Contact
National Plumbing Authority serves as a national-scope reference resource covering plumbing systems, codes, licensing, and trade practices across the United States. This page explains how to reach the editorial and administrative staff, what information to include in any inquiry, and what response timelines to expect. Messages that include specific, well-framed detail receive faster and more accurate responses.
What to Include in Your Message
Effective inquiries share a common structure. The staff handles a range of subject areas — from code interpretation questions and licensing pathway questions to editorial suggestions and factual corrections — and a message that clearly identifies its purpose reduces back-and-forth by at least 1 exchange in most cases.
The following breakdown covers the 4 core elements of a well-formed message:
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Subject area — Identify the specific topic. For plumbing inquiries, reference the relevant code family where applicable. The two primary model codes governing U.S. plumbing installations are the Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC), published by the International Association of Plumbing and Mechanical Officials (IAPMO), and the International Plumbing Code (IPC), published by the International Code Council (ICC). Naming which code or jurisdiction applies narrows the scope immediately.
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Jurisdiction or state — Plumbing regulation in the United States is administered at the state level, with 50 separate licensing and inspection frameworks. Noting the state makes it possible to route code, licensing, or permitting questions correctly. Topics such as plumbing license types and requirements vary substantially by jurisdiction.
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Specific question or correction — Vague messages such as "I have a plumbing question" cannot be routed efficiently. A message referencing a specific page, section heading, or factual claim — for example, "The pipe materials overview page does not mention CPVC's maximum service temperature rating" — allows editorial staff to act directly.
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Supporting documentation or source — For factual corrections, including a link to the authoritative source (such as a statute, ASTM standard, or agency notice) accelerates editorial review. Unsupported correction requests are queued for independent verification, which extends response time.
Messages sent without elements 1 and 3 above are likely to receive a request for clarification before substantive engagement begins.
Response Expectations
Response timelines follow a triage system based on inquiry category. Editorial corrections tied to specific plumbing code citations — such as those referencing OSHA's sanitation standards for plumbing workers or EPA drinking water regulations — receive priority review because factual accuracy on regulatory matters carries direct safety and compliance implications.
Standard response windows by category:
- Factual correction requests — reviewed within 5 business days; urgent safety-relevant corrections (e.g., incorrect pressure ratings, incorrect backflow prevention classifications) are reviewed within 2 business days
- Editorial suggestions — reviewed on a rolling basis, typically within 10 business days
- Licensing or apprenticeship questions — general inquiries receive a response pointing to the appropriate state-level resource; the site does not provide legal or licensing advice
- Permitting and inspection questions — responses reference the permitting and inspection concepts page and relevant Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) resources; the AHJ in any given jurisdiction holds final authority over inspection and permit decisions
- Partnership or content licensing inquiries — routed to administrative review; response within 15 business days
Messages sent outside business hours are queued and addressed in order received.
Additional Contact Options
For users who have exhausted self-service reference options before writing, the following pages address the most common inquiry categories directly:
- How to Get Help for Plumbing — covers when to call a licensed plumber, how to find one, and what information to have ready
- Plumbing Frequently Asked Questions — addresses common questions about systems, codes, and materials without requiring a direct inquiry
- Regulatory Context for Plumbing — covers federal and state regulatory frameworks, including the roles of OSHA, EPA, and state plumbing boards
- Plumbing Associations and Organizations — lists national trade bodies such as PHCC (Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Contractors Association) and IAPMO that maintain their own public inquiry lines
For questions about specific state-level licensing, the appropriate state plumbing board is the authoritative source. State boards are independent agencies; National Plumbing Authority does not represent, speak for, or operate on behalf of any state licensing body.
How to Reach This Office
Correspondence intended for National Plumbing Authority editorial staff should be submitted through the site's contact form. When submitting:
- Use the dropdown selector to identify the inquiry type before writing the message body — this routes the submission to the correct queue without manual triage
- Attach supporting documents as PDF or plain text; image formats are accepted for visual evidence of a factual error (e.g., a screenshot of a conflicting code table)
- Do not submit the same inquiry through multiple channels simultaneously; duplicate submissions create queue conflicts and delay all responses in the affected thread
Inquiries referencing safety context and risk boundaries for plumbing that involve an active safety hazard — such as a gas line question governed by NFPA 54 (National Fuel Gas Code) or a cross-connection issue regulated under state health codes — should be directed to the local AHJ or emergency services rather than this office. Editorial staff cannot provide real-time safety guidance or emergency response.
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