to use, with widely available filters and a steady “roughly one a month” rhythm, even if it never gets anywhere near the “lab-style” TDS readings that data obsessives dream about. The ZeroWater jug is more of a specialist tool for people with hard or high-TDS water or a strong interest in water quality: you get dramatic drops in TDS, third-party certifications for tricky contaminants and a meter that tells you exactly when performance is slipping, but filter life and running costs are much more dependent on your local water, and the slower flow plus extra checks won’t suit everyone. In practical terms, Marella suits households that want straightforward, low-effort filtration with stable, easy-to-plan running costs and are happy with “better tap water” rather than “lab-grade purity”, while ZeroWater fits people who are willing to track readings and accept more variable, sometimes higher filter use in exchange for pushing purification as far as a jug can realistically take it.