Tankless Water Heaters in Atlanta

Tankless water heaters represent a distinct category within the broader water heater systems in Atlanta landscape, operating without the storage tanks that define conventional units. This page covers the technical classification, operational mechanics, applicable code framework, and decision criteria relevant to the Atlanta metro service sector. Understanding this technology's place in the local regulatory and infrastructure environment matters for property owners, licensed contractors, and building inspectors navigating permit and installation requirements.


Definition and scope

A tankless water heater — also designated a demand-type or instantaneous water heater — heats water directly as it passes through the unit without retaining any stored volume. The U.S. Department of Energy classifies these units as a distinct appliance category under its appliance standards program, separate from storage and heat pump water heaters (U.S. DOE Appliance Standards Program).

Two primary fuel classifications define the category:

A further subdivision exists between whole-house units and point-of-use units. Whole-house units are sized to serve multiple fixtures simultaneously; point-of-use units are compact devices installed at a single fixture location such as a bathroom sink or kitchen outlet.

Scope and geographic coverage: This page addresses tankless water heater installations within the City of Atlanta, Fulton and DeKalb County jurisdictions, under the regulatory authority of the City of Atlanta's Office of Buildings and the Georgia Department of Community Affairs (DCA). Properties in Cobb County, Gwinnett County, or other Atlanta metro municipalities operate under separate jurisdictional permit authorities and are not covered here. Commercial installations in Atlanta are addressed separately through commercial plumbing in Atlanta.


How it works

When a hot water fixture is opened, cold water enters the tankless unit through an inlet pipe. A flow sensor detects the movement of water — typically at a threshold of 0.5 gallons per minute (GPM) or greater — and activates the heating element or burner. In gas-fired units, a heat exchanger transfers combustion energy to the water stream; in electric units, resistance elements perform direct heating.

The unit modulates output based on incoming water temperature and the set outlet temperature, which is typically factory-set between 120°F and 140°F in compliance with ASHRAE and ANSI Z21.10.3 standards for gas water heaters (ANSI Z21.10.3). The American Society of Sanitary Engineering (ASSE) Standard 1017 governs performance of temperature-actuating devices on these systems.

Flow rates are measured in GPM, and sizing is determined by calculating the simultaneous demand across fixtures and the temperature rise required. Atlanta's average groundwater temperature entering residential supply lines runs approximately 60°F to 65°F in winter months — a temperature rise requirement that affects sizing calculations directly. A shower demanding 2.0 GPM and a kitchen faucet demanding 1.5 GPM simultaneously requires a unit rated for at least 3.5 GPM at the required temperature rise.

Venting for gas-fired units follows one of three configurations:

  1. Power-vent (Category III or IV) — uses a motorized blower to exhaust combustion gases through PVC or stainless steel flue pipe horizontally or vertically.
  2. Direct-vent (sealed combustion) — draws combustion air from outside through a concentric pipe system, eliminating indoor air quality concerns in tight construction.
  3. Non-power vent (Category I) — less common in modern tankless applications; relies on natural draft through a traditional B-vent chimney.

Venting type must match the unit's certification and be installed per the manufacturer's listed instructions and the International Fuel Gas Code (IFGC), which Georgia has adopted as part of its state construction code suite (Georgia DCA State Codes).


Common scenarios

Tankless water heater work in Atlanta appears across a range of project types:


Decision boundaries

Selecting, sizing, and installing a tankless water heater in Atlanta involves discrete regulatory and technical thresholds:

Permit requirement: The City of Atlanta requires a plumbing permit for any water heater installation, including tankless units, under the Atlanta Building Code and Georgia State Minimum Standard Plumbing Code (based on the International Plumbing Code). Permit applications are submitted through the City's Office of Buildings. Inspection is required prior to closing walls or concealing connections. The full permitting structure is detailed at permitting and inspection concepts for Atlanta plumbing.

Licensing requirement: Tankless water heater installation in Atlanta must be performed by a licensed plumber holding a valid Georgia Plumbing Contractor license or working under one. If the installation involves gas line modification, a gas fitter endorsement is required. The licensing framework is outlined at Atlanta plumbing contractor licensing requirements. The authoritative licensing reference for Atlanta-area contractors is the regulatory context for Atlanta plumbing, which covers the Georgia State Licensing Board for Residential and General Contractors alongside the Secretary of State's plumbing contractor classifications.

Sizing thresholds:
1. Confirm the incoming gas supply pressure meets the manufacturer's minimum (typically 4–10 inches water column for natural gas units).
2. Calculate peak simultaneous demand in GPM across all active fixtures.
3. Determine required temperature rise from supply temperature to desired delivery temperature (minimum 55°F rise for winter conditions in Atlanta).
4. Match unit flow rate at the calculated temperature rise — not at the maximum rated GPM, which typically applies only at lower temperature rise values.
5. Verify electrical service capacity if installing electric models (most whole-house electric units require 200-amp service with dedicated 60–100 amp breaker banks).

Safety standards: Units must bear certification from a nationally recognized testing laboratory (NRTL) such as UL (Underwriters Laboratories) or CSA Group under ANSI Z21.10.3 for gas models or UL 174 for electric models. Carbon monoxide (CO) risk from improperly vented gas tankless units is classified as a life-safety hazard under NFPA 54 (National Fuel Gas Code), adopted in Georgia. CO detector placement near fuel-burning appliances is addressed in the Georgia State Fire Code.

The broader service sector context for plumbing decisions in Atlanta — including how contractors, inspectors, and property owners interact within the regulatory framework — is accessible through the Atlanta Plumbing Authority index.


References

📜 2 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 26, 2026  ·  View update log

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