DWV, supply, and fixtures — sized, counted, and priced.
Pilrs traces every supply line, DWV stack, and gas run on your plumbing drawings — sizing pipes against IPC/UPC fixture unit tables and delivering a bid-ready material list with fittings, valves, and insulation included.
Plumbing estimating sits at the intersection of three separate code disciplines — IPC for water supply, UPC for drainage, and NFPA 54 for natural gas — each with its own fixture-unit table, sizing methodology, and pipe material conventions. A single commercial restroom group on a hospital plan generates 12 fixtures, 26 DFUs of drainage load, 36 WSFU of supply demand, and 4 fixtures with medical air or vacuum requirements that pull a separate spec section into scope.
The takeoff bottleneck is fixture-to-isometric reconciliation. The architect draws fixtures on the architectural plans. The plumbing engineer draws supply, waste, and vent isometrics. The fixture schedule lists model numbers and trim packages on a separate sheet. The estimator must pull each fixture from the arch plan, match it to the schedule for model number, then trace the iso to verify it appears on the plumbing system. Manual reconciliation across 200+ fixtures averages 6-10 hours, with a 4-7% miss rate on fixtures that appear on arch but were dropped from iso.
When DWV stack sizes shift late, the entire material order shifts with them. A 3" sanitary stack at 24 DFU upgrades to 4" the moment a public restroom group pushes the cumulative load past the IPC Table 710.1(2) threshold. That upsize cascades through every fitting, hanger, and insulation foot — and on a 14-story commercial building, it is a $24,000-38,000 swing that estimators catch in revision, not in bid.
IPC Table 604.3 assigns water supply fixture units (WSFU) per fixture; UPC Table 703.2 assigns drainage fixture units (DFU). A water closet is 5 WSFU but 4 DFU. A lavatory is 1 WSFU and 1 DFU. Estimators must run both calculations in parallel for every fixture, then size supply mains to Hunter's Curve and DWV to the DFU table — two completely different sizing methodologies executed simultaneously.
A 4" soil stack at 36 DFU needs a 2" vent (IPC 916.4); the same stack at 70 DFU jumps to a 3" vent. Vent sizing lags drainage and is typically the last thing checked, so a late drainage upsize means the vent material order is wrong by the time fab sees it. Pilrs cascades vent sizing automatically when DWV branches change.
Commercial kitchen grease interceptors are sized by IPC 1003.3.4 — peak grease drainage flow times retention time minimum 30 minutes. A 3-compartment sink with one prep sink generates 87 GPM of peak flow, requiring a 1,500-gallon outdoor interceptor with $8,400 of concrete vault and $3,200 of pump-out service contract per year. Manual takeoffs typically default to "spec the smallest interceptor" and undersize.
NFPA 99 medical gas pipe (oxygen, vacuum, medical air, nitrous oxide) requires Type L copper with brazed joints (no soldering allowed). Brazing labor runs 2.4x soldered labor per joint, and every joint must be witnessed and documented for ASSE 6010 commissioning. A 200-bed hospital med-gas system has 1,800-2,400 brazed joints — miss the labor multiplier and you are 480-960 unbid labor hours short.
Every floor drain over a public space needs a trap primer (UPC 807.0, IPC 1002.4) to maintain seal during dry periods. A multi-story commercial building with 40 floor drains needs 40 trap primers, each requiring a 1/2" cold water connection from the nearest cold water line. Manual takeoffs typically miss 30-40% of trap primer scope, averaging $185/floor in unbid material.
The architect issues an addendum changing the lavatory from a Kohler K-2210 to an Elkay LRAD2519 — same shape, different rough-in dimensions. The estimator working from the original schedule prices the wrong supply stop and trap configuration. On 80 lavatories, that is $1,400 of mis-purchased trim plus the labor to swap.
The line items that slip between plan sheets — and the dollars that leave with them.
RPZ and DCDA assemblies require annual testing per local water authority. Estimators include the assembly cost but not the $185-340 per assembly per year testing service. On 12 BFP assemblies, that is $4,000+ in unbid recurring scope.
