A plumbing system without proper venting traps will siphon. Trap-seal loss = sewer gas in occupied spaces. The vent system pressurizes the drainage piping so siphonage cannot occur. Sizing the vent pipes correctly — without over-sizing for cost or under-sizing for code violation — is one of the most-skipped reviews in plumbing tendering.
This guide covers the four common venting strategies (individual, common, wet, circuit) and how to size them per NBC 2016 Pt 9 and IPC 2018.
Why vents matter
Three failure modes occur without venting:
1. Siphonage — flow downstream pulls air from the trap; trap loses water seal
2. Back-pressure — water column upstream pushes air back through trap; aerated water + sewer gas
3. Pressure transients — flow surges create momentary pressure spikes; trap seal momentarily breaks
Properly sized vent system prevents all three. The vent provides atmospheric communication so pressure stays equalized.
Strategy 1: Individual vent (each fixture vented)
Every fixture has a vent connected within 1.5 m of the trap weir. Most conservative; required for high-priority installations (hospitals, laboratories) and for fixtures with long horizontal arms (over 1.5 m to vent).
Sizing per IPC 2018 §906: vent pipe = 1/2 the drain size, minimum 32 mm (1¼ inch). For a 75 mm bathroom group drain, individual vents = 38 mm (1½ inch).
Pros: bulletproof reliability, easy code compliance.
Cons: pipe quantity, complex routing, expensive.
Strategy 2: Common vent (two fixtures sharing one vent)
Two fixtures back-to-back share a single vent stack. Common in hotel guest bathrooms (lavatory + WC), kitchen sinks (twin bowl).
Sizing: vent must be sized for the larger of the two fixtures’ DFU (Drainage Fixture Unit) values.
| Fixture | DFU |
|---|---|
| Lavatory | 1 |
| Kitchen sink | 2 |
| Bathroom group (lav + WC + tub) | 6 |
| Floor drain | 2 |
| WC | 4-6 |
| Urinal | 4 |
| Shower | 2 |
| Tub | 3 |
A bathroom group + WC sharing a vent: max DFU = 6 → vent = 50 mm (2 inch).
Strategy 3: Wet vent (one drain serves both drainage and venting for upstream fixtures)
Multiple bathroom fixtures (lavatory, tub, shower) drain into a wet-vented section that simultaneously carries drainage from the WC. The wet vent permits limited gravity drainage to act as the vent.
Sizing per IPC 2018 §913.4:
- Wet vent diameter ≥ 50 mm (2 inch)
- Wet-vented fixtures’ total DFU ≤ 7 (one bathroom group plus a urinal, typically)
- Maximum 4 fixtures wet-vented (e.g. one bathroom group)
Pros: economical (fewer pipes, less roof penetration).
Cons: limited application; failure of wet-vent fixture downstream creates double trouble.
Strategy 4: Circuit vent (battery of fixtures)
Multiple fixtures (typically 3-7) connected to a single horizontal branch with a vent connecting between two fixtures.
Sizing per IPC 2018 §911:
- Vent pipe = 1/2 the largest drainage pipe in the circuit
- Maximum 8 fixtures on a circuit vent
- Total DFU ≤ 30
For a 100 mm horizontal branch with 8 fixtures and 30 DFU total: circuit vent = 50 mm.
Pros: very economical for large fixture batteries.
Cons: requires careful slope (150 mm fall over horizontal run); siphon risk if exceeding 30 DFU.
Strategy 5: Combination drain and vent (limited application)
A single pipe acts as both drain and vent for a small, low-DFU fixture battery.
IPC 2018 §912: limited to 4 fixtures, total DFU ≤ 4. Used in small kitchens or pantry sinks where simplicity is preferred.
