Rainwater harvesting is legal in Kirkland for outdoor irrigation under WA Ecology Policy 1017; residential potable use requires a plumbing permit and treatment under state rules.
Washington was one of the first states to formally clarify that rooftop rainwater harvesting does not require a water right under the Department of Ecology Interpretive Policy 1017 issued in 2009. Kirkland residents can collect rainwater from rooftops into barrels, cisterns, and bioswales for outdoor irrigation, vehicle washing, and non-potable indoor use without a state water-right permit. The city encourages rainwater harvesting through its stormwater programs because it reduces runoff entering Lake Washington and local creeks. Large cisterns over 10,000 gallons or potable indoor use may require plumbing permits and treatment consistent with Department of Health rules. Rain barrel discounts and rebates have periodically been available through the King County WaterWorks grant program and RainWise Seattle-King County initiative. Rainwater reuse for toilet flushing inside a home requires proper backflow prevention, labeling of non-potable plumbing, and plumbing permit review under the WA State Building Code.
Illegal non-roof rainwater harvesting or unpermitted large-scale systems can be referred to WA Department of Ecology; plumbing code violations handled through Kirkland Building Division.
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Side-by-side rule comparisons with other cities in King County.
See how other cities in King County handle rainwater harvesting.
See how Kirkland's rainwater harvesting rules stack up against other locations.
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