Short definition
Black iron pipe is threaded steel pipe with a dark mill-scale finish, used in Washington homes for natural gas distribution and fuel oil — never for potable water. It’s sized in nominal pipe size (NPS), joined with malleable iron threaded fittings, and sealed with pipe-thread compound or yellow gas-rated PTFE tape. Installation requires a licensed gas fitter in most jurisdictions.
What it is
Look at the gas line behind your range, dryer, or water heater. The dark, painted-or-unpainted threaded pipe is black iron. It’s identical in steel composition to galvanized pipe but without the zinc coating — the dark color comes from the natural mill scale on the steel surface. Joints are threaded, sealed with pipe dope or gas-rated tape, and connected through malleable iron fittings (elbows, tees, unions).
Inside your house, a licensed gas fitter ran the black iron from the meter or LPG regulator to each gas appliance. Flexible appliance connectors (coated stainless steel) make the final foot-or-two of the connection so the appliance can be moved during service.
Why it matters to a homeowner
You’ll encounter black iron during three conversations:
- New gas appliance install — a code-approved gas fitter has to extend or modify the black iron pipe to feed the new appliance.
- Suspected gas leak — black iron threaded joints are a common slow-leak source, especially in older homes. The diagnostic is a soap-bubble test or an electronic gas sniffer.
- Seismic retrofit — earthquake straps and flexible appliance connectors are part of Washington-specific gas-safety upgrades, particularly in areas with documented Cascadia-zone risk.
The non-DIY rule is stricter on gas than on water: don’t sweat fittings or extend lines yourself unless you’re licensed. The downside risk is gas leaks and explosion, not water damage.
Common variants and what black iron is not
- Black iron vs. galvanized. Both are steel pipe. Black iron has dark mill scale; galvanized is dipped in molten zinc and has a silver-gray finish. Black iron is for gas; galvanized was historically for water (now obsolete).
- Black iron vs. CSST. Corrugated stainless steel tubing is the flexible alternative for residential gas distribution. Both are code-approved with proper fittings.
Common failure modes
- External corrosion in damp or unconditioned spaces — pinhole leaks, gas escape.
- Thread sealant failure at fittings — slow leak detected with soap or sniffer.
- Seismic stress at rigid threaded joints — flex connectors at appliances are required by code in WA.