A plumber needs to confirm that a shower head on the second floor of a building will receive adequate pressure. The street pressure is 350 kPa. The shower is 7.5m above the water main connection point.
Pressure (kPa) = Height (m) × 9.81
Residential: 100–500 kPa · 1 bar = 100 kPa = 14.5 psi
1 What this calculator does
Calculates static water pressure from a head of water (pipe height above reference point). Converts between kPa, psi and bar. Checks the result against AS/NZS 3500 minimum and maximum service pressures for plumbing installations.
2 Formula & professional reasoning
Pressure (kPa) = Height (m) x 9.81
Pressure (psi) = Height (m) x 1.450
Pressure (bar) = kPa / 100
AS/NZS 3500 range: 100 kPa minimum (at highest fixture) to 500 kPa maximum (at meter)
Pressure at fixture = Supply pressure - (Height x 9.81 kPa/m)
Hydrostatic pressure converts height (head) of water to pressure. Every metre of water height generates 9.81 kPa of pressure. For a supply system, pressure at any point equals the supply pressure minus the pressure lost in lifting the water to that height. A second-floor fixture 7.5m above the main loses 7.5 x 9.81 = 73.6 kPa from the supply pressure.
3 Worked examples
⚠️ Illustrative example only — not clinical or professional instruction.
Pressure loss from height: 7.5 x 9.81 = 73.6 kPa | Pressure at shower: 350 - 73.6 = 276.4 kPaPressure: 35 x 9.81 = 343.4 kPaStatic pressure: 650 kPa -- above the 500 kPa AS 3500 maximum | Pressure reducing valve (PRV) required4 Sanity check
5 Common errors
| Error | Cause | Consequence | Fix |
|---|---|---|---|
| Confusing static and dynamic pressure | Using the calculated static pressure as the delivered pressure during flow | Overestimating delivered pressure at fixtures -- inadequate flow may result | Static pressure is pressure with no flow. Dynamic pressure (actual pressure during use) is lower due to friction losses in pipes and fittings. For detailed flow calculations, add pipe friction loss using the Darcy-Weisbach or Hazen-Williams method. |
| Not installing a PRV where street pressure exceeds 500 kPa | Not checking the water authority's supply pressure before connection | Fixture failure, tap seat damage, burst flexible hoses and potential water damage | Always check the water authority's supply pressure and confirm it is within the 500 kPa maximum. Where pressure exceeds this, install a pressure reducing valve set to 300-350 kPa. |
| Not allowing for minimum pressure at the highest fixture | Calculating street-level pressure without subtracting height losses | Top floor fixtures below the 100 kPa minimum -- inadequate flow from taps and showers | Always calculate the pressure at the highest fixture: supply pressure - (height above main x 9.81 kPa). This must be at least 100 kPa (AS/NZS 3500). |
| Using psi when AS/NZS 3500 specifies kPa | Working in imperial pressure units on an Australian installation | Non-compliance with Australian standards -- inspection failure | Australian plumbing standards use kPa. US and UK commonly use psi. Confirm which unit system applies to the relevant standard and convert as needed. |
6 Reference & regulatory links
7 Professional workflow
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