Water Heater Drain Pan Cost Estimator
A water heater drain pan is the shallow tray the tank sits in. Its only job is to catch a slow leak or a weeping tank and carry that water to a safe place through a pan drain — instead of letting it soak the ceiling, flooring, or whatever is below. In Florida this matters most when the heater is in an attic, on a second floor, or in a closet over finished living space, where a quiet leak can do four-figure damage before anyone notices. Tanks fail from the inside out, so the pan and a working drain are cheap insurance. Adding a leak alarm or an automatic shut-off upgrades the pan from "catch a little" to "catch it and stop it."
A water heater drain pan is a shallow tray under the tank. If the tank weeps, the relief valve dribbles, or a fitting seeps, the pan catches that water and a pan drain carries it to a safe discharge point. The pan does not stop a leak — it manages a small one so it doesn't become a ceiling or flooring repair.
Why Florida Cares
Lots of FL heaters live in attics, on second floors, or in interior closets over finished space — exactly the spots where a slow, unseen leak does the most damage. A pan plus a working drain (and ideally a leak alarm) is the standard, low-cost protection.
What It Won't Do
A pan does nothing for a sudden tank rupture that dumps 40+ gallons at once — that overwhelms any pan. It is built for the far more common slow leak.
Generally, a drain pan is called for when a leak from the heater would cause damage — that is, when the tank is anywhere that water could reach finished living space below.
Typical "Pan Required" Spots
Attic and platform installs, second-floor closets, and interior closets sitting over a finished room. These are the high-risk locations a pan and drain are meant for.
Garage / Slab
A heater on a garage slab that can drain to the floor or just outside is lower risk, and pan requirements are sometimes lighter — but a pan is still cheap insurance, and a changeout is the easy time to add one.
Confirm Locally
The exact requirement and how the pan drain must terminate depend on the adopted Florida Building Code edition and any local amendments — verify with your AHJ for your specific install.
A pan with no drain, or a drain that goes nowhere useful, barely helps — the pan just fills and overflows. The drain is the part that actually protects you.
Where It Terminates
The pan drain runs to an approved discharge point where the water is visible and harmless — commonly outside, to a floor drain, or another approved location. It should be obvious if water starts coming out, so a problem gets noticed.
How It Runs
It needs the right pipe size, continuous downhill slope (it is gravity only), and a clear path to that termination. An attic or second-floor pan often needs a longer run, sometimes through a wall to the exterior, which is the main cost driver for the drain.
FL Gotchas
A pan drain that dumps into the same space (useless), one with no slope, or a termination hidden where a leak goes unnoticed.
Watch For
(1) Standing water in the pan — the tank or a fitting is leaking; (2) water dripping from the pan drain outside (the system doing its job — investigate the source); (3) a rusted, cracked, or crushed pan; (4) a pan drain that is clogged, disconnected, or was never run; (5) staining on the ceiling below an attic or upstairs heater.
Don't Ignore It
Water sitting in the pan means something is already leaking. A small drip today is a failing tank tomorrow. Find the source — tank, relief valve, or fitting — before it becomes a flood, and confirm the pan drain is clear so it can actually carry water away.
Pans come in plastic and metal, and the right choice depends partly on the fuel type.
Plastic
Inexpensive, won't rust, and common under electric heaters. Light and easy to set during a changeout.
Metal (Aluminum / Galvanized Steel)
More heat-tolerant. Gas water heaters are commonly set in a metal pan because of the burner and flue heat; confirm acceptable pan materials for a gas unit with your AHJ.
Sizing
The pan has to be larger than the tank's footprint so it actually catches drips around the base, with the drain fitting at the low side. Match the pan diameter to the tank and leave room to seat it level.
Best Time: During a Heater Swap
The pan goes under the tank, so the easy time to add or replace one is when the heater is already being pulled for a changeout. Retrofitting a pan under an existing tank means draining and lifting the heater — doable, but more labor.
Typical Install
1. Drain and move the tank. 2. Set the correctly sized, level pan. 3. Connect the pan drain fitting and run the line at a continuous downhill slope to an approved termination. 4. Reset the heater in the pan. 5. Add a leak alarm or automatic shut-off if desired. 6. Refill and check for leaks at the tank and fittings.
FL Gotchas
Setting a tank that doesn't fit the pan, a pan with no drain connected, a flat (no-slope) drain line, and skipping the pan entirely on an attic or upstairs swap.
The pan itself is cheap; the cost is access and the drain run. These are planning estimates for the pan plus professional labor in the FL market.
The Pan
A plastic pan is the low end; aluminum and galvanized/steel pans cost a bit more.
Location & Access
A garage/slab pan tied to a nearby drain is cheapest. An attic or second-floor heater adds access difficulty and FL attic heat, and usually a longer drain run.
The Drain Run
Tying to an existing pan drain is least; a new short drain costs more; a long or through-wall run to the exterior is the biggest driver. A leak alarm or automatic shut-off adds a little for a lot of protection. Use the calculator to combine location, pan, drain, and add-ons.
Routine Checks
When the heater is serviced, look in the pan — it should be dry. Confirm the pan drain is clear and still routed to its termination. Any water in the pan means find the source now.
Leak Alarm
An inexpensive water sensor in the pan sounds (or sends a phone alert) the moment water appears — perfect for an attic or closet heater you rarely look at.
Automatic Shut-Off
A step up: a sensor plus a motorized valve that shuts off the water to the heater when it detects a leak, stopping the supply instead of just warning you. The best protection for an upstairs or over-finished-space install.
Keep the Drain Clear
Debris, insulation, or insects can block an attic pan drain. A clear drain is what lets the pan actually do its job.
FL Permit Requirements
- Replacing a cracked or rusted pan during a like-for-like heater swap
- Adding a leak alarm or water sensor to an existing pan
- Clearing or reconnecting an existing pan drain
- A new water heater install (the pan and pan drain are part of that permit)
- Running a new pan drain to an approved termination
- Relocating the heater or changing its location
- Adding an automatic shut-off valve tied into the water supply
FL County Permit Fee Reference
A pan swap during a changeout is usually minor; new pan-drain routing and water-heater installs are typically permitted as part of the larger job. Fees and timelines are approximate — verify with your local building department / AHJ before starting work.
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FL Code References
Who Can Pull a Permit in FL?
Replacing a pan during a changeout is often routine, but the drain pan and its drain are part of a regulated water-heater install under the FL Building Code (Plumbing). A pan is generally required where a leak would damage finished space, and the pan drain must run to an approved point — with material, size, slope, and termination per the adopted code and any local amendments. An automatic shut-off tied to the supply is plumbing work. 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 whether a pan is required and how the drain must terminate with your local building department before work begins.
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Licensed FL Contractor - Water Heater Pans & Leak Protection
We install and replace water heater drain pans, run pan drains to an approved point, and add leak alarms and automatic shut-offs — protecting ceilings and floors under attic, closet, and upstairs heaters.