IPC 708.1 requires cleanouts every 100 ft of horizontal drainage and at every change in direction over 45 degrees. A 600 LF underslab sanitary main needs 6+ cleanouts at $340-580 installed each — typically missed in 35% of takeoffs.
Each wall-hung urinal, water closet, or lavatory needs a structural wall carrier (Zurn, Smith, JR Smith). Carriers run $280-680 each. Missing carriers on 24 wall-hung fixtures is $8,000+ of unbid material.
ASHRAE 90.1 requires 1.5" insulation on all hot water recirc lines. On a hotel with 12,000 LF of recirc, missed insulation is $48,000 of material plus 280 labor hours.
Heat pump water heater rebates under the IRA and state-level decarbonization mandates are forcing fundamental changes in commercial water heating spec. Combined with PFAS-free pipe requirements rolling out in 14 states, lead-free fitting transitions, and the chronic shortage of master plumbers (NCCER projects a 110,000-plumber gap by 2027), every commercial plumbing bid in 2026 will be more complex and more time-sensitive than 2024. Contractors who do not automate takeoff cannot compete on bid pace.
Plumbing takeoffs fail because the fixtures live on the architectural plans, the pipe routing lives on the plumbing plans, the model numbers live on the fixture schedule, and the sizing rules live in the plumbing code. Reconciling those four sources by hand is the estimating job, and it is where hours disappear and missed scope hides.
DWV is the most unforgiving subsystem. A 3" sanitary stack serving 20 DFUs is fine — until someone adds a public restroom group and pushes the count to 28 DFUs, where IPC requires a 4" stack. That gauge change cascades through every fitting, hanger, and insulation foot. Estimators who catch it late either eat the cost or change-order the GC.
Gas piping compounds the problem with equivalent length. A 40-foot run through three 90-degree elbows has an equivalent length closer to 55 feet. NFPA 54 tables use equivalent length plus CFH demand to size the pipe, and manual takeoffs routinely skip the elbow adjustment, leaving the entire gas system a code violation.
Pilrs ingests plumbing plans, architectural plans, fixture schedules, and isometrics, then traces every water, waste, and gas line back to its source. Fixtures are counted off the architectural plan and cross-checked against the fixture schedule. WSFU, DFU, and CFH totals are calculated automatically against IPC, UPC, and NFPA 54 tables. A licensed plumbing estimator verifies sizing before delivery.
Water closets, lavs, sinks, showers, floor drains — counted on architectural plans and matched to the fixture schedule to catch spec drift.
Sanitary and vent pipe sized per IPC/UPC drainage fixture unit tables. Stack sizes flagged when branch DFU totals trigger an upsize.
WSFU totals run automatically against Hunter's Curve with simultaneous demand, sizing mains and branches with pressure-drop awareness.
CFH demand summed across appliances, with 2L-method equivalent length applied to every fitting to satisfy NFPA 54 sizing.
Pipe insulation quantified by linear foot and thickness per spec. Hangers spaced per code (MSS SP-69) and included in the material list.
Oxygen, vacuum, and lab waste systems handled with NFPA 99 compliance checks and brazed-joint labor units.
From plan upload to verified estimate — purpose-built for plumbing contractors.
P-sheets, A-sheets, fixture schedules, and isometrics. Spec section 22 parsed for material class and pressure rating.
Water, waste, vent, and gas lines traced from source to fixture. DFU, WSFU, and CFH totals calculated live.
IPC/UPC/NFPA 54 sizing validated. A licensed plumbing estimator reviews flagged items and fixture schedule matches.
Pipe by size and material, fittings, valves, fixtures with model numbers, insulation, and labor — branded PDF and Excel.
Direct answers to the questions plumbing estimators ask most.
Long-form guides with real waste factors, labor units, and bidding traps — written for working estimators.
How to measure, count, and quantify plumbing scope without missing phantom items. Spec-to-drawing cross-checks, waste factors, and the common 2 percent errors that kill bids.
Labor units, burden, markup, and the real 2026 material pricing bands. Where new estimators underbid themselves and what experienced shops carry in contingency.
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