Eczema Flare Up After Shower? Here's Why & How to Fix It (2026)

Eczema Flare Up After Shower? Here's Why & How to Fix It (2026)

Eczema Flare Up After Shower? Here's Why & How to Fix It (2026)

Eczema Flare Up After Shower

If showering makes your eczema worse, your water quality is likely aggravating the condition.

Why Does This Happen?

Chlorine damages the skin barrier protein filaggrin, which is already compromised in eczema sufferers. Hard water minerals increase skin pH, activating enzymes that break down the skin barrier. A landmark 2017 University of Sheffield study in the Journal of Investigative Dermatology found that hard water damages the skin barrier and increases eczema risk. Children in hard water areas are up to 87% more likely to develop eczema by age one.

The Water Quality Connection: Science & Research

Key Finding

Research consistently links shower water contaminants — particularly chlorine, chloramines, and hard water minerals — to skin and hair issues. Your skin absorbs a significant amount of these chemicals during a typical 10-minute shower.

Contaminants That Contribute to Eczema Flare Up After Shower

Contaminant Effect Common In
Chlorine Damages filaggrin protein All city water
Chloramine More irritating for sensitive skin 30% of US systems
Hard water minerals Increases skin pH, activates enzymes 85% of US water
THMs Inflammatory byproducts Chlorine-treated water

Data referenced from the EWG Tap Water Database, which tracks contaminants in water systems nationwide.

DIY Tests & Checks You Can Do at Home

1

Test Your Water

Purchase a water test kit (~$15-30 at hardware stores) to check chlorine levels and water hardness.

2

Check EWG Database

Search the EWG Tap Water Database by zip code for your local water quality report.

3

The Showerhead Check

White chalky buildup on your showerhead or glass doors? Those same mineral deposits are getting on your skin and hair.

4

The Travel Test

Notice if the problem improves when showering elsewhere (hotels, other cities). This strongly suggests your home water is the issue.

How Shower Filtration Helps

Shower filtration uses activated carbon and KDF-55 media to address the root causes. KDF media uses a copper-zinc alloy to reduce chlorine through electrochemical reduction. Activated carbon adsorbs chlorine, chloramines, and volatile organic compounds. Together, they can reduce chlorine by up to 99% and significantly decrease mineral effects on your skin and hair.

How Afina Shower Filtration Can Help

Afina's multi-stage filtration system uses activated carbon and KDF-55 media to reduce chlorine, heavy metals, and other contaminants — helping protect your skin, hair, and overall health.

Filtered Showerhead

$99

Built-in multi-stage filtration

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Shower Filter

$47

Fits any existing showerhead

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Replacement Filter

$29

2-3 month filter life

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Related Reading

Frequently Asked Questions

Can shower water trigger eczema?

Yes. Research confirms hard water and chlorine damage the skin barrier, which is already compromised in eczema, potentially triggering flare-ups.

Is hard water bad for eczema?

Studies show hard water increases skin pH and activates barrier-degrading enzymes. Children in hard water areas are up to 87% more likely to develop eczema.

Will a shower filter help my eczema?

Many eczema sufferers report fewer flare-ups with filtered water. While not a cure, removing irritants may reduce triggering factors.

What shower temperature for eczema?

Dermatologists recommend lukewarm water (98-100°F). Hot water increases chlorine absorption and further strips the skin barrier.

Ready to Upgrade Your Shower Water?

Join thousands of households that have switched to filtered shower water for healthier skin and hair.

Shop Filtered Showerhead Shop Shower Filter
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