What Is a Sump or Sewage Pump System?

A sump or sewage ejector system is used when plumbing fixtures are located below the level of the building sewer, meaning wastewater cannot drain by gravity. Wastewater must be collected in a sump or basin and pumped up to the building drain or sewer. Typical examples include a basement bathroom below the sewer elevation, laundry fixtures on a lower level, floor drains below grade, and foundation drainage systems.

Core Principle (NPC 2.4.6.3(1))

Only piping that is too low to drain by gravity may discharge into a sump or tank. Gravity drainage is always preferred — a pump system is a last resort.

Two Different Systems

  • Sanitary Sewage Sump: Receives wastewater from fixtures. Must be water-tight, air-tight, and vented. Pumps to the sanitary building drain.
  • Storm / Groundwater Sump: Collects foundation drains and groundwater. Has different discharge rules and may discharge above grade depending on local bylaws.

Required Components

Every properly designed system has five major parts: the receiving basin/sump, pump or ejector, discharge piping, vent system, and controls & safety devices.

Code Breakdown — NPC 2.4.6.3 Explained

(1) Only when gravity won't work: Do not install a pump for convenience. It is only permitted when gravity drainage is not possible.

(2) Sanitary sumps must be sealed and vented: Required to prevent sewer gas escape, prevent pressure damage, and maintain atmospheric balance.

(3) Pump or ejector required: The system must be capable of lifting sewage into the sanitary drain.

(4) Manual systems require 24-hour storage: If the system is not automatic, the basin volume must hold one full day of flow. This is a storage sizing requirement, not a pump sizing question.

(5) Building trap rule: If a building trap exists, the pump discharge must connect downstream of the trap.

(6) Required discharge order — frequently tested:

Pump → Union → Check Valve → Shut-Off Valve → Building Drain

The union allows easy servicing, the check valve prevents backflow, and the shutoff valve provides maintenance isolation.

(7) Discharge pipe sizing: Must provide optimum flow velocity at pump design flow. An undersized pipe causes friction loss and pump overload. An oversized pipe causes low velocity and solids settling.

(8) Storm sump discharge options: Either union + check valve for above-grade discharge, or union + check valve + shutoff valve.

Venting Requirements (NPC 2.5.7.7)

Vent size must be one size smaller than the largest drain entering the sump, with a minimum of 2" and a maximum of 4". For macerating systems, the minimum vent size is 1½".

How to Think Like a Designer

Every pump system is sized around three questions:

  • How much? — Flow rate (GPM / L/s)
  • How high? — Total Dynamic Head (TDH)
  • How much storage? — Basin volume

Step-by-Step Pump Sizing Method

Step 1 — Determine Fixture Load (NPC Table 2.4.9.3)

Add up fixture units for all fixtures in the group. Example basement group: WC = 4 FU, Lavatory = 1 FU, Shower = 2 FU, Laundry = 3 FU — Total = 10 FU. Convert fixture units to design flow using NPC 2.4.10.3, multiplying each litre per second by 31.7 to get the fixture unit total.

Step 2 — Determine Total Dynamic Head (TDH)

TDH = Static Lift + Friction Loss + Minor Losses

  • A) Static Lift: Vertical distance from the pump "ON" level to the discharge connection point. Example: pump depth = 2.5 m, connection height = 1.5 m above floor — static lift = 4 m (≈13 ft).
  • B) Friction Loss: Depends on pipe diameter, length, number of fittings, and flow rate. Rule of thumb: 2" discharge at 30 GPM = 3–5 ft of friction per 100 ft of pipe.
  • C) Minor Losses: Add equivalent pipe length for check valves, elbows, and unions. Exam shortcut — add 20–30% to the total pipe length.

Example TDH Calculation: 

Static lift = 13 ft, pipe length equivalent = 50 ft, friction = 2 ft — TDH =15 ft.

Step 3 — Select Pump Using Performance Curve

The pump must deliver the required flow at the calculated TDH.

Sump Basin / Tank Sizing

Basin size controls pump cycling frequency, pump life, odour control, and flood protection.

  • Basic Volume Formula (rectangular): Volume (gal) = Length × Width × Water Depth × 7.48
  • Round basin formula: Volume = π × r² × depth × 7.48

Example: 24" diameter basin, 30" usable depth, radius = 1 ft — Volume = 3.14 × 1² × 2.5 × 7.48 = 58 gallons.

Design Rules: Minimum pump run time of 30–60 seconds, minimum off time of 1 minute, avoid short cycling. Typical residential sewage basin working volume is 30–40 gallons.

Float Levels & Controls

Typical sequence from lowest to highest: OFF float → ON float (pump starts) → High-level alarm.

