
Water technology company Boon just launched its latest purifier, Purify Pro. It is a commercial water purification system aimed at offices, institutions, hospitality spaces, and other shared spaces. According to the company, this new system has been designed to deliver high-capacity purification while allowing users to monitor water quality and system performance in real time as well.
Boon Purify Pro Features
Purify Pro can process up to 100 litres of water per hour. For this, it uses a combination of reverse osmosis (RO) and ultraviolet (UV) purification. According to the company, the system is designed for environments with high daily consumption where reliable access to drinking water is essential.
One of the USPs of this purifier is its 15-inch LCD screen and LED indicators. This provides real-time details about the water parameters and system status. This system enables users to track purification metrics and facilitates easier dispensing in shared spaces.
The Purify Pro is backed by Boon’s UltraOsmosis purification architecture, which the company says helps remove contaminants while retaining essential minerals in the water to maintain balanced taste. It also includes multiple filtration technologies to help with the purification performance.
These include the RidgeFlow PP filter, which is designed to offer higher dirt-holding capacity, and ECO RO membranes, built to handle water with high TDS while extending membrane life. The purifier also uses LumaUV, an inline LED UV disinfection technology which provides effective purification while consuming less power compared to conventional UV systems.
You get four dispensing options with this purifier: hot, normal, cold, and sparkling water. Sparkling water has been added specifically for workplaces and hospitality settings that typically rely on bottled beverages.
In addition to all this, the purifier also has Boon’s WaterAI platform, which lets users monitor parameters like temperature and TDS in real time. The company says the platform allows facility managers to monitor water quality and identify potential maintenance needs before any operational issues arise.
This launch comes at a time when businesses and institutions are increasingly looking for alternatives to bottled water as a part of their broader sustainability initiatives. Commercial spaces such as offices, universities and hotels generate significant plastic waste from packaged water consumption.
According to industry experts, demand for high-capacity, connected purification systems is gradually increasing as companies are trying to balance their sustainability goals with operational efficiency.

















