Skip to content

Emergency Eyewash Station Cost Estimator

Estimated Total Cost
$0 - $0

An emergency eyewash station is a plumbed fixture that delivers a hands-free, controlled flow of water to flush the eyes (or eyes and face) after a chemical splash, and a drench safety shower does the same for the whole body. The widely referenced standard is ANSI/ISEA Z358.1, which calls for a 15-minute flush, tepid water (commonly cited as roughly 60-100°F), and a location reachable within about 10 seconds of the hazard. The cost drivers are the station type (eyewash, eye/face, combination, or drench shower), the number of stations, whether you are tapping nearby plumbing or running new supply and drainage, and add-ons like a tepid-water thermostatic mixing valve, an indirect-waste floor drain, freeze protection, and backflow protection.

Plumbed station - hands-free 15-minute flush per Z358.1 Tepid water usually needs a thermostatic mixing valve FL labs, shops, ag & pool chemical rooms commonly need these

An eyewash flushes the eyes; an eye/face wash covers eyes and a larger facial area; a drench (safety) shower floods the head and body; a combination unit puts a shower and eyewash on one fixture. Plumbed units connect to a continuous water supply; portable/gravity-fed units carry their own water and are usually a supplement, not a substitute.

Why It Matters

The right fixture depends on the hazard. A spot that handles corrosives often warrants a combination shower-plus-eyewash, while a light-duty bench may only need an eyewash. Matching fixture to hazard - and to the supply and drainage you can provide - keeps the install both compliant-minded and practical.

Common Florida settings: labs and schools, manufacturing and machine shops, warehouses, agriculture and packing houses, auto and battery shops, and pool/spa chemical rooms at HOAs, hotels, and water-treatment areas.

Why It Comes Up Here

Florida's many hospitality, agricultural, and pool-heavy facilities store and handle acids, chlorine, and other chemicals. Wherever a chemical splash hazard exists, a properly placed and plumbed eyewash or drench shower is a basic part of the safety plumbing - and it has to actually work, with adequate flow and tepid water, on the day it is needed.

ANSI/ISEA Z358.1 is the reference most facilities follow. It describes a unit reachable within about 10 seconds of the hazard, on the same level, free of obstructions, with a 15-minute continuous flush and hands-free operation.

Plan the Supply

That 15-minute flush means the water supply and any drainage have to keep up - an eyewash and especially a drench shower move real volume. Undersized supply lines are a common miss. Confirm the exact flow and placement requirements that apply to your facility and AHJ before finalizing the rough-in.

Z358.1 calls for tepid flushing fluid - commonly cited as roughly 60-100°F - so a victim can tolerate a full 15-minute flush without thermal shock or scald.

It Is Not Automatic in Florida

People assume warm-climate water is always tepid, but it swings: a cold supply line can run cool, while water sitting in a rooftop or attic run or an uninsulated line in the Florida sun can get dangerously hot. A thermostatic mixing valve sized for the unit's flow is the usual way to deliver reliable tepid water, with scald protection on the hot side. This is one of the most overlooked parts of a compliant install here.

A plumbed station discharges water during use and during weekly activation testing, so many installs include a floor drain or indirect-waste receptor to handle it and avoid pooling on the floor.

FL Notes

Because these fixtures can sit on a chemical-handling supply, backflow / cross-connection protection is often part of the design so nothing can be siphoned back into the potable system. The specifics of drainage, indirect waste, and backflow protection follow the adopted Florida Building Code (Plumbing), the local utility, and your AHJ - confirm them for your occupancy.

Best Time: At Build-Out or Remodel

The cleanest path is to plumb stations when a lab, shop, or chemical room is built or remodeled, so supply, tepid-water valve, and drainage are designed in rather than retrofitted.

Typical Install

1. Identify each hazard and pick fixture type and location. 2. Run adequately sized supply to each unit. 3. Add a thermostatic mixing valve for tepid water. 4. Provide drainage / indirect waste where used. 5. Add backflow protection as required. 6. Mount the unit, set the bowl/head height, and provide unobstructed access. 7. Activate, flush, and verify flow and temperature.

FL Gotchas

No tepid-water valve, undersized supply, blocked access, no drainage for testing, and skipping backflow protection on a chemical-area supply.

Z358.1 describes weekly activation of plumbed units to clear the supply line and confirm operation, plus a fuller periodic inspection.

Routine Care

Activate each unit on a schedule, confirm flow, pattern, and tepid temperature, check that access stays clear, keep dust caps in place, and make sure any drainage carries the test water away. In Florida humidity, also watch for corrosion and mineral scale at heads and valves.

Warning Signs

Weak or uneven spray, water too hot or too cold, a mixing valve that drifts, leaks or pooling, blocked access, or a missing/clogged eyewash head all mean service is due.

The fixture is one line item - station type, how many, supply/drainage, and the tepid-water valve drive the total. These are planning estimates for the work plus professional labor in the FL market.

Type, Count & Scope

A single eyewash tapped into nearby plumbing is the low end; a multi-station job with combination drench showers, new supply runs, and drainage is the high end. More stations and longer runs cost more.

Tepid Water & Protection

A thermostatic mixing valve, an indirect-waste floor drain, freeze protection, and backflow protection each add. Use the calculator to combine station type, count, scope, and add-ons.

