Approved Plumbing Materials and Standards in Colorado

Colorado plumbing installations are governed by a structured framework of material specifications, code adoptions, and inspection requirements that determine which products and systems are lawful for use in residential and commercial construction. The state's adoption of the International Plumbing Code (IPC) and International Residential Code (IRC), with Colorado-specific amendments, establishes the baseline for material approval. Understanding which materials are permitted — and under what conditions — is essential for licensed contractors, building officials, and property owners navigating permitting and compliance processes.

Definition and scope

Approved plumbing materials in Colorado refers to the specific pipes, fittings, fixtures, valves, and joining methods that meet the standards recognized under Colorado's adopted plumbing codes. Approval is not a single statewide certification; it operates through a layered system in which state code adoptions set the floor, and local jurisdictions — including the City of Denver, Colorado Springs, and the majority of Colorado's 64 counties — may adopt amendments that add or restrict materials beyond the state baseline.

The Colorado Plumbing Authority index covers the full landscape of state plumbing regulation, including how materials standards intersect with licensing, permitting, and inspection obligations. Material standards intersect directly with the regulatory context for Colorado plumbing, which governs how local amendments are promulgated and enforced.

The Colorado State Plumbing Board, operating under the Colorado Department of Regulatory Agencies (DORA), holds authority over plumbing licensure and code enforcement at the state level. The Colorado Division of Housing also plays a role in setting standards for manufactured and factory-built structures. Federal standards from bodies such as ASTM International, NSF International, and the American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) are incorporated by reference into Colorado's adopted codes.

This page addresses Colorado-specific material standards for potable water supply, drain-waste-vent (DWV) systems, and gas piping. It does not cover medical gas systems, industrial process piping governed by separate ASME B31 standards, or cross-jurisdictional pipeline infrastructure regulated federally by the Pipeline and Hazardous Materials Safety Administration (PHMSA).

How it works

Colorado's material approval process functions through code adoption and reference standard incorporation. The Colorado Revised Statutes (C.R.S.) Title 12, Article 155 governs plumbing licensing and establishes the authority of the State Plumbing Board to adopt and amend codes. The board has adopted the IPC and IRC as primary reference documents, with amendments published in the Colorado Code of Regulations (2 CCR 717-1).

Material approval follows this structured pathway:

  1. National standard publication — Organizations such as ASTM, NSF, and AWWA publish material standards (e.g., ASTM D2665 for PVC DWV pipe, ASTM B88 for copper water tube).
  2. IPC/IRC incorporation by reference — The adopted Colorado plumbing codes reference these standards directly, making compliance with the underlying standard a legal requirement.
  3. Colorado Board amendment — The State Plumbing Board reviews and may restrict or expand the list of acceptable materials through rulemaking.
  4. Local jurisdiction amendment — Municipalities and counties may adopt amendments through their building departments, requiring review of both state and local code before specifying materials.
  5. Inspection and approval — Licensed plumbing inspectors verify material compliance at rough-in and final inspection stages. Non-compliant materials result in failed inspections and required replacement.

Third-party listing by recognized testing laboratories — NSF/ANSI 61 for potable water contact materials and NSF/ANSI 372 for lead content — is a prerequisite for fixture and fitting approval in most Colorado jurisdictions.

Common scenarios

Potable water supply piping is among the most regulated categories. Type L and Type K copper tubing (conforming to ASTM B88) remain widely accepted across all Colorado jurisdictions. Cross-linked polyethylene (PEX) tubing — conforming to ASTM F876, F877, or CSA B137.5 — has been broadly adopted and is now the dominant material in new residential construction in Colorado. The shift toward PEX is particularly relevant in high-altitude plumbing considerations and freeze protection applications, where the material's flexibility and freeze-resistance characteristics offer performance advantages over rigid copper.

Drain-waste-vent (DWV) systems commonly use PVC (ASTM D2665, D2729) or ABS (ASTM D2661) plastic piping in residential applications. Cast iron (ASTM A74, CISPI 301) is required in specific commercial applications and where fire-rated floor-ceiling assemblies demand non-combustible materials. For more on DWV-specific requirements, see Colorado Drain-Waste-Vent Standards.

Gas piping inside structures is governed separately under Colorado's adopted fuel gas code. Black steel pipe conforming to ASTM A53 is the traditional standard; corrugated stainless steel tubing (CSST) conforming to ANSI/CSA LC 1 is permitted with bonding requirements that vary by jurisdiction. Details of gas line compliance appear under Colorado Gas Line Plumbing Regulations.

Type A vs. Type B copper comparison: Type K copper has the thickest wall and is rated for underground and high-pressure applications; Type L is used for interior supply lines; Type M, with the thinnest wall, is accepted in some Colorado jurisdictions for above-ground residential use but rejected by others, making local code verification essential before specification.

Decision boundaries

Material selection in Colorado is not a single-source determination. Three factors create decision boundaries that shift project by project:

Scope limitations: This page addresses Colorado state-level standards and the framework through which local jurisdictions operate. Federal EPA regulations governing lead and copper rule compliance in public water systems, and PHMSA regulations governing transmission and distribution pipelines, fall outside the scope of this reference.

References