How much fall does a drain pipe need?
Pick the pipe size, enter the run length, and get the total drop — with the code-minimum slope for your area cited below.
At 1.00% (1 in 100, 0.120 in/ft) over 10 m, the pipe must drop 100 mm end to end.
NPC NPC 2025 · Sentence 2.4.8.1.(1)
Drainage pipes NPS 3 (about 3 in) or smaller must slope down at least 1 in 50 (2%) in the direction of flow. NPS 4 and larger may run flatter — commonly down to 1 in 100 (1%) — as governed by the hydraulic-load tables in Article 2.4.10. Provinces amend the national code, so confirm your province's adopted edition and your AHJ.
Common questions
- What is the minimum slope for a drain pipe?
- It depends on pipe size and the code your area adopts. Under the US IPC, pipes 2½ inch and smaller need 1/4 inch per foot (about 2%), and 3 to 6 inch pipes need 1/8 inch per foot (about 1%). Always confirm the value for the code your Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) adopts.
- How much fall per foot does a 3-inch drain need?
- Under the IPC, a 3-inch drain needs a minimum of 1/8 inch of fall per foot of run (about 1%, or 1 in 100). Over a 20-foot run that's about 2.5 inches of total drop.
- Can a drain pipe be too steep?
- Yes. If a drain is much steeper than needed, water can race ahead and leave solids behind, which causes clogs. Aim for the code minimum or a touch more — steeper isn't automatically better.
- What happens if a drain isn't sloped enough?
- Too little slope means waste water moves slowly, solids settle, and the line clogs or backs up. Meeting the code-minimum slope keeps the flow fast enough to self-scour.
Reference & education only. Not professional, engineering, or code-compliance advice. Estimates are based on published model codes; local amendments and your Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ) govern. Always verify against the current adopted code and a licensed professional before doing work.
Last reviewed 2026-06.