FL Permit Requirements

Usually Minor in FL
  • Swapping a like-for-like eyewash head onto existing plumbing
  • Replacing a worn eyewash bowl, dust caps, or strainer
  • Servicing or replacing a thermostatic mixing valve like-for-like (verify locally)
Permit / Licensed Work Likely in FL
  • New plumbed stations with new supply runs and drainage
  • Adding a tepid-water mixing valve and re-piping for it
  • Backflow / cross-connection protection on a chemical-area supply
  • New floor drains / indirect-waste receptors in a slab

FL County Permit Fee Reference

Swapping a head or servicing a valve is usually minor. New plumbed stations, new supply and drainage, a tepid-water mixing valve, backflow protection, or a new floor drain is regulated and often permitted, and commercial occupancies may involve plan review. Fees and timelines are approximate — verify with your local building department / AHJ (and any fire/safety authority) before starting work.

County Permit Fee Est. Processing

FL Code References

    Who Can Pull a Permit in FL?

    Installing plumbed emergency eyewash and drench-shower stations with new supply, a tepid-water mixing valve, drainage, and backflow protection is regulated plumbing work that often requires a permit, and the safety side commonly references ANSI/ISEA Z358.1 for flow, tepid water, placement, and the 15-minute flush. Supply sizing, indirect waste, mixing-valve and scald protection, and cross-connection control follow the adopted Florida Building Code (Plumbing), local utility rules, and local amendments, and new commercial work is generally permitted and inspected. A like-for-like head swap or routine valve service is usually minor. Per FL Statute 489.105, regulated plumbing and related construction work is performed by the appropriate licensed contractor.

    Verify any contractor's license at myfloridalicense.com and confirm requirements with your local building department before work begins.

    Get a Free Eyewash Station Estimate

    Licensed FL Contractor - Eyewash, Eye/Face Wash & Drench Showers

    We size and install plumbed emergency eyewash, eye/face wash, combination, and drench-shower stations for labs, shops, agriculture, and pool chemical rooms — from a single station to multi-station systems — with adequately sized supply, the tepid-water thermostatic mixing valve Florida installs often need, drainage and indirect waste, freeze protection, and proper backflow protection.

    Built for Florida homes - accounting for Florida's hard water, humidity, coastal corrosion, and county permitting.

    Serving Palm Beach County & Florida - get matched with a licensed plumber

    Florida Quick Answers

    How much does eyewash station cost in Florida?

    Costs vary by scope, home size, and your Florida region. Use the calculator above for a Florida-specific estimate rather than a one-size-fits-all price.

    What affects the price?

    Pricing depends on the size and layout of your home, the pipe materials and fixtures you choose, your Florida region and local labor rates, and permit fees. Work that is more complex or harder to access generally costs more.

    Can I DIY this, or should I hire a licensed plumber?

    In Florida, minor maintenance may be DIY, but anything beyond that generally calls for a licensed plumber, and many jobs require a permit and inspection. When a permit, or your main water or drain lines are involved, hire a Florida-licensed plumber.

    Does homeowners insurance cover it?

    It depends on the cause and your specific policy. Sudden, accidental damage is more often covered than gradual wear-and-tear or maintenance - confirm the details with your insurer.

    How long does it take?

    Timelines depend on scope - many routine jobs take a few hours to a day, while larger projects run longer. Your licensed plumber can confirm after assessing your home.

    Plan with confidence

    Planning estimate, not a quote — confirm with a licensed Florida plumber. Confidence is qualitative: ranges reflect this page’s Florida assumptions, not a guaranteed price.

    Key assumptions

    Estimates on this page are Florida-specific and reflect Eyewash Station for typical Florida homes.

    From this page: Costs vary by scope, home size, and your Florida region. Use the calculator above for a Florida-specific estimate rather than a one-size-fits-all price.

    Your actual cost depends on your home's condition, layout, and local labor and permit rates.

    Factors that raise or lower cost

    From this page: Pricing depends on the size and layout of your home, the pipe materials and fixtures you choose, your Florida region and local labor rates, and permit fees. Work that is more complex or harder to access generally costs more.

    Generally raises cost: harder access, older homes, added permits and inspections, premium fixtures or materials, and emergency or after-hours work.

    Generally lowers cost: easy access, bundling several items in one visit, standard fixtures, and off-peak scheduling.

    Preparation checklist

    • Clear access to the work area and locate your main and fixture shut-off valves.
    • Check with your county or city building department (AHJ) on whether a permit and inspection are required.
    • Note the make, model, or measurements of existing fixtures and pipe materials.
    • Get the scope, total price, warranty, and cleanup terms in writing before work starts.
    • Verify the plumber holds an active Florida license and carries insurance.

    Questions to ask your plumber

    • Are you licensed and insured in Florida, and who pulls the permit?
    • Is the quote itemized for parts, labor, permit fees, and disposal?
    • What could change the final price once the work begins?
    • What warranty covers the parts and the labor?
    • How long will the job take, and will my water be shut off?
    Compare licensed plumbersView permit infoEmail thisExplore related calculators

    Recommended next steps

    Curated Florida tools and resources related to this page.

    Last reviewed: July 1, 2026 (US Eastern)

    Reviewed by the FL Plumbing Tools editorial team.

    Sources: Florida plumbing cost research and Florida Building Code / local authority-having-jurisdiction (AHJ) permit references.

    Florida reference: Estimates and guidance reflect Florida labor rates, permitting, hard water, humidity, and coastal conditions.

    Updates: Reviewed periodically and updated as Florida codes, permit fees, and market rates change.