Backflow prevention is the boring code topic that saves lives. The question it answers is simple: can pool water (and the chemicals in it) ever flow backward into the potable water supply? If the answer is yes, someone could turn on a kitchen faucet and get a glass of chlorinated pool water. Properly designed and inspected backflow assemblies make that answer always no.
What backflow actually is
Backflow is any flow of water opposite to its intended direction. It happens for two reasons:
- Back-siphonage— a pressure drop in the supply line (a main break, hydrant draw, or nearby high-demand event) creates suction that can pull water from downstream connections back into the main.
- Back-pressure— the downstream side is pressurized higher than the supply side, pushing water backward. Common where a pump, heater, or pressure vessel is connected to a potable line without a check.
Where the risk lives on a pool
- Autofill lines— the potable water line that keeps pool level constant. If the pool is contaminated and the city main loses pressure, pool water can siphon backward.
- Chemical-feeder refill— any hose used to refill a chemical tank directly from a hose bib is a classic cross-connection.
- Heater cold-water make-up on commercial systems.
- Equipment-pad rinse stations with hose bibs exposed to chemical splash.
The four common assembly types
| Device | Protection level | Typical pool use |
|---|---|---|
| Air gap | Highest. Unbeatable because it's physical. | Autofill that drops water into a float-controlled reservoir with a visible air gap. |
| Atmospheric Vacuum Breaker (AVB) | Protects against back-siphonage only. Cheap. | Hose bibs, low-hazard fill lines that are never under continuous pressure. |
| Pressure Vacuum Breaker (PVB) | Back-siphonage protection with continuous pressure allowed. | Irrigation taps, autofills that hold pressure. |
| Reduced-Pressure Zone (RPZ / RP) | Highest mechanical protection. Handles both back-pressure and back-siphonage. | Commercial pool autofills, chemical-feeder make-up lines, any high-hazard connection. |
Florida-specific rules worth knowing
Florida follows the Florida Building Code (Plumbing) which references the International Plumbing Code with state-specific amendments. Commercial pools in Florida typically require an annual backflow-assembly test by a certified backflow tester, with the utility receiving the test report. Residential pools with autofills generally require a backflow preventer appropriate to the connection type — most commonly an AVB at the hose bib or a PVB on a hard-plumbed autofill.
- Testable assemblies (PVB, RPZ) must be installed above grade with test cocks accessible.
- Freeze protection matters in North Florida — PVBs and RPZs can split if water isn't allowed to drain before a hard freeze.
- Annual testing is the owner's responsibility, even if the contractor installed the device.
A pool autofill is a cross-connection by default. Treat it that way. Install the right assembly, test it annually, and keep the test report with the pool's records.