Bottled water coolers

Healthier hydration for only pennies a glass
How bottled water delivery service works
A Culligan Bottled Water Cooler gives you
Popular office water coolers

- High-quality, filtered drinking water wherever you need it
- Standalone unit allows you to move the water cooler
- Compact design takes up less than one square foot of space

- Bottom-load design eliminates hassle of lifting heavy 5-gallon bottles
- Provides hot, cold and room temperature options at the push of a button
- Compact design takes up less than one square foot of space
These water coolers can help solve the following water problems
The Culligan advantage
- 100% Guarantee
- Local water experts
- Custom water solutions
- 85+ years
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Frequently asked questions
Required supplies:
- Clean rubber gloves
- Paper towel
- Lint-free towel
- Plastic scrub brush (longer handle for easier cleaning)
- Teaspoon measuring spoon
- 2-gallon pail Unscented household liquid beach
- Clean 1-gallon container filled with bottled water
*Never use soap/detergents, steel wool or any other abrasives on your reservoir.
Sanitization instructions:
- Unplug the power cord.
- Remove bottle from the cooler and cap/cover for reuse.
- Drain and discard all water from the cooler.
- Remove the cooler top — including the baffle and no-spill device.
- Drain water from the cold water chamber and melt any ice rings. DO NOT SPILL.
- Prepare cleaning solution with 1 teaspoon of liquid bleach for each 1 gallon of water.
- Thoroughly clean all surfaces of the cooler with a cleaning solution and towel.
- Rinse the reservoir through the cold faucet.
- Clean baffle, no-spill device, cooler top, removable drip tray and faucets with cleaning solution.
- Thoroughly rinse cooler parts.
- Reinstall all parts
- Place a bottle back on the cooler and drain two cups of water from each faucet.
- Plug the cooler back into the electrical outlet — allow at least 45 minutes before use.
Bottled water coolers should be sanitized every 60-90 days according to the International Bottled Water Association (IBWA).
Water that is classified as "bottled water" or "drinking water" is regulated by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to maintain certain standards.
According to the FDA, for a product to be considered "bottled water," it cannot contain sweeteners or chemical additives, and must be calorie-free and sugar-free. Flavors, extracts and essences - derived from spice or fruit - can be added to bottled water, but these additions must comprise less than one percent of the final product. Beverages containing more than one percent of added flavor are classified as soft drinks, not bottled water.
The FDA defines the various water types as follows:
- Artesian water: Bottled water from a well that taps a confined aquifer (a water-bearing underground layer of rock or sand).
- Mineral water: Contains no less than 250 parts per million of total dissolved solids (minerals). No minerals can be added to this product.
- Purified water: Water labeled as "purified" can be derived from distillation, deionization or reverse osmosis.
- Sparkling water: Water that after treatment and possible replacement with carbon dioxide contains the same amount of carbon dioxide that it had at emergence from the source. Soda water, seltzer water and tonic water are not considered bottled waters. They are regulated separately and may contain sugar and calories. These types of waters are considered soft drinks.
- Spring water: Bottled water derived from an underground formation from which water flows naturally to the surface of the earth.
- Distilled water: Water derived from an approved source and heated to produce steam. The dissolved solids are left behind and the steam is condensed for a pure, mineral free, distilled product.