Pressure Reducing Valve Installation, Replacement & Adjustment in Sydney

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What is a pressure reducing valve and why does it matter for your building?

A pressure reducing valve (PRV) is a mechanical device fitted to a building’s water supply that controls the pressure delivered to every tap, appliance, and fixture inside.

Sydney Water mains can deliver pressure well above what internal plumbing is designed to handle, sometimes 700–800 kPa or higher. A PRV reduces that to a safe operating range, typically 300–350 kPa for most commercial and strata buildings in NSW. When it’s working correctly, you don’t notice it. When it fails or drifts out of adjustment, the whole building feels it.

Water pressure problems in a strata building or commercial property rarely fix themselves. Tenants on upper floors complain about weak showers. Ground floor units cop hammering pipes and noise and the flexi hoses invariably end up bursting

We install, replace, and adjust PRVs across commercial properties and strata complexes in the Sutherland Shire and southern Sydney.

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Contact us today for a free, no-obligation quote for all plumbing and drainage

  • Phone: 0418 408 333
  • Mon – Sat 8.00 – 18.00. Sunday CLOSED
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Booking A Plumber is as Easy as 1-2-3

1

Request a Quote

Call or send a text on 0418 408 333 or submit a contact form and we’ll get back to you promptly with honest advice.

2

Book a Time

We’ll arrange a time that works for you. We show up on time and keep you informed every step of the way.

3

Job Completed

Relax knowing the work is completed safely, professionally, and cleaned up properly. Your satisfaction matters to us.

What we do

We handle PRV installation on new connections, replacement of failed valves, and adjustment of existing valves that have drifted out of spec.
For strata and commercial buildings, we also carry out pressure testing across the building to confirm the valve is doing its job at every level — not just at the meter.

Where a single PRV isn’t enough (common in buildings over three or four storeys), we work with zoned pressure reduction setups. That means separate PRVs serving different floor zones, so you’re not trying to make one valve serve both the basement and the penthouse. It’s a more involved job, but it’s the right solution for taller buildings.

Our contractor licence is 93566C, verifiable at the NSW Fair Trading public register. ABN 86 081 868 984.

What causes PRV failure

PRVs fail for a few reasons, and it’s worth knowing which one you’re dealing with before replacing the valve outright.

  • Internal wear is the most common. The diaphragm or seat inside the valve degrades over time, especially in areas with harder water or higher sediment. The valve loses its ability to hold a consistent downstream pressure and starts to drift — sometimes high, sometimes low, sometimes fluctuating between the two.
  • Sediment blockage is the other common one. A valve that’s been running without a strainer upstream, or in a building where pipe scale has been dislodging, can get partial blockages that affect flow and pressure consistency. Sometimes this is cleanable. Sometimes the valve needs replacing.
  • Water hammer — that banging noise in the pipes when taps are turned off quickly — can also indicate a PRV that’s set too high or has lost its ability to absorb pressure surges. It’s not always the valve, but it’s a logical first check.
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TMV’s And PRV’s

PRVs and TMVs are different valves with different compliance requirements. TMV’s Are for the hot water temperature and TMV testing is a legal requirement for many commercial buildings

And if the pressure problem in your building is coming from the Sydney Water main itself — low street pressure affecting the whole area — that’s a Sydney Water issue, not something a plumber can fix on your side of the meter. We’ll tell you that upfront rather than quote you for work that won’t solve it.

What the process looks like

We start with a pressure test at the meter and at representative points throughout the building. That tells us what the valve is doing (or not doing) before we touch anything. From there, if the valve just needs adjustment, it’s a straightforward job. If it needs replacing, we’ll quote on the replacement including isolation, installation, and pressure verification across the building.

We don’t quote PRV work over the phone for anything other than a single residential or small commercial connection.
For strata and multi-storey commercial work, a site visit is the only way to give you a number we can stand behind.

Call 0418 408 333 or get in touch through theblockeddrainguys.com.au to arrange an assessment.

PRV FAQs

Common questions about plumbing services answered by licensed Sydney plumbers

A pressure reducing valve controls the water pressure delivered to a building’s internal plumbing from the street main. Sydney Water mains can deliver pressure well above what’s safe for internal fixtures — sometimes 700–800 kPa or higher. A PRV reduces that to a safe operating range, typically 300–350 kPa for most residential and commercial buildings. Without one, or with a faulty one, fixtures, flexi hoses, and appliances are operating under more stress than they’re designed for.

Common signs include: fluctuating water pressure throughout the building, banging or hammering in the pipes, unusually high pressure at ground floor fixtures combined with weak pressure on upper floors, and unexplained flexi hose failures. A pressure gauge on the outlet side of the valve will tell you what it’s delivering. If you don’t have one, a licensed plumber can test it during a site visit.

A quality valve that’s been correctly installed and maintained will typically last 10–15 years. Unmaintained valves in buildings with harder water or higher sediment loads can fail sooner. In older strata buildings across the Sutherland Shire, it’s not uncommon to find valves that are well past their useful life and have never been serviced.

It depends on the fault. A valve that has drifted out of adjustment but is otherwise mechanically sound can often be reset without replacement. A valve with a failed diaphragm, damaged seat, or sediment blockage that can’t be cleared usually needs replacing. We’ll tell you which one it is after assessing the valve — we’re not going to recommend a replacement if an adjustment will fix it.

In most cases, the main PRV serving the whole building is common property and therefore the owners corporation’s responsibility. PRVs installed within individual lots (some buildings have secondary pressure reduction at the lot level) may be the lot owner’s responsibility, depending on what the strata plan and by-laws say. If you’re not sure, check your strata plan or ask your strata manager before engaging anyone.

Yes. Under the NSW Plumbing and Drainage Act 2011, installation and replacement of pressure reducing valves is licensed plumbing work. It must be carried out by a licensed plumber and a compliance certificate issued on completion. DIY or unlicensed installation is not legal and creates liability issues, particularly in strata and commercial settings.