Macerator and Saniflo Installation
A macerator (commonly called a Saniflo, which is a brand name) is a pump unit containing a rotating blade that macerate waste and pump it through a small-bore discharge pipe (22mm typically) to the main soil stack or drain. They allow bathrooms to be installed anywhere in a property — including below drain level — without breaking up floors or major drainage alterations. Installation requires a double-check valve on the cold supply and must comply with the Water Supply (Water Fittings) Regulations 1999.
Summary
Saniflo and similar macerator systems have enabled bathroom installations in locations that would otherwise require extensive structural work — basement bathrooms, loft conversions, garage conversions, and outbuildings are all candidates. The trade-off is ongoing maintenance (the blade and pump require servicing every 2–3 years), noise (maceration is audible), and a monthly descaling routine in hard water areas.
Saniflo is the dominant brand in the UK market but is not the only option — alternatives include Kinedo, WPump, and generic macerator units from various suppliers. The installation principles are consistent across brands, but always follow the specific manufacturer's instructions for the product being fitted — macerator connections, pipe diameters, and maximum run distances vary by model.
For plumbers, macerators are a regular product but one where correct installation details matter significantly. A discharge pipe running at the wrong gradient, a pipe diameter that doesn't match the pump specification, or a missing air admittance valve will produce a system that either doesn't drain or backs up. Get the hydraulics right before boxing in the unit.
Key Facts
- Saniflo types: Behind-WC macerator (most common; connects to standard back-to-wall or close-coupled WC pan outlet), bathroom macerator (connects to WC + bath/shower + basin), dual-inlet (for WC + one other fitting), and whole-room units for multiple fittings
- Discharge pipe diameter: typically 22mm OD rigid UPVC or PVC; some models 32mm or 40mm; always use the diameter specified by the manufacturer — undersizing causes blocking
- Maximum discharge run: horizontal run up to 50m (Saniflo brand Saniplus); vertical lift up to 5m; combined runs reduce each other — check manufacturer's hydraulic limits for the specific model
- Gradient of discharge pipe: minimum 1:80 (12.5mm/m) for horizontal runs; no flat sections; pipe must not dip down and back up (creates air lock)
- Air admittance valve (AAV): required at or near the macerator unit where the system is not connected to a conventional vented soil stack; prevents negative pressure causing siphonage of the macerator trap seal; most macerators have a built-in trap that still requires an AAV unless connected directly to a vented stack
- Double-check valve: mandatory on the cold water supply to a macerator under Water Regulations; prevents backflow of macerated waste into the potable supply (fluid category 5 risk)
- Power supply: macerators require a 13A fused socket or fused spur; must NOT use an unfused socket; the socket or fused spur must comply with bathroom zone requirements (IP-rated if within zones 1 or 2); the socket should ideally be outside the bathroom or in a recessed position compliant with zoning
- Maintenance descaling: in hard water areas (water hardness above 200 mg/l CaCO3), the impeller and pump chamber accumulate limescale; use purpose-made macerator descaler (Saniflo recommends Saniflo Descaler) monthly; do not use standard toilet bleach tablets in the pan — chlorine damages macerator components
- What cannot go through a macerator: sanitary products, wipes (including "flushable"), cotton wool, hair bands, or any fibrous material will block the macerator; this must be clearly communicated to all users
- Noise level: standard Saniflo units produce approximately 50–60 dB(A) when operating; audible through lightweight partitions; quieter models are available but still noticeably louder than a gravity drain
Quick Reference Table
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Try squote free →| Macerator type | Connected fittings | Typical use |
|---|---|---|
| Single inlet (WC only) | WC pan | Single toilet addition |
| Dual inlet | WC + one fitting (basin or shower) | Small en-suite |
| Multi-inlet | WC + bath/shower + basin | Full bathroom |
| Sanipack | WC behind false wall (in-wall cistern) | Design-focused installation |
| Sanibest Pro | Heavy-duty; suitable for commercial | Bars, offices, workshops |
| Parameter | Typical Saniflo domestic spec | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Discharge pipe OD | 22mm | Check model — some 32mm |
| Maximum horizontal run | 50m | Saniplus; reduce for vertical lift |
| Maximum vertical lift | 5m | With horizontal run reduced proportionally |
| Minimum pipe gradient | 1:80 | No flat or reverse sections |
| Power supply | 13A fused spur | IP-rated if in zone 2 |
| Cold supply check valve | Double-check valve | Mandatory under Water Regulations |
Detailed Guidance
Siting the Macerator
The macerator unit sits directly behind the WC pan, typically within a purpose-built boxing or false wall. Saniflo's behind-WC models sit at floor level with the WC pan rubber outlet connecting directly to the macerator inlet port.
