What Size Reverse Osmosis System Do I Need for 5 People?
For 5 people using RO water for drinking and cooking, here's the membrane and tank size that keeps up — and how it changes with heavier use.
For 5 people (drinking & cooking), with a 3.2-gallon tank — sized so the tank stays ahead of peak use, not by daily volume.
| Typical daily RO water use | ~8 gallons |
|---|---|
| Why this size | tank refill speed at peak draw |
| Real membrane output | ~50% of the GPD rating (typical temp/pressure) |
| Recommended membrane | 75 GPD |
| Recommended storage tank | 3.2-gallon |
75 GPD RO System
Best for 4–5 people
A higher-output membrane that refills the tank faster, so a typical family isn't waiting between glasses. The most common size for a household of four.
How this is calculated
A household only uses a few gallons of RO water a day, so the membrane size isn't about daily volume — it's about how fast the tank refills at peak draw (several people filling bottles at once). Bigger households need a faster membrane. Note that a membrane's rated GPD is measured at 77°F and 60 psi; a typical home gets roughly half that. We map your household size and usage to the standard tiers (1–3 people → 50 GPD, 4–5 → 75, 6 → 100).
The result above assumes standard drinking-and-cooking use. If your household leans on the RO line for a coffee maker, ice maker, pets, or plant watering, switch the usage setting to "heavy" and you'll likely move up a membrane size. A larger storage tank also helps a 5-people home avoid running dry at peak times.
Frequently asked questions
What size reverse osmosis system do I need?
Match the membrane's gallons-per-day (GPD) rating to your household's daily drinking and cooking water, with margin. As a rule of thumb: 1–3 people → 50 GPD, 4–5 people → 75 GPD, 6+ or heavy use → 100 GPD. The calculator above tailors it to your usage.
Does a 75 GPD membrane really make 75 gallons a day?
No — that rating is measured at 77°F and 60 psi. A typical home runs cooler and lower-pressure, so real output is roughly half the rating. That's why we size against real-world output, not the label number.
What size RO storage tank should I get?
Most under-sink systems use a 2.8–4 gallon tank (which holds ~2–3 gallons of usable water). Larger families or higher-GPD membranes benefit from a 4-gallon or dual-tank setup so you don't run the tank dry.
Do more people just mean a bigger membrane?
Mostly. A higher-GPD membrane refills the tank faster so it keeps up with demand. Above ~6 people or heavy use, a permeate pump or a second tank helps more than going to an oversized membrane alone.
Is a 75 GPD RO system enough for 5 people?
For 5 people on standard drinking-and-cooking use, a 75 GPD membrane refills the tank fast enough to keep up. Heavy use (coffee, ice, pets) or low water pressure can warrant the next size up or a permeate pump.