Fire sprinkler piping being installed in a commercial building ceiling
Licensed Fire Sprinkler Fitting

Here — let me show you what you're actually looking at.

Wet systems, dry systems, deluge, pre-action — each spec'd to the square foot, the occupancy load, and the authority having jurisdiction. Before you request a quote, read the tables below. They'll tell you exactly what your building needs and why.

NICET III· Water-Based Systems
ICC Certified· Fire Suppression
CA Lic #C16-892441· Fire Protection
NFPA 13 / 2025· Current Edition
Read the comparison tables below
"We handed SprinkleSpec a five-story mixed-use shell with a 60-day compliance window. Eleven days from survey to flow test — passed fire marshal walk-through first try, no red tags, no callbacks."
Marcus Delgado, Project Manager at Ironbridge Construction Group
Marcus Delgado
Project Manager · Ironbridge Construction Group
Five-Story Mixed-Use
11 days · Survey → Flow Test
92%
Sprinklers activate correctly in reported fires
NFPA
85%
Reduction in fire death risk with sprinklers present
NFPA
78K
Max sq ft per light-hazard wet system (NFPA 13 2025)
NFPA 13
Table 1 of 2

System Type Comparison

Every building gets one of four system types. The table below shows what drives that decision — cost, occupancy, maintenance burden, and the code trigger that makes it non-negotiable.

Red annotations = plain-language
notes from field experience
System TypeCost RangeIdeal OccupancyMaintenance CycleCode Trigger
Wet Pipe
Most Common
$2 – $4 / sq ft
lowest installed cost; minimal ongoing expense
Office, retail, hotel, residential, light industrialAnnual contractor inspection + quarterly owner checks
full performance test every 5 years
Ambient temp consistently above 40 °F
required above 70 °F ambient — most common selection
Dry Pipe
$3 – $5.50 / sq ft
higher install; compressor adds ongoing cost
Unheated warehouses, parking garages, loading docks, cold-storageAnnual inspection; full trip test every 3 years
60-second water delivery rule (NFPA 13)
Spaces where pipes may freeze
AHJ mandates dry pipe when ambient drops below 40 °F
Pre-Action
$4.50 – $7 / sq ft
detection system adds significant cost
Data centers, archives, museums, telecom roomsAnnual contractor inspection; detection system tested per NFPA 72
two-event confirmation prevents accidental discharge
High-value contents; accidental discharge unacceptable
NFPA 13 + NFPA 72 dual compliance required
Deluge
$5 – $9 / sq ft
highest cost; all heads open simultaneously
Aircraft hangars, chemical storage, power plants, paint boothsAnnual full-flow test; valve inspection per NFPA 25
high-hazard classification drives AHJ scrutiny
High-hazard occupancy; flammable liquids/gases present
fire marshal will specify — not a choice, a mandate

Cost ranges reflect installed cost per square foot for typical commercial occupancies in the Western US, 2025. Actual costs vary by building height, water supply availability, and local labor rates.Your spec will be site-specific — these are reference benchmarks, not bids.

From the field

The question I get most often from GCs is: "Can we just do wet pipe everywhere?" Ninety percent of the time, yes. Wet pipe is the simplest, cheapest, and most reliable system ever put in a building — water under pressure, head opens, fire gets wet. The only time you can't do wet pipe is when the pipes might freeze, or when a single accidental discharge would cost more than the system itself.

The 60-Day Compliance Letter

If you're holding an NFPA 13 compliance notice from the fire marshal, the clock is already running. The AHJ doesn't negotiate extensions — they issue red tags and stop-work orders. What you need first isn't a quote; it's a system assessment that tells the fire marshal you've engaged a licensed contractor and have a compliance plan. We can have that document in your hands within 48 hours of a site survey.

Dry pipe is the most misunderstood system in the trade. People see the higher install cost and assume it's exotic — it's not. It's just wet pipe with compressed air holding the water back until a head opens. The catch is the 60-second rule: NFPA 13 requires water to reach the most remote head within 60 seconds of activation. That constraint drives every design decision on a dry system — pipe sizing, system volume, compressor capacity. Get it wrong and you fail the flow test.

Pre-action and deluge aren't really choices — they're code mandates for specific occupancies. If you're building a data center or an aircraft hangar, the authority having jurisdiction already knows what system you're putting in. The design work is in proving compliance with the specific edition of NFPA 13 your AHJ has adopted. In most Western jurisdictions, that's the 2022 edition. A handful of municipalities have already moved to 2025. We track that list — you shouldn't have to.

The table below breaks down retrofit versus new-construction timelines — the two scenarios that drive most of the questions we get. Read it before you fill out the form.

Table 2 of 2

Retrofit vs. New Construction

Timeline comparison by project phase. Red-pen differentials call out where retrofit adds complexity — and why. Understanding this before you call your GC saves arguments later.

PhaseNew ConstructionRetrofitDifferential
Site Survey & Assessment
1 day
clean shell, blueprints available
1–3 days
existing riser mapping, ceiling access required
Retrofit longer
Hydraulic Calculations & Design
3–5 days
standard occupancy loads
5–10 days
existing water supply must be retested; surprises common
Retrofit longer
AHJ Plan Review & Permit
5–15 days
varies by jurisdiction; expedited review available
10–21 days
change-of-occupancy triggers full re-review in most AHJs
Retrofit longer
Rough-In & Pipe Installation
2–4 weeks
open ceilings; concurrent with other trades
3–8 weeks
occupied buildings: phased work, ceiling demo, reinstatement
Retrofit longer
Inspection & Flow Test
1–2 days
1–2 days
Same
Fire Marshal Final Sign-Off
3–7 days after test
standard processing
3–7 days after test
same timeline — test results drive the decision, not project type
Same
Total Typical Timeline
6–10 weeks
standard commercial, no change-of-occupancy
8–16 weeks
occupied building adds coordination overhead
Retrofit longer
Now you know what you're looking at. Fill out the form below — building type, square footage, new or retrofit, and what triggered this project. That's all we need to put together a preliminary spec and timeline estimate.
Get Your System Spec'd
Get Your System Spec'd

Tell us what you're working with.

No obligation. We'll review your building type, square footage, and project context — then send you a preliminary system spec and timeline estimate within one business day. If it's urgent, say so in the trigger field.

01

We review your submission and pull the applicable NFPA 13 edition for your AHJ

02

Preliminary spec identifies system type, estimated scope, and permit pathway

03

Site survey scheduled within 5 business days if you want to proceed

Owner's Guide to NFPA 13 Compliance
12-page PDF · Free download · No sales follow-up

Covers system type selection, AHJ submission requirements, inspection schedules, and the 2025 NFPA 13 changes that affect existing buildings. Written for owners and facility managers, not engineers.

e.g. "Fire marshal compliance letter — 60-day deadline" / "Change of occupancy permit" / "System failed annual inspection"

* Required fields

No sales calls. Preliminary spec delivered by email within one business day.