Greywater Reuse Rules and Plumbing in Texas
Texas regulates greywater reuse through a combination of state plumbing code provisions, environmental quality rules, and local municipal authority — creating a layered framework that governs how residential and commercial properties may collect, treat, and redistribute greywater. The rules distinguish between greywater sources, permitted end uses, and required system components, with compliance enforced through the permitting and inspection process. Understanding this regulatory structure is essential for property owners, licensed plumbers, and developers pursuing greywater systems in Texas.
Definition and scope
Greywater, as defined under the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) framework, refers to wastewater generated from household or building sources excluding toilet waste — specifically discharge from bathtubs, showers, bathroom sinks, laundry machines, and similar fixtures. Kitchen sink wastewater and dishwasher discharge are explicitly excluded from the greywater classification in most Texas regulatory contexts due to elevated pathogen and grease content, placing them instead in the blackwater or wastewater category subject to onsite sewage facility (OSSF) rules.
The Texas Water Code and TCEQ's regulations under 30 TAC Chapter 210 and related provisions govern the reuse of non-potable water, while the Texas State Plumbing Code — administered through the Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners (TSBPE) — establishes installation standards for greywater plumbing systems. The page provides the broader statutory framework within which these greywater rules operate.
Scope and coverage: This page addresses greywater reuse regulations as they apply within the State of Texas, under TCEQ and TSBPE jurisdiction. It does not address federal EPA wastewater discharge permits, greywater rules in other states, or commercial-scale water reclamation facilities subject to separate TCEQ operating permits. Municipal utility districts and home rule cities may impose additional or stricter local requirements beyond the state baseline — those local rules are not comprehensively catalogued here.
How it works
A permitted greywater reuse system in Texas operates through a defined sequence of collection, containment, and distribution, with each phase subject to specific plumbing code requirements.
- Source separation — Greywater-generating fixtures (showers, laundry, bathroom sinks) are plumbed on a separate drain line from blackwater fixtures. This requires dual-drain rough-in during construction or retrofit piping work during renovation.
- Collection and surge storage — Greywater flows to a collection tank. TCEQ guidance and plumbing code provisions typically require covered, vented tanks to prevent vector access and odor release. Tank sizing is calibrated to daily generation volume and intended reuse demand.
- Treatment or filtration — Depending on end use, greywater may pass through a filter, sand media, or constructed wetland before redistribution. Subsurface irrigation systems generally require less treatment than indoor reuse applications.
- Distribution — Approved end uses under Texas rules include subsurface landscape irrigation and, under specific conditions, toilet flushing. Surface spray irrigation of edible crops is prohibited. All distribution lines must be clearly identified as non-potable to prevent cross-connection with the potable water supply.
- Overflow to sewer or OSSF — Systems must include an overflow pathway to the sanitary sewer or an approved onsite sewage facility when greywater volume exceeds reuse demand, preventing unauthorized discharge to ground or surface water.
Cross-connection control is a critical safety requirement. The Texas plumbing code mandates physical separation between greywater distribution and potable supply, consistent with Texas backflow prevention requirements. Dual-check or reduced-pressure backflow assemblies must be installed at any point where the systems are adjacent.
Common scenarios
Greywater reuse in Texas appears across three primary installation contexts:
Residential laundry-to-landscape systems — The simplest permitted configuration, involving direct routing of washing machine discharge to subsurface drip irrigation. These systems operate under a simplified permit pathway in jurisdictions that have adopted TCEQ's streamlined rules, with no pressurized storage tank required in low-volume applications.
Residential whole-house greywater systems — Capturing shower, bath, and bathroom sink discharge for subsurface irrigation or toilet flushing requires a more complex permit, engineered storage, and, in most cases, a licensed master plumber's design and installation. Texas residential plumbing requirements detail the baseline code provisions that apply to these systems.
New construction with integrated greywater plumbing — Builders in water-stressed Texas regions, particularly in Central Texas and the Hill Country, incorporate dual-drain rough-in as part of original construction. Texas plumbing for new construction covers the permitting pathway for these installations. This approach is also addressed in broader Texas plumbing water conservation standards discussions, given that greywater reuse directly reduces potable demand.
Commercial and multi-family greywater systems — These installations are subject to additional TCEQ review and typically require engineered plans stamped by a licensed professional engineer, in addition to TSBPE-licensed plumbing contractors for all installation work.
Decision boundaries
The key regulatory distinctions governing greywater system design and permitting in Texas fall along four axes:
| Factor | Simpler pathway | Complex/full permit pathway |
|---|---|---|
| Source type | Laundry only | Shower, bath, bathroom sinks combined |
| End use | Subsurface irrigation | Toilet flushing or indoor non-potable use |
| Volume | Under 400 gallons per day | Over 400 gallons per day |
| Setting | Single-family residential | Multi-family or commercial |
The 400-gallon-per-day threshold is drawn from TCEQ's reuse framework and triggers more detailed engineering and review requirements. Systems above this volume may require a TCEQ Authorization to Dispose of Waste or a Type II reclaimed water permit under 30 TAC Chapter 210.
Licensed plumber requirements are non-negotiable regardless of system complexity. TSBPE rules require a Texas master plumber to be responsible for any greywater system installation that involves modification to the building's drain, waste, and vent system. Homeowner self-installation exemptions do not extend to greywater system plumbing in Texas.
The comprehensive overview of Texas's plumbing sector, including how greywater regulation fits within the broader professional and regulatory structure, is accessible through the Texas Plumbing Authority index.
References
- Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) — Water Reuse
- 30 TAC Chapter 210 — Use of Reclaimed Water (TCEQ)
- Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners (TSBPE)
- Texas Water Code — Title 2, Subtitle D (Texas Legislature Online)
- International Plumbing Code / Texas Plumbing Code Adoption Reference (TSBPE)
- TCEQ — Onsite Sewage Facilities (OSSF) Program