How to Size a Cold Water Storage Tank (UK Step-by-Step Guide)

The sizing decision for a cold water storage tank has the greatest long-term consequence for water quality of any design choice in the system. Undersize the tank and the building loses supply under a mains interruption. Oversize it and water age climbs — stored temperature rises, Legionella risk increases, and a design error made at specification stage creates an operational problem that cannot easily be corrected later.

Published
Audience

Consulting engineers · MEP contractors · Developers

Standards Basis

CIBSE Guide G (2nd ed.); BS 8558:2015; HSG274 Pt 2

Reading Time

Approx. 12 minutes

This guide explains the sizing methodology for cold water storage tanks in multi-storey buildings, the four competing requirements that must be balanced, and the relationship between storage volume and Legionella risk. The methodology is drawn from CIBSE Guide G and BS 8558. All sizing calculations for real projects must be performed by a suitably qualified engineer using building-specific demand data.

For product specification context — panel construction, capacity ranges, and BS EN 13280 compliance — see the Complete Technical Guide to Sectional GRP Cold Water Tanks.

150 L

Indicative daily cold water demand per person in residential buildings (BS 8558 / CIBSE Guide G)

1 kg/L

Water density for structural loading: a 10,000 L tank exerts 10 tonnes on the plant room floor

20°C

Maximum cold water storage temperature (ACoP L8 / HSG274 Pt 2) — the Legionella constraint on water age

Why Proper Sizing Matters — In Both Directions

The instinct of many designers is to size cold water storage conservatively — to specify more volume than the calculation strictly requires, on the basis that more storage is safer. This is correct for resilience. It is incorrect for water hygiene.

Undersizing produces

Supply and operational risk

Booster set starvation during peak demand; supply failure during mains interruptions shorter than the design resilience period; risk of the booster low-water cut-out activating under normal operating conditions.

Oversizing produces

Water hygiene risk

Excessive water age — the average time water spends in storage before use; progressive temperature rise in warm plant rooms; Legionella risk that may be unmanageable by physical controls alone; in some cases, the need for supplementary chemical treatment.

Key Principle

The correct volume is the minimum that satisfies all four requirements
The correct storage volume is the smallest volume that satisfies all four sizing requirements — not the largest the plant room can accommodate, and not the volume that maximises the resilience period beyond what the brief requires.

The Four Sizing Requirements

Every cold water storage tank sizing exercise must balance four competing requirements, which most commonly conflict in the order listed.

Requirement
What It Drives
Conflicts With
Peak demand buffering
Tank must absorb instantaneous demand that exceeds the mains fill rate
Water hygiene — a larger buffer means longer water age
Resilience
Stored volume maintains supply under mains interruption for a specified duration
Water hygiene — a longer resilience period means more storage and longer water ageins supply under mains interruption for a specified duration
Water hygiene
Maximum acceptable residence time given the thermal environment and Legionella risk
Resilience and buffering — both push toward more storage
Physical constraints
Available footprint, ceiling height, structural floor loading, and access
All other requirements — physical limits cap achievable volume

Where the resilience requirement and the water hygiene requirement pull in opposite directions — as they frequently do in multi-storey buildings with warm basement plant rooms — the designer must either accept supplementary treatment as a design element, reduce the resilience target in the brief, or adopt a two-compartment arrangement that reduces effective residence time.

Daily Demand by Building Type

The starting point for sizing is an estimate of average daily demand. The appropriate figure depends on building occupancy type, number of occupants, and pattern of use. The two primary UK sizing tools are:

Primary reference — special legal status

CIBSE Guide G — Public Health and Plumbing Engineering (2nd ed.)

Provides demand-based sizing methodologies for cold water storage by occupancy type, including loading unit methods and demand unit approaches for a range of building types. The appropriate starting point for any UK multi-storey project.

Complementary guidance

BS 8558:2015 — Services Supplying Water for Domestic Use

Provides reference consumption rates by occupancy type and guidance on storage volume for various resilience periods. Used alongside CIBSE Guide G to confirm demand assumptions and storage targets.

Building Type
Indicative Demand
Source Basis
Residential (per person per day)
130–150 litres
BS 8558 / CIBSE Guide G
Hotel (per bed per day, full service)
200–350 litres
CIBSE Guide G
Office (per person per day)
30–50 litres
CIBSE Guide G
Hospital (per bed per day)
350–500 litres
CIBSE Guide G
School (per pupil per day)
20–30 litres
CIBSE Guide G

These are indicative ranges for preliminary sizing. Actual demand depends on occupancy rates, fixture types, hours of operation, and seasonal variation. For new-build projects, CIBSE Guide G loading unit calculations using the planned fixture schedule provide a more accurate estimate than per-person rules of thumb. However, Cold water storage tank sizing must account for both operational resilience and water hygiene performance.