Duplex vs Simplex Systems

  • Simplex (single pump): Used in residential applications, lower cost.
  • Duplex (two pumps): Used in commercial applications, pumps alternate duty and provide backup redundancy.

Common Exam Mistakes

  • Missing vent on sewage sump
  • Wrong valve sequence on discharge piping
  • Connecting the pump discharge upstream of the building trap
  • Oversized pump causing short cycling
  • No check valve installed

High-Level Sizing Walkthrough

Given: Basement bathroom group, 12 FU total, static lift = 14 ft, horizontal run = 40 ft, 2" discharge.

  • Step 1 — Flow: 25 GPM design flow.
  • Step 2 — TDH: Static = 14 ft, friction = 2 ft, fittings = 1 ft — TDH = 17 ft.
  • Step 3 — Pump Selection: Select a pump delivering 25 GPM @ 17 ft TDH — typically a 1/2 HP sewage ejector.
  • Step 4 — Basin Size: Desired run time = 45 sec — required working volume = 25 GPM × 0.75 min = 19 gal. Use a 30–40 gal basin for good cycling.

Real-World Design Tips

  • A larger basin means longer pump life.
  • Install the check valve close to the pump to reduce valve slam.
  • Maintain vertical discharge before the horizontal turn.
  • The vent must connect to the venting system — not an AAV unless specifically permitted.
  • Always plan for maintenance access.

Quick Mental Checklist

When you encounter a sump question, ask: Is gravity impossible? Sanitary or storm? Is a vent required? Is the valve order correct? Is the pipe sized for velocity? How much flow is required? How high must it pump? Is the basin volume adequate?

If you understand flow, head, and storage, you can solve any sump or sewage pump question. Every design decision comes back to pressure effects, air balancing through venting, and hydraulic logic — gravity where possible, pumped only when necessary.

Example 1 — Sewage Ejector for Basement Bathroom

Situation: A basement bathroom group includes a water closet, lavatory, and shower. The fixtures are located below the building drain level, so wastewater cannot drain by gravity.

Design requirement: A sealed sewage sump with an ejector pump must be installed.

Example sizing — Typical residential sewage ejector basin:

  • Basin diameter: 450 mm (18 in.)
  • Basin depth: 600 mm (24 in.) minimum
  • Pump capacity: about 40–60 L/min (10–15 gpm) minimum for small residential use

Design considerations:

  • The basin must be water-tight, air-tight, and vented.
  • Pump discharge must have: 1. Union, 2. Check valve/backwater valve, 3. Shut-off — installed in this sequence from bottom to top.

Why is a pump required? NPC code (2.4.6.3): When fixtures are below the building drain or sewer, sewage must be lifted by a sump or sewage pump.

Example 2 — Storm Water Sump Pump for Foundation Drainage

Situation: A house has a foundation drain (weeping tile) and basement floor drain. Stormwater must discharge to grade. Gravity drainage is not possible, so a storm sump pump is required.

Example sizing:

  • Estimated inflow = 50 L/min
  • Pump capacity = 75 L/min recommended
  • Basin size: Minimum 450 mm diameter, deep enough to allow pump cycling without short cycling

Design considerations:

  • Must not connect storm sump to sanitary sewer (unless permitted)
  • Discharge to the storm system or grade
  • A union, check valve, and shut-off are required on discharge.

Mock C of Q Question:

According to the National Plumbing Code of Canada, which of the following is the correct installation requirement for sewage ejectors?

  • A. Connect the fixtures directly to the building drain with a backwater valve
  • B. Install a sewage sump with a pump and a vented, air and water-tight cover
  • C. Install a sewage sump with a pump, piping, and must vent only if municipality says to
  • D. Install a sewage sump with a pump, which is vented and has a water-tight cover

Correct Answer: B — Install a sewage sump with a pump and a vented, gas-tight cover

Step-by-Step Reasoning with Code References

1. Pump required when fixtures are below the sewer

NPC 2.4.6.3 – Sewage Sumps and Pumping Equipment: Where a fixture cannot drain by gravity into the building drain or building sewer, the drainage shall be discharged into a sump and pumped to the building drain or building sewer. The fixtures are below the building drain; gravity drainage is not possible, and a sewage ejector system is required.

2. Sump must be gas-tight and vented

NPC 2.4.6.3. (2): A sewage sump shall be provided with a gas-tight cover and shall be vented. Prevents sewer gas from entering the building. Required for sewage ejector pits.

3. Pump discharge must have a check valve

NPC 2.4.6.4 – Pump Discharge Piping: The discharge pipe from a pump shall be provided with a check valve and a shut-off valve. Prevents backflow into the sump. Required on ejector discharge.

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