Commercial Plumbing Emergency Response Plan Template.
A fill-in-the-blank emergency protocol for commercial properties. Print it, fill it in, and post it where your building engineer can find it at 2 a.m. on a Saturday. The time to build an emergency plan is before you need one.
WHY THIS MATTERS
The Difference Between a $400 Repair and a $60,000 Claim Is Response Time.
Most commercial plumbing emergencies don't start as emergencies. They start as a drip nobody noticed, a shutoff valve nobody can find, or a phone call to a number that goes to voicemail at 6 p.m.
The buildings that contain damage quickly have one thing in common: a plan that was written before the emergency. They know where the shutoff is. They know who to call. They know what to document for insurance. Everything else is improvisation — and improvisation at 2 a.m. with water running through a ceiling is expensive.
This template gives you every section of that plan. Print it, fill in the blanks, and post it in your maintenance office. If you want us to walk your building and help you fill it in, schedule a site walk.
Prints on standard 8.5" × 11" paper — multi-page fill-in document
Emergency Response Plan
Commercial Plumbing Emergency Protocol
Section 1
Emergency Contact Card
Fill in these six contacts and post this card in the building maintenance office, electrical room, and at each main shutoff location.
Primary Plumbing Contractor
Property Manager / Owner
Building Engineer / Maintenance
Insurance Agent
Water District
Water Damage / Restoration
Section 2
4-Step Emergency Response Protocol
Post this protocol in the building maintenance office and electrical/mechanical room. Train all on-site staff on Steps 1 and 2.
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Locate and Close the Shutoff Valve
Stop the water. Every minute of active flow compounds the damage. Use the shutoff valve map (Section 3) to find the closest valve to the source.
- If you can isolate the affected floor or zone, do that first — it limits the shutdown impact on other tenants
- If you cannot isolate, close the main building shutoff
- If the main shutoff is stuck or inaccessible, call the water district emergency line to shut off at the meter
- Note the exact time you closed the valve — insurance will ask
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Call Your Emergency Plumber
Call the Primary Plumbing Contractor from Section 1. Provide:
- Building address and your name / role
- Location of the failure (floor, suite, area)
- Type of water (clean supply line, sewer backup, or unknown)
- Whether the shutoff has been closed
- Whether there is active water damage to occupied spaces
If the primary contractor is unreachable after 15 minutes, escalate to the property manager.
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Document Everything
Start documenting immediately — before cleanup begins. Insurance claims are won or lost on documentation.
- Photos: Source of leak/failure, extent of water spread, affected inventory or equipment, ceiling/wall/floor damage
- Video: Walk the affected area with narration — date, time, what you’re seeing
- Written log: Time of discovery, time shutoff was closed, time plumber was called, time plumber arrived, actions taken
- Affected tenants: Names, suite numbers, whether they were displaced
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Notify Affected Parties
Use the tenant notification templates in Section 4 to notify affected tenants and stakeholders.
- Notify all affected tenants immediately (use Emergency Notice template)
- Notify the property manager / owner if not already aware
- Notify your insurance agent within 24 hours
- If sewer backup: notify the local health department if required by your jurisdiction
- If gas is involved: evacuate first, then call the gas company emergency line and 911
Section 3
Shutoff Valve Location Map
Fill in each valve location and label them physically in the building with weatherproof tags. The person dealing with the emergency at 2 a.m. may not be the person who filled in this form.
Main Building Shutoff
Water Meter Shutoff
Hot Water System Shutoff
Fire Suppression (Do Not Close)
Floor / Zone Isolation Valves
Gas Main Shutoff
Section 4
Tenant Notification Templates
Three ready-to-use templates. Fill in the blanks and distribute by email, text, or printed notice.
Template A: Emergency Water Shutoff
NOTICE: Emergency Water Shutoff
Date: __________ Time: __________
Due to an emergency plumbing situation in location/floor, water service to affected areas has been temporarily shut off.
Our plumbing contractor is on site and working to restore service. Estimated restoration: time or TBD.
During this time, restrooms on floor/area are available for use. We apologize for the inconvenience and will provide updates as they become available.
For questions, contact: name at phone.
Template B: Planned Maintenance Shutoff
NOTICE: Scheduled Plumbing Maintenance
Date: __________
Water service to affected areas will be temporarily interrupted on date between start time and end time for scheduled plumbing maintenance.
Work being performed: description.
Please plan accordingly. Restrooms on floor/area will remain available throughout.
Questions? Contact: name at phone.
Template C: Post-Incident Update
UPDATE: Plumbing Incident Resolution
Date: __________
The plumbing emergency reported on date in location has been resolved. Water service has been fully restored as of time.
Summary of work performed: description.
If you notice any residual issues (low pressure, discolored water, moisture, or odor), please report them immediately to name at phone.
Thank you for your patience during this event.
Section 5
Insurance Documentation Checklist
Start collecting this documentation immediately. Do not wait for the adjuster to ask. Claims that include complete documentation from hour one are processed faster and paid more fully.
Document Within the First 24 Hours
- Time and date of discovery
- Time shutoff valve was closed
- Time plumber was called and arrived
- Photos of the source / point of failure
- Photos of all water-damaged areas
- Video walkthrough with narration
- List of affected tenants and suites
- Written description of what happened
- Name of responding plumber and company
- Plumber’s initial diagnosis
- Any displaced tenants or closed businesses
- Estimated square footage of affected area
Collect Within 72 Hours
- Plumber’s written repair report
- Plumber’s invoice for emergency work
- Restoration company’s moisture readings
- Restoration company’s scope of work
- Itemized list of damaged property / equipment
- Tenant business interruption claims (if any)
- Building maintenance records for the failed system
- Previous inspection reports (camera, backflow, etc.)
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