What Size Waste Pipe Do I Need? Sizing, Minimum Falls, and Regulations

Quick Answer: Use 32mm for basins and bidets, 40mm for baths, showers, and kitchen sinks, 50mm for combined branch runs or commercial appliances, and 110mm for soil (WC) connections. Minimum gradients of 18--90mm per metre apply to all branch discharge pipes, with maximum unventilated run lengths set by Approved Document H Table 2 (e.g. 1.7m for 32mm basin waste, 3.0m for 40mm bath waste). Exceeding these lengths requires ventilation or an air admittance valve.

Summary

Every waste pipe installation in England and Wales must comply with Building Regulations Approved Document H (2015 edition) and the design standard BS EN 12056-2:2000. Pipe diameter is determined by the appliance it serves and the number of discharge units flowing through it. The gradient (fall) must be steep enough to carry solids but shallow enough to prevent trap siphonage -- Approved Document H specifies 18--90mm of fall per metre of horizontal run for branch discharge pipes. Maximum unventilated branch lengths vary by pipe diameter and gradient, and exceeding them will cause trap seal loss. Getting these fundamentals right avoids callbacks, BCO rejections, and drainage failures.

Key Facts

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Detailed Guidance

Which pipe size for which appliance?

Approved Document H Table 1 sets the minimum trap and pipe sizes:

Appliance Min. Trap Diameter Min. Water Seal Depth Pipe Size
Washbasin 32mm 75mm 32mm
Bidet 32mm 75mm 32mm
Bath 40mm 50mm 40mm
Shower 40mm 50mm 40mm
Kitchen sink 40mm 75mm 40mm
Washing machine / dishwasher 40mm 75mm 40mm (standpipe)
WC (close-coupled/concealed) 75mm minimum outlet 50mm 110mm (or 75mm for older small-outlet WCs)
Urinal (bowl) 40mm 75mm 40mm
Floor gully 50mm 50mm 50mm

Never reduce the pipe diameter downstream -- it must stay the same size or increase toward the stack or drain.

What gradient (fall) should waste pipes have?

All branch discharge pipes require a gradient of 18--90mm per metre. This range applies across 32mm, 40mm, 50mm, and 110mm branch pipes serving individual appliances or groups.

In practice:

For underground foul drainage (110mm and above), Approved Document H Table 6 sets different gradients:

Pipe Diameter Min. Gradient (with WC) Min. Gradient (without WC) Max. Capacity
75mm 1:40 (25mm/m) 1:40 4.1 l/s
100mm (110mm OD) 1:80 (12.5mm/m) 1:40 9.2 l/s
150mm 1:150 (6.7mm/m) 1:150 15.0 l/s

The minimum velocity for self-cleansing in underground drains is 0.7 m/s at one-third pipe capacity.

What are the maximum unventilated branch lengths?

Approved Document H Table 2 gives the maximum branch pipe lengths where no separate ventilation is needed. Exceeding these lengths risks trap siphonage -- the rush of water through the pipe creates negative pressure that pulls the water seal out of the trap, allowing sewer gases into the building.

Appliance Max. Connections Pipe Diameter Max. Length (unventilated) Gradient Range
Washbasin / Bidet Up to 3 32mm 1.7m 18--22mm/m
Washbasin / Bidet Up to 3 32mm 1.1m 18--44mm/m
Washbasin / Bidet Up to 3 32mm 0.7m 18--87mm/m
Washbasin / Bidet Up to 3 40mm 3.0m 18--44mm/m
Washbasin / Bidet Up to 3 50mm 4.0m 18--44mm/m
Bath / Shower Up to 3 40mm 3.0m 18--90mm/m
Bath / Shower Up to 3 50mm 4.0m 18--90mm/m
Kitchen sink Up to 2 40mm 3.0m 18--90mm/m
Kitchen sink Up to 2 50mm 4.0m 18--90mm/m
Washing machine Up to 3 40mm 3.0m 18--90mm/m
WC (outlet > 80mm) Up to 8 100mm 15.0m 18--90mm/m
WC (outlet < 80mm) 1 only 75mm 15.0m 18--90mm/m

Critical note on 32mm basin waste: The maximum unventilated run of 1.7m only applies at the shallowest gradient (18--22mm/m). At steeper falls the allowable length drops sharply. This is the most common cause of failed BCO inspections on bathroom refits -- the basin is too far from the stack for 32mm pipe. The fix is to upsize to 40mm (giving 3.0m) or add ventilation.

When do I need an air admittance valve (AAV)?

An AAV (commonly called a Durgo valve) allows air into the system to prevent trap siphonage, without needing a full vent pipe through the roof. Under Approved Document H:

Common AAV applications: island kitchen sinks where running a vent to the external wall is impractical; en-suite bathrooms remote from the main stack; loft conversions where extending the stack through the new roof is undesirable.

What about 110mm soil stacks and connections?

The 110mm soil stack (SVP -- soil vent pipe) is the vertical pipe that collects branch discharge pipes and carries waste down to the underground drain. Key requirements:

Practical guidance by room type

Standard bathroom (basin, bath/shower, WC):

Kitchen:

Utility room:

En-suite / loft conversion:

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use 32mm waste pipe for a kitchen sink?

No. Kitchen sinks require a minimum 40mm trap and 40mm waste pipe per Approved Document H Table 1. A 32mm pipe cannot handle the volume and grease loading from a kitchen sink and will block frequently.

What happens if my waste pipe run is longer than the maximum unventilated length?

You have three options: (1) upsize the pipe diameter -- moving from 32mm to 40mm increases the maximum unventilated run from 1.7m to 3.0m; (2) fit an air admittance valve (AAV) at the trap end of the branch; (3) install a ventilating pipe connecting the branch to an open vent or the vented part of the stack above the highest branch connection. Any of these will prevent trap siphonage.

Do I need building control sign-off for waste pipe work?

Replacing like-for-like waste pipes on existing appliances is generally maintenance and does not require notification. However, new drainage runs, new connections to the soil stack, or any work involving underground drainage is notifiable under Part H and requires building control approval or completion by a registered competent person (e.g. a plumber registered with APHC, CIPHE, or a competent person scheme). If in doubt, contact your local authority building control (LABC).

Can I connect a washing machine waste directly to the soil stack?

Yes, provided you use a 40mm trapped standpipe (minimum 600mm above floor level) and the branch run to the stack is within the 3.0m maximum unventilated length at the correct gradient. The trap must have a 75mm water seal. Alternatively, you can discharge into an external trapped gully.

Is 50mm waste pipe ever needed in domestic work?

Rarely for individual appliances, but 50mm is useful as a combined branch serving multiple fixtures (e.g. a bathroom group of basin + bath feeding into a single 50mm branch to the stack). It gives you a 4.0m maximum unventilated run versus 3.0m for 40mm, which can solve layout problems in extensions and loft conversions. Approved Document H Table 2 explicitly provides for 50mm branches.

Regulations & Standards