Resilience Period — 24-Hour vs 48–72-Hour Storage

The resilience requirement is defined in the project brief. Common targets are:

Building Type
Typical Resilience Target
Standard multi-storey residential
30 minutes to 1 hour
Hospitals, hotels, single incoming main
2 to 4 hours
Critical applications, poor supply reliability
Up to 24 hours
Remote sites, critical national infrastructure
48–72 hours (use with caution — significantly increases water age and Legionella risk)

Resilience calculation

Resilience storage (L) = (Daily demand ÷ 24) × Resilience hours

Assumes no mains refill during the resilience period — the correct assumption for a supply interruption event. Apply a 1.5× peak demand buffering factor to the result to account for demand rates above the daily average.

Firefighting Reserve and Combined Tank Considerations

Where a tank must also serve a sprinkler or hydrant system, BS EN 12845 defines the required dedicated volume by hazard classification. This reserve is an additional fixed volume that cannot serve domestic consumption under normal conditions.

Hazard Classification
Example Buildings
Required Tank Volume
Ordinary Hazard Group 1
Offices, schools
27,500 – 40,000 L
Ordinary Hazard Group 2
Car parks, museums, libraries, public buildings
105,000 – 140,000 L
Ordinary Hazard Group 3
Shopping centres, supermarkets, plant rooms, hospitals
135,000 – 185,000 L

Common separation strategies include installing a physical tank partition or setting the domestic outlet at a higher level so that the bottom portion of the tank (the fire reserve) remains untouched during normal operation. Either method must prevent daily domestic draw-down from depleting the fire reserve.

Resilience calculation

Resilience storage (L) = (Daily demand ÷ 24) × Resilience hours

Assumes no mains refill during the resilience period — the correct assumption for a supply interruption event. Apply a 1.5× peak demand buffering factor to the result to account for demand rates above the daily average.

Turnover, Water Age, and Legionella Risk

In addition, effective cold water storage tank sizing also requires consideration of water turnover rates and thermal conditions within the plant room. Where a tank serves a sprinkler system, BS EN 12845 specifies minimum storage volumes by hazard classification:

Water age calculation

Theoretical water age
Water age (days) = Storage volume (L) ÷ Average daily demand (L/day)

This is a theoretical minimum assuming perfect mixing. Without internal baffles, actual water age for some portions of stored volume will be significantly longer due to stratification and short-circuit flow patterns.

Practical Water Hygiene Design Guidance: a tank with water age under approximately 8 to 12 hours in a well-insulated, thermally controlled plant room will generally maintain temperature below 20°C without difficulty. A tank approaching 24 hours water age in a warm plant room will typically require additional insulation, internal baffles, or supplementary water treatment.

Stratification risk in large-volume tanks

In tanks exceeding approximately 10,000 L, warmer, less dense water rises to the upper layers while cooler water settles lower. A single temperature sensor at low level may show an acceptable reading while the upper layers exceed 20°C. For tanks above 10,000 L, the specification must include multiple temperature sensor pockets at low, mid, and high levels; internal baffles; and inlet and outlet positioned on opposite sides to promote end-to-end diagonal flow.

COLD WATER STORAGE TANK SIZING METHODOLOGY

The following roadmap integrates the regulatory, standards, and health obligations set out above into a sequential process for specifying, installing, and maintaining a GRP cold water storage tank in a UK building.

Seven-step process

Cold Water Storage Tank Sizing — UK Method

1

Estimate daily demand

Use occupancy data and the CIBSE Guide G / BS 8558 reference values to calculate peak daily water consumption (L/day).

2

Set the resilience period

Determine the required backup duration (hours) from the project brief. Common benchmarks: 30 min–1 hr residential; 2–4 hr hospitals and hotels; up to 24 hr critical.

3

Calculate resilience volume

Apply the formula: (Daily demand ÷ 24) × Resilience hours. Multiply by 1.5× for peak demand buffering.

4

Add firefighting reserve (if applicable)

Determine the fire reserve per BS EN 12845 hazard classification and add this as a fixed, non-domestic volume. Confirm the separation strategy — partition or elevated outlet — at design stage.

