California Backflow Compliance — What Every Commercial Property Owner Must Know.
Annual testing is mandatory under California Title 17. Reports must be filed with your water agency. The obligation is on the property owner — not the tenant, not the contractor.
Key Takeaways
- Annual testing is required by California Title 17 — the property owner is responsible, not the tenant
- Your water agency can shut off service for non-compliance — no court order required
- Test reports must be filed directly with the water agency by the certified tester
- Three device types (RPZ, DCV, DCDA) cover most commercial installations — which one depends on hazard level
WHO NEEDS ANNUAL BACKFLOW TESTING
If Your Property Has a Cross-Connection Point, You're Required to Test.
Most commercial properties have at least one backflow assembly — many have several. The requirement applies regardless of property age, lease structure, or tenant type.
Restaurants & Food Service
Pre-rinse stations, carbonated beverage lines, and dishwashers all require assemblies. Health permit renewals are frequently tied to current backflow certification.
Healthcare & Medical
Sterilization, dialysis, and lab water connections carry high-hazard classification — subject to CDPH standards stricter than standard commercial requirements.
Industrial & Manufacturing
Cooling towers, process water, and chemical-handling connections require RPZ assemblies. Higher hazard ratings mean more frequent agency scrutiny.
Irrigation & Landscape
Any commercial irrigation connection to potable water requires annual testing — the most commonly overlooked requirement across office parks and retail centers.
Fire Suppression Systems
Wet sprinkler systems connected to domestic water require DCDA testing annually — separate from fire system certification, and frequently missed.
Office & Multi-Tenant Buildings
HVAC, boilers, and domestic connections carry testing requirements. Multi-meter buildings may have obligations at both the building and suite level.
WHAT CALIFORNIA REQUIRES
Title 17 in Plain Language.
California's cross-connection control program under Title 17 of the California Code of Regulations sets the rules. Here's what they mean for property owners:
- Annual testing of all backflow prevention assemblies — no exceptions
- Testing must be performed by a California-certified tester
- Results must be filed with the local water agency — not just kept on-site
- Failed assemblies must be repaired and retested within 30–60 days
- Noncompliance notices go to the property owner, not the tenant
- Each water agency enforces its own deadlines independently
Most agencies don't send reminders. The deadline is the deadline.
ASSEMBLY TYPES AT A GLANCE
Know What's on Your Property.
The assembly type determines the hazard protection level and the testing protocol required.
RPZ
Reduced Pressure Zone
Highest protection level. Required for high-hazard connections: industrial, medical, fire suppression, and irrigation.
DCV
Double Check Valve
Used for low-to-moderate hazard connections. Common in office buildings, boilers, and light commercial.
DCDA
Double Check Detector Assembly
Required for fire sprinkler systems connected to the domestic water supply.
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA WATER AGENCIES
Each Agency Runs Its Own Program.
Reports must be filed with the specific agency serving your property's water connection. A certificate filed with the wrong agency does not satisfy your obligation.
IRWD
Irvine Ranch Water District — Irvine, Tustin, portions of Orange and Santa Ana Canyon.
MWDOC
Municipal Water District of Orange County — wholesale agency serving multiple OC water districts.
LADWP
Los Angeles Department of Water and Power — primary purveyor for the City of Los Angeles.
RCWD / EVMWD
Rancho California Water District and Elsinore Valley MWD — serving western Riverside County.
CERTIFIED BACKFLOW TESTING — SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Annual Testing, Same-Day Agency Filing, Done.
California Coast Plumbers provides certified on-site backflow testing for commercial properties across Orange County, Los Angeles County, and Riverside County. We test, file with your water agency the same day, and deliver the compliance certificate. C-36 Licensed — Lic. #736992.
California cross-connection control program certified. Every device tested to agency standards and fully documented.
Reports filed with IRWD, MWDOC, LADWP, RCWD, or WMWD before end of business the day of your test.
We carry common replacement components. Most failed assemblies are retested before we leave the property.
We track deadlines, coordinate scheduling, and handle agency filings across every property in your portfolio.
SERVICE AREA
Certified backflow testing for commercial properties across Southern California, including:
On-Site in 2 Hours. That Is Our Standard.
Commercial emergencies do not wait for business hours. Our Priority 1 (P1) SLA targets a 2-hour response during business hours and a 2-hour dispatch for after-hours crises — across Orange County, LA, Riverside, San Bernardino, and San Diego. One call. We handle the rest.
2-Hour Response — (714) 632-0170