Compare Bath Filters
Santevia Bath Filter scores higher on safety - here's why.
R3 scored the Kinder Filter Bathtub Faucet Water Filter 2.0/10 and the Santevia Bath Filter 4.3/10 on the same bath filters scoring system, weighing safety, efficacy, and usability. The Santevia Bath Filter comes out ahead, led by its safety score (4.3/10 vs 1.0/10).
The most important dimensions, side by side.
See which one actually scores higher — and why
Free account unlocks full safety scores, spec-by-spec breakdown, and the R3 verdict on Kinder Filter Bathtub Faucet Water Filter vs Santevia Bath Filter.
Unlock the full Kinder Filter Bathtub Faucet Water Filter vs Santevia Bath Filter breakdown
Free account unlocks all safety scores, complete spec comparison, scoring rationale, and the R3 verdict on which one to buy.
Everything you need to make the call - who each one is for, and who should skip it.
Go for it if you...
You want the cheapest possible faucet attachment and are not relying on it for verified contaminant removal
You like that the hose filters water inline as the tub fills and fits most standard tub faucets with no plumbing
Your main goal is softer-feeling bath water for sensitive skin rather than certified, lab-proven filtration
Your tap water is treated with plain chlorine and your main goal is to cut the chlorine smell and harshness during baths
You want the lowest-cost way into a bath filter and do not mind replacing the bag every two months
You want a tool-free filter that straps onto a standard horizontal tub faucet
You are reassured by an independent published lab test for the chlorine claim specifically
The main thing to know
The filter is advertised as removing fluoride, which a bath-faucet filter cannot do, and it names no media, publishes no flow-rate chlorine test, and carries no independent heavy-metal safety check, so its core cleaning claims are unverified.
An outside lab confirms it removes the chlorine from bath water, but the filter media is unnamed and there is no published heavy-metal or chloramine test for this specific product, so most of its safety picture stays unverified.
Skip this if you...
You want lab-verified or independently certified chlorine removal before putting a filter in your child's bath
You need confirmation that the filter does not leach copper, zinc, or other metals into the water
You expect the product to actually remove fluoride as advertised
You want a filter rated in gallons so you can match replacement to how often your family bathes
Your utility treats water with chloramine, which this filter has not been shown to address
You want a named, certified filtration media rather than an undisclosed granulated material
You need independent proof the filter itself does not release metals into the bath water
You have a long vertical faucet neck, which the strap does not fit
Neither of these quite what you're looking for?
I've reviewed all Bath Filters options at every price pointEvery Bath Filters in our database is scored using R3's deterministic scoring system - the same inputs always produce the same score. For this comparison, we evaluated Kinder Filter and Santevia across 3 independent criteria: Safety (70%), Efficacy (15%), Usability (10%). No sponsored rankings. No paid placements.
Straight answers - no sponsored content, no filler.
I'd start with Santevia Santevia Bath Filter - it scored 4.3/10 overall in our scoring system. Safety is our top-weighted scoring pillar, followed by efficacy, and usability. Check which pillar matters most to your family and compare those specific scores.
R3 uses a deterministic scoring system - the same inputs always produce the same score. We evaluate each Bath Filters across Safety, Efficacy, Usability using independently verified data. No sponsored rankings. No paid placements. Every score is fully reproducible.
Not necessarily. The overall score reflects how we weight those three pillars, but your priorities may differ. If you care most about safety, compare the safety scores directly. If budget drives your decision, the prices tell a clearer story. The "right" pick is the one that matches what matters most to your family.
Not the right match? Explore these alternatives in the same category.