Key siting considerations:
- The unit needs to be accessible for servicing (descaling, blade replacement) — do not box in permanently; use removable panels
- The power outlet (fused spur or socket) should be accessible without moving furniture
- The discharge pipe route should be the most direct possible to the soil stack or external drain
- The horizontal discharge pipe must be continuous downhill — no sections that dip or rise; water must flow without air lock
Discharge Pipe Installation
The discharge pipe carries macerated waste under pressure (the pump in the macerator provides positive pressure). Unlike gravity drainage which requires careful gradient management, the discharge pipe can run vertically and horizontally in various directions — but it must:
- Use the correct pipe diameter (22mm for most domestic models)
- Maintain a minimum 1:80 gradient on all horizontal runs — water needs this gradient to fully drain after the pump stops
- Have no sagging sections — pipe clips every 300–400mm on horizontal runs; sagging causes waste to pool and odour issues
- Connect to the soil stack above the flood level of the highest fitting in the stack (prevents backflow from the stack into the discharge pipe)
- Have an inspection eye fitting where the pipe connects to the stack (for rodding access if needed)
The pipe must be rigid PVC — do not use flexible waste pipe for the discharge run. Flexible pipe sags between fixings and creates the dipping sections that cause problems.
Connecting to the Soil Stack
The preferred connection is into the soil stack via a solvent-welded boss connector. The entry point into the stack should be at least 200mm above the highest spigot connection (below the discharge pipe connection point) to prevent backflow from the stack.
Where connecting to an existing stack is not practical, the discharge pipe can run directly to:
- An external drain connected to the main sewer
- An underground inspection chamber (standard 100mm drain) via a reducer fitting
- A garden manhole directly connected to the drainage system
In all cases, the connection must be watertight and rodable.
Air Admittance Valve (AAV)
AAVs are mechanical valves that open to admit air into the drainage system under negative pressure (created when water flows away) and close under positive pressure (preventing gases from escaping). They eliminate the need for a vent pipe to atmosphere.
For macerators, an AAV must be fitted at or near the macerator unit unless the discharge pipe connects directly and uninterruptedly to a vented soil stack. The AAV must be:
- Accessible (not permanently boxed in or buried)
- In an accessible, ventilated location (not sealed in a wall cavity)
- Fitted above the spill level of the highest connected fitting
- A BS EN 12380-compliant device
Most Saniflo installations in UK bathrooms use an AAV on a short 22mm stub connected to the discharge pipe within 300–500mm of the macerator. The AAV prevents siphonage and backs up the macerator's own internal float.
Electrical Requirements
Macerators are Class I appliances (earthed, connected to mains voltage). The power supply requirements are:
- Minimum: 3-pin fused 13A socket fused at 3A (check manufacturer recommendation); or a fused connection unit (FCU) fused at 3A
- The socket or FCU must comply with bathroom zone requirements:
- Outside zones: standard unswitched fused socket is acceptable
- Zone 2: socket with IPX4 rating, or FCU outside zone 2
- Never in zone 1
In practice, most installers fit an unswitched fused spur (FCU) outside the bathroom (in an adjacent cupboard, or at high level above the door frame) with an indicator light. This keeps the power supply well outside the bathroom zones and provides a visible indication that the unit is powered.
The macerator must NOT be connected to a ring final circuit socket without a fuse reduction — the motor's starting current can trip an MCB if the circuit has insufficient capacity. A dedicated fused spur is the correct approach.
