Short definition
Pipe support spacing is the code-mandated maximum interval between pipe hangers, varying by pipe material. Spacing exists to prevent sagging, traps in supply pipe, and bellies in DWV pipe. The numbers are tighter for flexible materials (PEX) and looser for rigid (copper, steel).
What it is
Standard residential horizontal-pipe spacing intervals, per UPC and IPC (with minor variation by version):
| Pipe material | Maximum horizontal spacing |
|---|---|
| PEX | 32 inches |
| CPVC (hot water) | 3 feet |
| Copper, 1/2 to 1 1/4 inch | 6 feet |
| Copper, larger | 10 feet |
| Plastic DWV (PVC, ABS) | 4 feet |
| Cast iron | 5 feet, plus at every joint |
| Galvanized / black iron, 1 inch+ | 12 feet |
| Galvanized / black iron, smaller | 8 feet |
Vertical pipe is supported at least once per floor (typically every 10 feet), with riser clamps at floor penetrations.
WA-amended UPC adopts these intervals. Some local AHJs may tighten requirements for specific applications.
Why it matters to a homeowner
Two failure modes when spacing is exceeded:
- Supply pipe traps air. A sag between hangers fills with air pockets that cause water-hammer-like noise and sometimes flow restriction.
- DWV pipe forms a belly. Solids settle in the low point and re-clog faster than the rest of the line. A “clog every six months” pattern in a basement DWV branch is often a hanger-spacing failure rather than a fixture problem.
When you watch a rough-in, count the hangers — three hangers across a 12-foot PEX run is the minimum. One in the middle and one at each end is not enough.
Common failure modes
- Spacing exceeded. Sag, trap, belly.
- Hangers only at penetrations. Same effect as exceeded spacing.
- One hanger pulled out. Pipe drops; adjacent hangers overload; compounding failure.