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πŸ”§ Building Safety/Fire Sprinkler Requirements

Fire Sprinkler Requirements: Goodyear vs Phoenix

How do fire sprinkler requirements rules compare between Goodyear, AZ and Phoenix, AZ?

Goodyear has fewer restrictions than Phoenix.

Goodyear, AZ

Maricopa County

Few Restrictions

Maricopa County adopted the 2018 IRC but, like every Arizona jurisdiction, deleted the IRC R313 residential sprinkler mandate consistent with ARS section 9-807. New homes in unincorporated Maricopa County need not have NFPA 13D sprinklers, though commercial and multifamily NFPA 13 systems remain required.

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Phoenix, AZ

Maricopa County

Heavy Restrictions

Phoenix City Code Chapter 10 adopts the 2018 IRC including Section R313, requiring automatic fire sprinklers in all new one- and two-family dwellings and townhouses. Arizona has no statewide preemption against the residential sprinkler mandate.

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Key Facts Comparison

FactGoodyearPhoenix
Single-family sprinklersNot required-
Townhome sprinklersNFPA 13R required-
State preemptionARS 9-807 / 11-861-
Code adopted2018 IBC, IRC, IFC-
Code citation-Phoenix Ch. 10, IRC R313
Standard-NFPA 13D residential
Scope-New one- and two-family homes
Existing homes-Not required retroactively
Reviewing agency-Phoenix Fire and PDD

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Goodyear FAQ

Can I voluntarily install a sprinkler in my new house?

Yes. Voluntary NFPA 13D systems are permitted, often qualifying for insurance discounts. Maricopa County will plan-check and inspect the system, though no mandate forces installation in detached single-family dwellings.

When do sprinklers become required in residential projects?

Once a project crosses into townhomes of three or more attached units, multifamily R-2 occupancies, or any commercial use, IBC chapter 9 and IRC R313.2 sprinkler requirements apply, with NFPA 13 or 13R systems mandatory.

Phoenix FAQ

Do I need sprinklers in my existing Phoenix home?

No. Phoenix's IRC R313 sprinkler mandate applies only to new construction of one- and two-family dwellings and townhouses. Existing homes are not retroactively required to install sprinklers absent major reconstruction triggering compliance.

What standard governs Phoenix residential sprinklers?

NFPA 13D, the residential standard. It is designed for life safety, controlling a fire long enough for occupants to escape, rather than full property protection. Phoenix Fire Department reviews and inspects all installations.

Does a major remodel trigger sprinklers?

Sometimes. Substantial reconstruction or additions exceeding Chapter 10 value or floor-area thresholds can trigger full compliance. Phoenix Planning and Development advises owners during permit pre-application; consult before major renovations.

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