Vent stack sizing for the building
Total DFU × stack flow capacity table (IPC 2018 §906.6):
| Vent stack diameter | Max length of vent stack (m) | Max DFUs vented |
|---|---|---|
| 32 mm (1¼”) | 9 | 6 |
| 50 mm (2″) | 30 | 26 |
| 65 mm (2½”) | 60 | 80 |
| 75 mm (3″) | 105 | 120 |
| 100 mm (4″) | 200 | 480 |
| 125 mm (5″) | 220 | 1,360 |
| 150 mm (6″) | 300 | 2,800 |
For a 30-storey hotel with 250 guestrooms, each generating ~10 DFU = 2,500 DFU at building base:
- Vent stack required: 150 mm (6 inch)
- Stack must terminate at roof, ≥ 0.6 m above roof or 3 m horizontal from any operable window/door
Wet venting: the practical Indian application
Most Indian residential and hospitality plumbing uses some form of wet venting because individual venting requires too many vertical chases. Typical installation:
- Bathroom group (lav + WC + tub + shower) draining into a single 75 mm horizontal branch
- Vent take-off after the lavatory drain (the upstream high-priority fixture)
- WC drain joins the wet vent below the lavatory connection
- Vent rises to vent stack
Sized correctly: 75 mm wet-vent section, 50 mm vent leg, complies with NBC 2016 Pt 9 and IPC 2018.
Worked example: 30-storey hotel, 250 guest bathrooms
Each guest bathroom: 1 lavatory + 1 WC + 1 tub + 1 shower = 1 + 4 + 3 + 2 = 10 DFU
Per floor (10 bathrooms typical): 100 DFU
Total building DFU = 10 floors × 100 = 1,000 DFU (some operate simultaneously, allowance per code)
Vent stack from base to roof:
- 100 mm (4″) stack diameter handles up to 480 DFU; fan-out/upsize required at higher
- For 1,000 DFU, use 125 mm (5″) vent stack — adequate for 1,360 DFU
Common venting per bathroom: 50 mm (2″) branch vent, takes off above the lavatory drain at the typical bathroom group.
Roof terminations: 1 vent stack at roof, terminating 0.6 m above roof, located minimum 3 m from any operable window or HVAC fresh-air intake.
Five common venting mistakes
1. No vent on long horizontal arm > 1.5 m to fixture. Code requires individual vent within 1.5 m of trap; sites with 3+ m runs need re-piping.
2. Common vent shared by fixtures with very different DFUs. A WC (DFU 4) sharing with a lavatory (DFU 1) — fine. A WC (DFU 4) sharing with a kitchen sink (DFU 2) plus a tub (DFU 3) plus a shower (DFU 2) — exceeds common-vent application; needs circuit or individual vent.
3. Vent stack terminating near operable window. Sewer gas re-enters; complaint city. Always 3+ m horizontal separation from any operable opening.
4. Vent pipe size 32 mm (1¼”) accepted as universal default. Only valid for single fixture, low DFU. Check each branch.
5. Roof termination forgotten. Vent stack must terminate above roof level — terminating it inside an attic with a screen is not compliant.
Quick checklist
- [ ] Each fixture’s DFU rating from NBC/IPC table
- [ ] Vent strategy selected per fixture group (individual / common / wet / circuit)
- [ ] Vent pipe ≥ 1/2 drain diameter, minimum 32 mm
- [ ] Vent stack sized per total DFUs and length per IPC §906.6
- [ ] Roof termination ≥ 0.6 m above roof
- [ ] Roof termination ≥ 3 m horizontal from operable window/door/HVAC intake
- [ ] Wet vent application limited to one bathroom group + ≤ 4 fixtures
- [ ] Trap seal protected per NBC trap weir + vent connection rules
References: NBC 2016 Pt 9 §7 (Drainage and Plumbing); IPC 2018 §906 (Vents) + §911 (Circuit Vents) + §913 (Wet Vents); IS 1172 Indian Code for Water Supply, Sewerage and Drainage; ASPE Plumbing Engineering Design Handbook Vol 2.
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