Why 90% of New Water Heaters in Canada Are Garbage
The Big Picture: What People Believe
Across hundreds of lines of discussion, one belief keeps repeating:
“Things used to last. Now they’re designed to fail.”
Whether it’s water heaters, furnaces, or even cars, commenters feel like durability has quietly disappeared replaced by expensive replacements, rental traps, and “planned obsolescence.”
But is it reality… or frustration stacking on top of bad experiences?
Let’s break it down.
The “Nothing Lasts Anymore” Sentiment Is Everywhere
This is the dominant emotion in the entire comment section.
People repeatedly compare modern appliances to older ones that supposedly lasted decades.
One commenter says their parents’ 1972 water heater is still running today.
Another mentions a furnace from the 1980s still working fine.
And then there are the newer stories:
- water heaters failing in 2–6 years
- tanks leaking and damaging basements
- replacements needed multiple times in under a decade
The contrast is what fuels the frustration.
“Everything being built today is built to FAIL and it’s all by design.”
Even when the numbers vary, the feeling is consistent: modern reliability feels worse.
Rental Water Heaters: “A Scam” or a System People Don’t Trust
If there’s one thing that really triggers people in these comments, it’s rentals.
The word “scam” shows up repeatedly.
Users describe:
- being stuck paying monthly fees for years
- being forced into replacements
- companies doing “zero maintenance”
- long-time customers feeling trapped or overcharged
One commenter summed it up bluntly:
“We were scammed by Reliance. 40 years of loyalty meant nothing.”
Another says simply:
“Rentals are a scam. Only in Ontario.”
Whether fair or not, the perception is clear:
People don’t feel in control of their own equipment.
The DIY Crowd vs Everyone Else
There’s a strong divide in the comments.
On one side:
- homeowners who maintain their tanks
- people replacing anodes
- flushing sediment yearly
- tracking lifespan like engineers
On the other:
- frustrated homeowners dealing with leaks
- insurance pressures
- expensive repairs they didn’t expect
DIY users often claim dramatic results:
“My tanks are over 20 years old.”
“Check the anode every 2 years and it lasts forever.”
This creates a powerful narrative:
maintenance = survival
neglect = failure
But not everyone agrees it’s that simple.
The Cost Debate: Nobody Agrees on the “Real Price”
Ask the internet what a water heater costs and you’ll get five different answers.
In these comments:
- some say $800–$1300 installed
- others say $2500–$3000 is normal
- contractors push back on low estimates
- DIYers claim they saved thousands
This creates confusion and fuels distrust.
One contractor pushes back hard:
“If someone installs for $1000, make sure they’re licensed. Real installs are $2500+.”
Meanwhile, others argue they did it for a fraction of that.
The result? Nobody trusts pricing anymore.
Planned Obsolescence: A Theory Everyone Already Believes
Even without proof, many commenters are convinced:
Modern appliances are designed to fail sooner.
They point to:
- smaller or “weaker” components
- repeated breakdown cycles
- forced replacements tied to insurance limits
- regulatory changes affecting parts
One comment sums up the belief:
“It’s called planned obsolescence and yes, it’s 100% real.”
Whether accurate or not, it has clearly become a dominant mental model for how people interpret failure.
Insurance & Rules Add Another Layer of Frustration
A surprising theme shows up repeatedly:
insurance policies forcing replacements.
Some users report:
- no coverage after 10–12 years
- pressure to replace working tanks
- fear of water damage claims being denied
That creates a strange paradox:
Even if something still works… you might be forced to replace it anyway.
And that doesn’t sit well with homeowners.
The Emotional Tone: Anger, Nostalgia, and Exhaustion
This comment section isn’t calm technical discussion.
It’s emotional.
We see:
- anger at companies
- nostalgia for “old quality”
- frustration with costs
- cynicism about governments and corporations
- pride in self-reliance
A recurring vibe is:
“I used to trust what I bought. Now I don’t.”
The Contradictions That Keep This Debate Alive
Interestingly, the comments don’t agree with each other — at all.
Some say:
- “My unit lasted 20 years.”
Others say:
- “Mine failed in 3.”
Some say:
- “Maintenance fixes everything.”
Others say:
- “Everything is junk no matter what you do.”
So what’s going on?
Likely a mix of:
- maintenance differences
- installation quality
- water conditions
- brand variation
- and memory bias (we remember extremes more than averages)
What This Really Tells Us (The Bigger Insight)
This isn’t just about water heaters.
It’s about trust.
People feel like:
- products are less reliable
- companies don’t care
- systems are designed for repeat payments
- ownership is becoming more expensive and complicated
Even when facts are debated, perception is powerful.
And perception drives behavior.
Final Takeaway
After analyzing 114 comments, the story isn’t just about appliances.
It’s about a shift in mindset:
From “buy it once and it lasts”
to
“everything will fail – plan accordingly”
Whether that belief is fully accurate or not, it’s now deeply embedded in consumer thinking.
And for creators, contractors, and businesses?
That mindset changes everything.
Because people aren’t just buying products anymore.
They’re buying trust, transparency, and reassurance that they won’t get trapped.









