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Trap Primer Estimator

Estimated Total Cost
$0 - $0

A trap primer solves a specific Florida problem: a floor drain that rarely gets used - in a mechanical room, garage, laundry, or commercial kitchen - slowly evaporates the water in its trap, and once the trap is dry, sewer gas comes straight up into the room. A primer periodically adds a little water to keep that trap seal full. The most common is an automatic pressure-drop valve (ASSE 1018) tapped off a nearby cold-water line; an electronic timed primer or a distribution unit / manifold (ASSE 1044) handles several traps; and a waterless barrier insert (ASSE 1072) seals the drain without any supply. Cost drivers are the application, the device, the water tie-in, and access.

Keeps a floor-drain trap seal full so sewer gas stays out Automatic valve, electronic, manifold, or waterless barrier Florida heat dries out rarely-used floor-drain traps fast

Every drain has a trap - a U-shaped bend that holds a small plug of water. That water seal is what blocks sewer gas (and pests) from coming back up the drain into the room.

The Problem

A floor drain that is rarely used gets no water to refill it, so the seal slowly evaporates. Once it is gone, the drain is an open pipe to the sanitary system - which is exactly when you smell sewer gas in a mechanical room, garage, or back-of-house area.

A trap primer automatically adds a small amount of water to the trap so the seal never fully evaporates. The prime line connects to the trap above the trap seal, on the inlet side, so the trickle of water keeps the U full.

Types In Brief

An automatic pressure-drop valve releases a little water whenever nearby fixtures are used and the line pressure dips; an electronic primer doses on a timer; and a waterless barrier device seals the drain mechanically instead of with added water.

Florida's heat and dry, conditioned air can evaporate a floor-drain trap surprisingly fast, especially in mechanical rooms, garages, and vacant or seasonal spaces.

Where They Show Up

Trap primers are common on commercial floor drains and floor sinks - kitchens, restrooms, equipment rooms - where codes call for protecting trap seals that are subject to evaporation. Many Florida homes also have a floor drain in the garage or laundry that benefits from one.

An automatic pressure-drop valve (ASSE 1018) is the workhorse for a single trap fed from a potable cold line. An electronic / timed primer is useful where there is little nearby fixture use to trigger a pressure drop.

More Than One Trap

A distribution unit / manifold (ASSE 1044) primes several traps from one device. Where running water is impractical, a waterless barrier insert (ASSE 1072) drops into the drain and seals it with a one-way membrane - no supply line at all.

A water-fed primer needs a cold-water connection, ideally tapped off a nearby line so the prime happens with normal use. The discharge ties to the trap above the seal per the device instructions.

Backflow

Because the primer connects potable water to a drainage trap, cross-connection protection matters - the listed device and an air gap or backflow protection where required keep the supply safe. We size and route the line so the trap stays primed without waste.

Best Time: During Rough-In Or A Drain Repair

The cleanest time to add a primer is when the floor drain or nearby walls are open - new construction, a remodel, or a drain repair.

Typical Install

1. Confirm the trap is drying out and pick the device (valve, electronic, manifold, or waterless). 2. For a water-fed primer, tap a nearby cold line. 3. Run the prime line to the trap and connect above the seal. 4. Add cross-connection protection where required. 5. Provide an access panel for service. 6. Test that the trap refills.

FL Gotchas

Connecting below the trap seal, no access for service, an undersized or wrong device, skipping backflow protection, and a primer with no nearby use to trigger it (use an electronic or waterless type instead).

A trap primer is simple but not invisible - it should be checked periodically, especially on drains you depend on to stay odor-free.

Routine Care

Confirm the trap still holds water, that the valve or electronic unit is dosing, and that the line is clear. Replace a worn waterless barrier membrane on schedule. Keep the access panel reachable.

Warning Signs

A returning sewer-gas odor, a visibly dry trap, a primer that never cycles, or a waterless insert that no longer seals all mean it is time to service the device.

This is the trap primer and its tie-in plus professional labor in the FL market. These are planning estimates.

Application & Type

A single accessible floor drain with an automatic valve off a nearby line is the low end; several commercial traps on a manifold, a new supply run, and opening finished surfaces is the high end.

Add-ons

An access panel, priming multiple traps, opening and patching a wall / floor, and cross-connection protection each add. Use the calculator to combine the application, the primer type, the water supply, and add-ons.

FL Permit Requirements

Usually Minor in FL
  • Replacing a like-for-like automatic trap primer valve
  • Adding a waterless barrier insert to a floor drain
  • Servicing or clearing an existing primer line
Permit / Licensed Work Likely in FL
  • New primer supply tapped into the cold-water system
  • Opening a finished wall / floor to reach the trap
  • New or relocated floor drains / floor sinks
  • Commercial trap-seal-protection work at scale

FL County Permit Fee Reference

Replacing a like-for-like primer valve or adding a waterless barrier insert is usually minor. Tapping a new water supply for the primer, opening finished surfaces to reach a trap, adding or relocating floor drains, or commercial trap-seal-protection work is regulated and often permitted. Fees and timelines are approximate — verify with your local building department / AHJ before starting work.

County Permit Fee Est. Processing

FL Code References

    Who Can Pull a Permit in FL?

    A trap primer is a small device, but it lives on two regulated systems: the cold-water supply that feeds it and the drainage trap it protects. Trap-seal protection, the device standards (ASSE 1018 / 1044 / 1072), the prime-line connection above the trap seal, and cross-connection protection follow the adopted Florida Building Code (Plumbing), the manufacturer's instructions, local amendments, and the AHJ. Replacing a like-for-like primer or adding a waterless barrier insert is usually minor; tapping a new water supply, opening finished surfaces, or adding / relocating floor drains is permitted and inspected. Per FL Statute 489.105, regulated plumbing 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 Trap Primer Estimate

    Licensed FL Contractor - Floor-Drain Trap Seal Protection

    We stop sewer-gas odors from dry floor drains by adding the right trap primer — an automatic pressure-drop valve, an electronic timed primer, a distribution manifold for several traps, or a waterless barrier insert — and tie it in above the trap seal with proper cross-connection protection.

    Built for Florida homes - accounting for Florida's climate, water conditions, and county permitting.

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

    Florida Quick Answers

    How much does trap primer 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, gas work, 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 Trap Primer 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?
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    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.