Part 5 · Title 24, CCR
California Plumbing Code (CPC)
Title 24, Part 5 — the rules for water supply, drainage/DWV, venting, fixtures, fuel-gas piping, backflow protection and water efficiency in California buildings.
What CPC covers
The California Plumbing Code (CPC) is Part 5 of the California Building Standards Code (Title 24, California Code of Regulations). It sets the minimum standards for the design, materials and installation of plumbing systems — water supply, drainage, waste and vent (DWV), fixtures, water heaters, fuel-gas piping and backflow protection — to safeguard public health and safety. The CPC is based on the Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC) published by IAPMO, reprinted with California-specific amendments adopted by state agencies.
The 2025 California Plumbing Code is the current edition, effective January 1, 2026 and based on the 2024 UPC, replacing the 2022 CPC. Because Title 24 is updated on a three-year cycle and local jurisdictions may add amendments, the requirements that apply to your plumbing project depend on the edition your city or county has adopted and any local changes — which is exactly what GoCodebook reconciles for you.
What the California Plumbing Code regulates
The CPC is organized by system. Key areas include plumbing fixtures and fittings (Chapter 4), water heaters (Chapter 5), water supply and distribution including pipe sizing, materials and backflow prevention (Chapter 6), sanitary drainage (Chapter 7), vents (Chapter 9), traps and interceptors (Chapter 10), storm drainage (Chapter 11) and fuel-gas piping (Chapter 12). It also covers alternate water sources such as gray-water and recycled-water systems.
Drainage, waste and vent (DWV) design is the source of many plan-check corrections: trap arm lengths, vent sizing and distance to vent, cleanout placement and slope. On the supply side, the code requires backflow prevention and cross-connection control on hose bibbs, irrigation and other fixtures that could contaminate potable water. Ask GoCodebook for the controlling CPC section and we return the language plus citation.
Fixtures, water efficiency, gas piping and permits
California enforces strict water-efficiency limits on fixtures — maximum flush volumes for water closets and urinals and maximum flow rates for showerheads, lavatory and kitchen faucets. New construction and major remodels also intersect with the CALGreen (Part 11) water-conservation requirements, so the more stringent provision controls. Fuel-gas piping to ranges, dryers, water heaters and furnaces is regulated under CPC Chapter 12, including approved materials (Schedule 40 steel, CSST) and pipe sizing.
Most plumbing work — re-pipes, water-heater replacement, DWV alterations, gas-line extensions and new fixtures — requires a plumbing permit and inspection from the local building department. The exact triggers vary by city. See where coverage is deepest, then ask a question to get the rule for your jurisdiction.
Adopted editions and local amendments
The Building Standards Commission publishes Title 24, and the CPC reprints the UPC with amendments from California state agencies such as HCD. Cities and counties then adopt the code and may add local amendments — for example local backflow, gray-water, or all-electric reach codes that affect gas piping and water heating. That means the controlling text for a vent, trap or backflow question can differ between two neighboring jurisdictions.
GoCodebook identifies the adopted edition and local amendments for your address and returns the governing provision with a citation, so you can verify the original language quickly. A typical job also touches the California Mechanical Code (Part 4) for water-heater venting and the California Energy Code (Part 6) for hot-water and heat-pump water-heater requirements.
Who needs the CPC
CPC — frequently asked questions
What is the current edition of the California Plumbing Code?
The 2025 California Plumbing Code is current, effective January 1, 2026 and based on the 2024 Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC), replacing the 2022 CPC. Local jurisdictions adopt the statewide edition and may add amendments.
What does the California Plumbing Code cover?
The CPC (Title 24, Part 5) covers water supply and distribution, sanitary drainage (DWV), vents, fixtures and fittings, water heaters, fuel-gas piping, traps/interceptors, storm drainage and backflow protection, plus alternate water sources like gray water.
Is the CPC the same as the Uniform Plumbing Code?
The CPC is based on the UPC — it reprints the Uniform Plumbing Code (2024 UPC for the 2025 edition) and adds California amendments. The chapter structure matches the UPC, but California-specific changes and local amendments control.
Do I need a permit for plumbing work like a water heater or re-pipe?
In most jurisdictions, water-heater replacement, re-pipes, DWV alterations, gas-line work and new fixtures require a plumbing permit and inspection. Triggers vary by city — ask GoCodebook for the rule that applies to your address.
What are California's low-flow fixture and water-efficiency requirements?
The CPC sets maximum flush volumes for toilets/urinals and maximum flow rates for showerheads and faucets, and new construction and remodels also meet CALGreen (Part 11) water-conservation standards. The more stringent requirement controls — ask GoCodebook for your project specifics.
Where to read the CPC
California's adopted codes — including the California Plumbing Code (CPC) — are published under Title 24 and hosted on code libraries such as UpCodes (up.codes) and ICC Digital Codes from the International Code Council (ICC). Those let you read the text section by section.
GoCodebook goes further: instead of searching a code library, you ask a question and get the controlling provision for the edition and local amendments your jurisdiction adopted, with a citation to verify. See how GoCodebook compares to UpCodes and ICC.
Get cited CPC answers in seconds
Ask GoCodebook any question about the California Plumbing Code (CPC) and get a plain-English answer with the exact code citation — for your jurisdiction and the adopted edition.
Start Free TrialExplore the rest of Title 24
Part 1
California Administrative Code (CAC)
Part 2
California Building Code (CBC)
Part 2.5
California Residential Code (CRC)
Part 3
California Electrical Code (CEC)
Part 4
California Mechanical Code (CMC)
Part 6
California Energy Code
Part 7
California Wildland-Urban Interface Code (CWUIC)
Part 8
California Historical Building Code (CHBC)
Part 9
California Fire Code (CFC)
Part 10
California Existing Building Code (CEBC)
Part 11
California Green Building Standards Code (CALGreen) (CALGreen)
Part 12
California Referenced Standards Code (CRSC)