DailyHalacha.com for Mobile Devices Now Available

Click Here to Sponsor Daily Halacha
"Delivered to Over 6000 Registered Recipients Each Day"

      
(File size: 810 KB)
Is it Permissible to Use a Water Filter on Shabbat?

Many people have a filter mechanism attached to their faucets, such that the water is automatically filtered on its way through the faucet. Similarly, some people have special pitchers with a built-in filtering mechanism that filters the water on its way out of the pitcher. Is it permissible on Shabbat to use a faucet or pitcher that has such a mechanism?

This question is discussed in the work Shemirat Shabbat Ke’hilchatah (3:56), and he rules that using such an apparatus is allowed on Shabbat, provided that it had been attached to the faucet or pitcher before Shabbat. Since it is built in to the faucet, there is certainly no concern that one may squeeze the filter during Shabbat. Shemirat Shabbat Ke’hilchatah adds that if the filter falls off the faucet on Shabbat, one may return it on a temporary basis, without screwing it in fully for permanent use, as this would constitute "Boneh" ("building," which is forbidden on Shabbat).

There is, however, one condition that must be met for a filter to be permissible for use on Shabbat (as Shemirat Shabbat Ke’hilchatah writes in Halacha 49). Namely, the water must be drinkable even without filter. If the water would otherwise be soiled and unsuitable for drinking, then one may not use a faucet or pitcher that automatically filters the water and renders it drinkable. Halacha allows using an automatic filtering system on Shabbat only if the water is suitable for drinking even without the filter, and the individual would drink the water unfiltered, but he uses the filter so that the water would be especially clean. Here in the New York area, water is generally drinkable from the tap even without filtering, and therefore it would be permissible to use a faucet or pitcher with a built-in filtering system on Shabbat.

Summary: It is permissible on Shabbat to use a faucet or pitcher with a built-in filtering mechanism, assuming that the water is basically drinkable even without filtering.

 


Recent Daily Halachot...
The Power of Speech
The Importance of Learning during the Summer
Respecting One’s Father When He Visits on Shabbat
Must One Stand for His Rabbi or Parent While he Studies Torah, Prays or Recites Birkat Ha’mazon?
When Must One Stand in His Parent’s Presence?
Standing Up for a Parent Who is One’s Student
Standing in the Presence of One’s Parent
Laws Pertaining to Meals: Etiquette for Guests and Hosts, and Torah Scholars Eating with an Am Ha’aretz
Are There Restrictions on Whom a Female Kohen May Marry?
If a Kohen Marries a Woman Forbidden for Him
May a Kohen Fly on a Plane That is Carrying a Dead Body?
May a Kohen Visit the Gravesite of a Sadik?
May a Doctor Who is a Kohen Perform Biopsies or be in the Same Room as Body Parts From a Living Person?
May a Non-Kohen Bless Somebody With Birkat Kohanim?
Reciting the Verse of “Vi’yhi Noam” Before Praying or Performing a Misva
Page of 239
3585 Halachot found