Approved Document G Sanitation: G3 Unvented Hot Water, Wholesome Water and Hot Water Supply Temperature

Quick Answer: Approved Document G covers sanitation, hot water safety and water efficiency. Section G3 regulates unvented hot water storage systems: installers must hold a recognised G3 qualification, and every installation must include mandatory safety devices (temperature relief valve, expansion relief valve, pressure reducing valve, expansion vessel) and discharge pipework to a safe location. Hot water must be delivered at ≥50°C at outlets within 1 minute to comply with legionella control requirements.

Summary

Approved Document G covers a broad range of water-related building regulations requirements: sanitation facilities (toilets, washbasins), hot and cold water supply quality, hot water temperature, and the safety of hot water storage systems. Section G3 — covering unvented hot water storage — is the most technically complex and has the most significant qualification requirements of any domestic plumbing regulation.

The reason G3 is heavily regulated is simple: an unvented hot water cylinder stores large volumes of water under pressure, typically at 60–65°C. If the safety devices fail — and no primary safety device is present — the cylinder can undergo a Boiling Liquid Expanding Vapour Explosion (BLEVE). This is a catastrophic failure: cylinders can be propelled through buildings and have caused fatalities. The safety device chain in a G3 system is designed to ensure multiple independent failures would be required for such an event.

Beyond G3, Part G establishes requirements for wholesome water supply (ensuring cold water to drinking outlets is direct from the mains, not re-circulated or contaminated), water efficiency requirements for new dwellings, and legionella control through hot water temperature.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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G3 Safety Device Function Set Point Mandatory
Cold mains supply check valve Prevents backflow N/A Yes
Pressure reducing valve (PRV) Limits supply pressure Typically 3.5 bar Yes
Expansion vessel Accommodates thermal expansion Sized to cylinder volume Yes
Cylinder thermostat Primary temperature control Set to 60–65°C Yes (operational)
High-limit thermostat (overheat stat) Cuts immersion/coil on overheat 80–90°C (cuts power) Yes
Temperature relief valve (TPR) Thermal release on overheat Opens at 90–95°C Yes
Expansion relief valve (ERV) Pressure release on overpressure Set above working pressure Yes (combined with TPR often)
Thermostatic blending valve (TMV2) Limits bath temperature 44–46°C outlet Yes (baths)

Detailed Guidance

G3 Qualification Requirements

Anyone installing, commissioning or maintaining an unvented hot water storage system must be competent. AD G3 Regulation 2 defines competency as:

What the G3 qualification covers:

Building Control notification: Under Part G, work on unvented hot water systems must be either:

  1. Notified to Building Control before starting (full plans or building notice)
  2. Self-certified using a WaterSafe or equivalent competent person scheme (installer then notifies Building Control on completion)

Failure to notify is a Building Regulations offence.

G3 Safety Device Chain: Detailed Function

The safety devices in a G3 system work in series. Each device is the last line of defence in sequence:

1. Non-return valve / check valve (on cold feed): Prevents hot water flowing back into the cold mains. Without this, hot water could contaminate the cold supply (fluid category 3 risk under Water Regulations).

2. Pressure Reducing Valve (PRV): UK mains water pressure varies widely (1.5–10 bar). Most cylinders are designed for 3.5 bar maximum working pressure. The PRV reduces inlet pressure to the design working pressure. If the PRV fails open (common fault), cylinder pressure rises to mains pressure — potentially exceeding relief valve settings.

3. Expansion vessel: When cold water in the cylinder is heated from 10°C to 60°C, it expands by approximately 3%. In a sealed system, this expansion must go somewhere — the expansion vessel accommodates it. If the expansion vessel fails (waterlogged diaphragm), expansion pressure must be released through the expansion relief valve.

4. High-limit (overheat) thermostat: This is an energy cut-out device. If the primary thermostat fails and temperature rises above 80–90°C, the high-limit stat cuts power to the immersion heater or motorised valve to the boiler coil. This is the first safety device to activate on overheat.

5. Temperature and Pressure Relief Valve (TPR): Combined thermal/pressure relief valve. Opens at:

6. Expansion Relief Valve (ERV): Installed on the cold feed; opens to release pressure if it rises above its set point. Provides additional protection alongside the TPR.

Discharge Pipework (D1 and D2)

The discharge pipe is safety-critical. It conveys scalding water (90°C+) when the TPR or ERV lifts. It must be routed to a safe discharge point.

D1 pipe (from safety devices to tundish):

Tundish:

D2 pipe (from tundish to safe discharge):

Common failures in D2 installation:

Hot Water Temperature: Legionella and Scalding Balance

Part G requires hot water to be:

Minimum temperature (legionella control):

Maximum temperature (scalding prevention):

The conflict: To store at 60°C (legionella) but deliver at maximum 48°C (scalding), a thermostatic blending valve (TMV) must be fitted downstream of the cylinder. The TMV mixes hot and cold water to achieve the target temperature at the outlet.

TMV standards:

Water Efficiency: G2 Requirements

For new dwellings, Part G2 sets maximum water consumption:

Fittings Approach limits (typical):

Compliance: Include schedule of fittings in building regs submission; no testing required but evidence of specified fittings required.

WRAS Approval for Fittings

All plumbing fittings and materials in contact with water supplied for domestic use (including hot water) must comply with the Water Supply (Water Fittings) Regulations 1999. WRAS (Water Regulations Advisory Scheme) maintains a list of approved products.

Key requirements for hot water systems:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can a plumber without a G3 qualification work on an unvented cylinder?

No, unless supervised by a G3-qualified person. Any installation, commissioning, or replacement of components on an unvented hot water storage system requires G3 qualification. Replacing an immersion heater element in a vented cylinder does not require G3. Replacing an immersion heater in an unvented cylinder does require G3 competence (the system contains pressurised water; removing an immersion heater releases this pressure). If in doubt, the test is: is the cylinder sealed and pressurised? If yes, G3 competence is required.

Our unvented cylinder is dripping from the tundish. What does this mean?

A dripping tundish means one of the relief valves is weeping. Possible causes:

  1. Expansion vessel failure (most common): waterlogged diaphragm means expansion has nowhere to go; ERV weeps on each heating cycle. Replace expansion vessel.
  2. PRV set too high: mains pressure exceeds working pressure periodically. Replace or re-set PRV.
  3. TPR valve faulty: seat damaged, weeping cold. Replace TPR valve.
  4. System overpressure: supply pressure consistently too high. Add or replace PRV. A continuously weeping tundish that is producing hot water indicates the TPR is activating — this is an emergency; the system is overheating. Check the thermostat and overheat stat immediately.

Does a thermal store require G3 qualification?

A thermal store (where the DHW is produced by passing mains cold water through a heat exchanger coil in the store, not directly storing mains-pressure hot water) is typically not classified as an unvented hot water storage system under G3 if the DHW is heated and used immediately without accumulation. However, confirm this for specific products — some thermal stores do hold pressurised water. When in doubt, treat as G3.

Regulations & Standards