Water Supply and WRAS Compliance
Under the Water Supply (Water Fittings) Regulations 1999, connections to the cold water supply that introduce a risk of backflow of contaminated water must be protected with an appropriate backflow prevention device. The WC cistern (which fills from mains cold water) is a fluid category 3 risk (non-potable water that could flow back into the supply); the macerator waste content (if the system pressurised backwards) is fluid category 5 (grossly contaminated).
The required protection is:
- On the cold supply to the WC cistern: a double-check valve (BS 6282 Part 2 type BA) on the supply — this protects against the cistern contents backing up into the mains
- On the macerator cold supply inlet (where fitted directly): WRAS approval for all components
Any WaterSafe-registered plumber is accredited to certify this work. In practice, if the WC cistern has its own double-check valve, an additional valve on the macerator cold feed is not required for the macerator itself (only for the cistern).
Frequently Asked Questions
How noisy is a Saniflo macerator?
Standard domestic Saniflo units operate at approximately 50–60 dB(A) when macerating. This is comparable to a reasonably loud conversation. The noise lasts for approximately 3–10 seconds per flush. It is clearly audible through standard plasterboard partitions. If noise is a significant concern, the quieter Saniflo Silence model reduces this by around 5 dB(A) through additional acoustic insulation. Siting the unit within a boxing lined with acoustic mineral wool helps reduce transmission.
Can I put wet wipes down a Saniflo?
No — not even products labelled "flushable." All wipes, cotton products, hair, and fibrous materials will wind around the macerator blade and jam the unit within a short time. This is the most common cause of macerator failure. All occupants must be clearly briefed on this limitation. Consider a covered bin in the bathroom as an alternative disposal route for these products.
Does a Saniflo installation need Building Control sign-off?
A macerator installing a new WC in a residential property is adding sanitary accommodation — this may require Building Regulations compliance under Part G (Sanitation, hot water safety and water efficiency). In most cases, a simple en-suite addition using a macerator system is treated as a "material alteration" rather than a new drainage installation requiring formal notice. For a basement conversion or loft conversion where the macerator forms part of a new habitable space, Building Control involvement is required. The plumber's competent person scheme (CIPHE, WaterSafe) may allow self-certification. Check with your local authority before starting.
How long do macerators last?
A well-maintained Saniflo macerator has a service life of 15–20 years. The key maintenance steps are: monthly descaling in hard water areas, annual servicing of the float switch and pump seal, and replacement of the blade every 5–7 years. The motor and electronics are serviceable items — Saniflo's UK service network provides spare parts and workshop repairs.
Regulations & Standards
Water Supply (Water Fittings) Regulations 1999 — backflow prevention requirements; double-check valve on cold supply to cistern (fluid category 3 protection)
Building Regulations Part G (Sanitation, hot water safety and water efficiency) — sanitary accommodation requirements; may require notification for new WC installation
Building Regulations Part H (Drainage and waste disposal) — macerators discharge to a drain; the drain connection must comply with Part H
BS EN 12380 — air admittance valves; specifies performance requirements for AAVs used in macerator discharge systems
BS 7671:2018 — electrical installation requirements including bathroom zones
Saniflo UK Technical Support — installation manuals, hydraulic specification data, descaler products
WaterSafe — Find a Plumber — register of plumbers accredited for WRAS compliance work
CIPHE (Chartered Institute of Plumbing and Heating Engineering) — plumbing standards and best practice
[bathroom extractor fan guide|bathroom ventilation requirements when adding a new toilet or en suite](/wiki/bathrooms/bathroom-extractor-fan-guide|bathroom ventilation requirements when adding a new toilet or en-suite) — ventilation compliance alongside new bathroom installation
[waste pipes|waste pipe sizing and gradient requirements for gravity drainage](/wiki/plumbing/waste-pipes|waste pipe sizing and gradient requirements for gravity drainage) — for when macerator is not required and gravity drainage is possible
[underground drainage|underground drainage connections for macerator discharge to external drain](/wiki/drainage/underground-drainage|underground drainage connections for macerator discharge to external drain) — drain connection specifications
[building control|when building control sign off is required for bathroom additions](/wiki/compliance/building-control|when building control sign-off is required for bathroom additions) — notification requirements for new bathrooms
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