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Property Management

Florida Condo SIRS and Plumbing: What Boards Must Fund in 2026

Florida's Structural Integrity Reserve Study (SIRS) law makes plumbing a mandatory reserve component your board can no longer waive. Here's what that means for South Florida condo plumbing budgets, inspections, and special assessments in 2026.

April 27, 20268 min readBy South FL Emergency Plumber Team
Florida Condo SIRS and Plumbing: What Boards Must Fund in 2026

Key Takeaways

  • Florida Statute 718.112(2)(g) lists plumbing as one of eight mandatory SIRS reserve components — boards cannot waive funding for it.
  • The SIRS deadline for condo and co-op buildings three stories and higher was December 31, 2025; reserve waivers are no longer permitted as of January 1, 2026.
  • HB 913 (2025) raised the SIRS "other items" threshold from $10,000 to $25,000 and requires annual inflation adjustments going forward.
  • Plumbing reserve scope typically covers risers, mains, pump rooms, fire-protection lines, and large branch drains — not in-unit fixtures.
  • If your South Florida building needs a plumbing condition assessment for the SIRS, call us at 754-707-1774 — we work with HOAs across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach.

If you sit on a Florida condo board, manage a high-rise in Miami or Fort Lauderdale, or own a unit in any building three stories or taller, the plumbing line on your reserve schedule is no longer optional. As of January 1, 2026, Florida law forbids waiving or underfunding reserves for the eight components covered by the Structural Integrity Reserve Study (SIRS) — and plumbing is on that list. We've spent the last several months walking property managers through what this actually means inside the pipe chases, pump rooms, and risers of South Florida buildings. Here's the working summary.

What the law actually says

Florida Statute 718.112(2)(g) — as amended by SB 4-D (2022), SB 154 (2023), and most recently HB 913 (2025) — requires every condominium association with a building three stories or higher to commission a Structural Integrity Reserve Study and fully fund the components it covers. The eight required components are: roof, structure (load-bearing walls and primary structural members), fireproofing and fire-protection systems, plumbing, electrical systems, waterproofing and exterior painting, windows and exterior doors, and any other item with a deferred-maintenance or replacement cost above $25,000.

Two dates matter most for the 2026 budget cycle. The first SIRS for buildings three stories and higher was due December 31, 2025. And as of January 1, 2026, boards may no longer vote to waive or reduce reserves for any of the eight SIRS components. That ends a long-running practice in South Florida condos — particularly older Miami Beach, Hollywood, and Sunny Isles buildings — of rolling reserves forward year after year and absorbing the gap with special assessments when something failed.

What "plumbing" means in a SIRS

The statute lists "plumbing" without defining its scope, which is where most boards run into trouble. Based on the studies we've reviewed alongside licensed Florida engineers, the plumbing reserve line typically captures the building-side common-element systems — not in-unit fixtures. In a South Florida high-rise, that usually means:

  • Domestic cold-water risers and main supply lines from the meter to each floor
  • Domestic hot-water risers and recirculation loops, plus central water heaters or hot-water plant
  • Sanitary stacks, vent stacks, and main horizontal sewer lines exiting the building
  • Storm drains and roof drains that pass through the building envelope
  • Booster pumps, pressure-reducing valves, backflow preventers, and meter assemblies
  • Fire-protection wet and dry standpipes (often shared with the fire-protection line)
  • Pool, cooling-tower, and irrigation supply lines fed off the common system

What it generally does not cover: the supply lines, drains, and fixtures inside an individual unit past the shutoff at the riser or branch. Those remain the unit owner's responsibility under almost every Florida condo declaration we've seen — though, as always, the declaration controls. We have a separate guide on that boundary in our HOA plumbing responsibility post.

Why South Florida buildings get hit hardest

Three regional realities make the plumbing line on a South Florida SIRS unusually expensive compared to other parts of the country.

1. Salt-air and alkaline soil corrode metallic systems faster

Coastal high-rises along Brickell, Sunny Isles, Hollywood Beach, Fort Lauderdale Beach, and Boca Raton see chloride-driven corrosion on copper risers, galvanized vents, and cast-iron stacks at rates that simply don't apply to inland or northern markets. Cast-iron drain stacks installed in the 1970s and 1980s — common in older Miami Beach and Aventura buildings — are now reaching the end of their service life all at once.

2. The 60–70-year construction wave

A large share of South Florida's mid-century and 1970s-1980s mid- and high-rise stock is hitting the 25-year coastal milestone-inspection threshold (or its 30-year inland equivalent) precisely when SIRS funding becomes mandatory. Many of these buildings deferred plumbing replacements through repeated reserve waivers — a path the new law closes.

3. Hard water accelerates wear

Miami-Dade and Broward source water runs in the moderately hard to hard range. Over decades, scale buildup constricts horizontal mains, fouls pressure-reducing valves, and shortens water-heater life — all line items the SIRS engineer is supposed to forecast.

What boards and property managers should do this year

  1. Pull your SIRS report. If the plumbing line item is generic ("plumbing replacement, $X, in year Y"), commission a separate plumbing condition assessment to firm it up — engineers usually welcome the input.
  2. Ask the building engineer or maintenance lead to identify high-failure-risk components: original cast-iron stacks, galvanized vents, copper recirc loops with documented pinhole leaks, and aging booster pumps.
  3. Document leak history. Two or more pinhole or stack leaks per year is a leading indicator of a system-level repipe coming, not a one-off repair.
  4. Get a written scope and budgetary number for any major plumbing capital project before the next budget vote — it changes how you fund the reserve.
  5. If your milestone inspection is due on or before December 31, 2026, coordinate it with the SIRS so the engineer's findings flow directly into the funding model.

Common questions we hear from boards

Once a board sees the plumbing reserve line in dollars, the next questions are predictable. Below are the ones that come up in nearly every meeting we sit in on.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Generally no. The SIRS is a building-level reserve study covering common-element plumbing — risers, mains, pumps, central hot-water systems, and similar. In-unit supply lines, drains, and fixtures past the shutoff almost always remain the owner's responsibility under the declaration. If you're unsure where the line falls, our HOA plumbing responsibility guide breaks down the typical Florida condo split.

No. Florida Statute 718.112(2)(g) applies to condominium and cooperative buildings three habitable stories or higher. Two-story garden-style condos are not currently subject to SIRS, though they remain subject to the general reserve and assessment rules in Chapter 718.

That's allowed, but it's not actionable. We recommend boards commission a separate plumbing condition walkthrough by a licensed plumber to identify which subsystems (cast-iron stacks, copper risers, hot-water plant, booster pumps) are driving the cost and the timing. The engineer who prepared the SIRS will usually accept that input as a refinement.

Not for the eight SIRS components. As of January 1, 2026, Florida law prohibits waiving or reducing reserves for roof, structure, fireproofing, plumbing, electrical, waterproofing, windows and exterior doors, and any other item over $25,000. Reserves for non-SIRS items can still be addressed by membership vote, subject to the statute.

It can. A single pinhole leak isn't a SIRS event, but a pattern — multiple leaks on the same riser, recurring stack failures, or a documented section of failed cast-iron — should be reflected in the next reserve update. Document each leak with photos, location, system, and repair scope. We provide written reports formatted for HOA records when we do emergency calls in managed buildings.

A licensed Florida plumber familiar with high-rise common-element systems. We do these walkthroughs across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach, then deliver a written report with photo documentation, leak-history review, and budgetary repair numbers your engineer or property manager can drop into the SIRS. Call 754-707-1774 to schedule.

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