Product Description
LifeStraw Go Series 1L
Large capacity water filter bottle. Membrane filter lasts 1,000 gallons. Carbon filter lasts 26 gallons.
BPA Free Water Filter Bottle
- FILTERS OUT CONTAMINANTS: the Membrane microfilter protects against Bacteria (including E.coli + Salmonella), Parasites (including Giardia and Cryptosporidium), Microplastics, sand, dirt, and cloudiness
- IMPROVES TASTE: the Carbon filter reduces chlorine, odors + organic chemical matter
- LONG LASTING: The membrane microfilter lasts up to 1,000 gal (4,000 L) - about five years of daily use. Carbon filter lasts up to 26 gallons (100 L) - about two months.
- SAVES WASTE: The membrane microfilter lasts the equivalent to 8,000 single use plastic water bottles.
- LifeStraw is proud to be a B Corp and Climate Neutral Certified brand
- For every purchase, a child in need receives safe drinking water for a year.
- Capacity: 1L | 34 fl oz
- Weight: 268g
- Height: 27 cm | 10.6 in
- Diameter: 8.9 cm | 3.5 in
- Replaceable filters & parts
- BPA Free and dishwasher safe, once filter is removed
Includes: water bottle, BPA-Free membrane microfilter, activated carbon filter, cap with color-matched silicone mouthpiece
LifeStraw Membrane Microfilter Removes
- Membrane microfilter removes 99.999999% of bacteria, 99.999% of parasites, 99.999% of microplastics, silt, sand, and cloudiness
- Activated carbon filter reduces chlorine, organic chemical matter and odors for improved taste
- Meets NSF 42 standard for chlorine reduction
- Meets US EPA & NSF P231 drinking water standards for the removal of bacteria and parasites
- Membrane microfilter lasts up to 1,000 gal | 4,000 L, pore size: 0.2 micron
Independent Lab tested
LifeStraw products have a history of use in some of the harshest conditions around the world, from refugee camps to natural disasters to extreme back-country, our products have to work because lives depend on them. Our testing and transparency is unparalleled and we use the most trusted performance criteria based on protocols established by the World Health Organization, the US EPA, NSF International and the Water Quality Association.
.png)
.png)