5

Verify physical constraints

Check plant room footprint, ceiling height, structural floor loading (water weighs 1 kg per litre — a 10,000 L tank exerts 10 tonnes on the floor), and access routes for panel delivery.

6

Check water age

Calculate theoretical turnover (volume ÷ daily demand). If it significantly exceeds 12–24 hours in a warm environment, consider reducing volume, introducing internal baffles, or specifying a two-compartment arrangement.

7

Finalise and document

Select a standard tank size or configure a sectional tank to the required volume. Sectional GRP tanks are assembled from modular panels in 500 mm and 1,000 mm increments. Document all assumptions for facilities management reference.

Worked example

120-apartment residential tower

APARTMENTS

120, average 2 occupants

TOTAL OCCUPANTS
240
DAILY DEMAND
240 × 150 L = 36,000 L/day
RESILIENCE TARGET
240 × 150 L = 36,000 L/day
PLANT ROOM
Basement; summer ambient up to 22°C

Sizing steps:

Sizing steps:

1. Resilience storage: 36,000 ÷ 24 = 1,500 L/hr × 1 hr = 1,500 L
2. Peak buffering factor 1.5×: 1,500 × 1.5 = 2,250 L minimum working storage
3. Water age check at candidate volumes — see table below
4. Selected volume: 5,000 L (2 × 2,500 L, two-compartment arrangement) — satisfies resilience, buffers peak demand, and produces a water age of approximately 3.3 hours

Candidate Volume
Theoretical Water Age
Assessment — Warm Basement Plant Room
2,500 L
2,500 ÷ 36,000 = 1.7 hours
Acceptable: low stagnation risk; minimum viable volume
5,000 L ✓ Selected
5,000 ÷ 36,000 = 3.3 hours
Acceptable: good turnover; appropriate for this thermal environment
10,000 L
10,000 ÷ 36,000 = 6.7 hours
Monitor: acceptable with good insulation; baffles advisable
20,000 L
20,000 ÷ 36,000 = 13.3 hours
Elevated risk: warm plant room requires baffles or supplementary treatment
50,000 L
50,000 ÷ 36,000 = 33 hours
Unacceptable: significant Legionella risk without supplementary treatment; far exceeds demand

This example illustrates the core principle: size to the smallest volume that satisfies resilience and buffering, while actively checking against water hygiene constraints.

Frequently asked questions

What is the recommended storage volume for a cold water tank in the UK?

There is no single recommended volume — it depends on building occupancy, demand profile, resilience target, and the thermal environment of the plant room. CIBSE Guide G and BS 8558 provide the appropriate sizing methodologies. Oversizing is as problematic as undersizing: an oversized tank produces excessive water age, increasing the risk of stored water temperature rising above the 20°C Legionella control threshold.

Theoretical water age is calculated by dividing storage volume in litres by average daily consumption in litres per day. A 10,000 L tank serving a building with 36,000 L/day average demand has a theoretical turnover time of 10,000 ÷ 36,000 = 0.28 days (approximately 6.7 hours) — an acceptable rate. A 50,000 L tank on the same building produces a turnover time of approximately 33 hours, which in a warm plant room creates an unacceptable Legionella risk.

Only if both compartments are fully charged and the interconnecting valve is open. In normal operation, both compartments contribute to total storage. When one is isolated for maintenance, available storage reduces to the volume of the remaining compartment — typically 50 to 75 per cent of the design total. The sizing exercise must confirm that single-compartment storage is sufficient to supply the building for the expected maintenance duration.

The fire reserve is an additional fixed volume defined by BS EN 12845 according to the building’s hazard classification — it cannot serve domestic consumption under normal conditions. The domestic and fire volumes must be separated either by a physical partition or by positioning the domestic outlet above the fire reserve level. The total tank volume is the sum of the domestic storage volume plus the fire reserve, and both must be designed and documented independently.

Cold water storage tanks should be inspected at least annually and cleaned as required. Any evidence of sediment, stagnation, or microbial contamination warrants immediate inspection and cleaning, regardless of the scheduled interval. All inspection activity, temperature readings, and remedial actions must be recorded and retained for a minimum of five years.

CONTENTS

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Complete GRP Cold Water Tank Guide

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Published by Tricel Water in April 2026, this whitepaper is a specification and compliance reference for engineers, asset managers, facilities managers, and dutyholders involved in the design, procurement, installation, or maintenance of cold water storage systems in UK commercial and public sector buildings.

This guide is provided for general guidance and information purposes only. It does not constitute engineering advice and should not be relied upon as the sole basis for design decisions. © 2026 Tricel Water. All rights reserved.