Why FL Homes Need a Sump Backup: Storms, Outages & the Water Table
Florida is flat, wet, and storm-prone, which is the worst combination for a sump pump that only runs on grid power. When a tropical system or summer thunderstorm dumps several inches of rain, the water table rises fast — and that same storm is the most likely thing to knock out your electricity. A primary pump with no backup is offline at the exact moment the pit is filling fastest.
Where Sumps Show Up in FL
True basements are rare in Florida, but sump systems are common in coastal and low-lying homes, elevated/stilt homes with enclosed ground levels, homes with below-grade crawl spaces, elevator pits, and lots with a high seasonal water table. Anywhere groundwater or stormwater collects faster than it can drain by gravity, a sump pump moves it out.
The Two Failure Modes a Backup Covers
(1) Power loss — the grid goes down in the storm and the primary stops. (2) Primary pump failure — a stuck float, burned-out motor, or jammed impeller. A good backup system covers both by sensing high water and running independently.
Battery vs. Water-Powered Backups in Florida
There are two broad approaches, and the right one depends on your water supply and how long an outage you want to ride out.
Battery Backup (AGM or Lithium)
A second DC pump powered by a sealed battery in the pit area, with a charger/controller that keeps it topped up. AGM (sealed lead-acid) is the common, lower-cost choice; lithium and "smart" units run longer, last more cycles, and often add WiFi alerts. Runtime depends on battery capacity and how often the pump cycles — a single AGM battery may give several hours to a day of intermittent pumping, while dual-battery or lithium setups extend that.
Water-Powered Backup
Uses your home's municipal water pressure to drive an ejector that pulls water out of the pit — no battery to maintain or replace, and unlimited runtime as long as city pressure holds. The trade-offs: it uses potable water to pump (so it raises your water bill while running), it does not work on a private well that loses pressure in an outage, and it creates a cross-connection that Florida code requires to be protected by backflow prevention. Water-powered units are best for homes on reliable municipal pressure.
FL Code: Discharge, Check Valves & Backflow
The pump and battery are the easy part; the connections are where code matters.
Discharge Point
Sump discharge must go to an approved location — daylight to grade away from the foundation, a storm system, or another point allowed by your local code. It generally may not discharge into the sanitary sewer or a septic system. Route it so it cannot pond back against the house or onto a neighbor.
Check Valve
A check valve on the discharge keeps the column of water in the pipe from draining back into the pit each time the pump shuts off, which otherwise causes short-cycling and wear. Backup systems usually need their own check valve so the primary and backup do not fight each other.
Backflow on Water-Powered Units
Because a water-powered backup connects the potable supply to a drainage point, the Florida Building Code (Plumbing) cross-connection rules require approved backflow protection (commonly an RPZ-type assembly) on that connection. This is a permitted item in most jurisdictions and should be installed and tested by a licensed plumber. Confirm the adopted FBC edition and any local amendments with your AHJ.
Sizing the Backup: Capacity, Runtime & Battery Choice
A backup that cannot keep up with inflow is just a delay, not protection.
Match the Inflow
The backup pump should move enough gallons per hour to keep the pit below the alarm level during a storm. It does not have to match the primary exactly, but it should handle realistic storm inflow for your lot.
Runtime Planning
Florida outages from a major storm can last hours to days. A single AGM battery is a baseline; dual-battery and lithium systems extend runtime and tolerate more discharge cycles. If you are protecting a finished space or critical equipment, plan for a longer outage than you think you will get.
Battery Maintenance
AGM batteries degrade over a few years, especially in Florida heat, and should be load-tested periodically and replaced on schedule. Lithium and smart units last longer and many self-report battery health. A backup with a dead battery is the most common reason these systems fail their one job.
Hurricane & Outage Readiness in Florida
A sump backup is part of a larger storm plan.
Test Before Hurricane Season
Before June, pour water into the pit to confirm both the primary and the backup start, run, and shut off cleanly, and verify the discharge actually flows to daylight. Check the battery charge and the controller alarm.
Coordinate with a Generator
Many FL homeowners pair a sump system with a portable or standby generator. A generator can power the primary pump indefinitely, while the battery backup covers the gap before the generator is running and any time you are away. The two are complementary, not redundant.
Smart Alerts
WiFi-enabled backups text or app-alert you on high water, power loss, or low battery — valuable for snowbirds and vacation-rental owners who are not at the property when a storm hits.
Costs & What Drives Them in Florida
These are planning estimates for materials plus professional labor in the FL market. Battery replacements over the life of the system are an ongoing cost not included in the install figure.
Equipment
A standard AGM battery backup kit is the entry point; dual-battery, lithium, and smart/WiFi units cost more for longer runtime and monitoring. Water-powered units add the backflow assembly. A full primary-plus-backup combo costs more than adding a backup to a working primary.
Labor
Dropping a backup into an existing, ready pit with a good discharge line is the floor of the range. New discharge piping, a new check valve, a new basin, or a backflow assembly all add labor.
Add-Ons That Move the Number
New discharge line and check valve, a new or enlarged basin, an outlet/charger circuit (electrician), backflow protection for water-powered units, and older-home contingencies. Use the calculator tab to combine these.
DIY vs. Licensed: When to Call a Pro in Florida
Swapping a battery in an existing backup is routine homeowner maintenance. A full backup install touches drainage, electrical, and (for water-powered units) the potable supply.
Call a Licensed Pro When
You are adding a new discharge run, installing a backflow assembly for a water-powered unit, adding a circuit or outlet, or you want the install documented for insurance. New discharge plumbing and any potable-supply cross-connection are regulated work in FL — a licensed plumber (CFC/CPC) handles the water side and a licensed electrician (EC) handles new circuits.
Insurance Angle
Florida homeowner policies often exclude flood and may limit water-backup coverage unless you carry a specific endorsement. A documented, code-compliant backup install — with photos and any permit — supports a claim and may help with coverage. Confirm sump/water-backup and flood coverage with your carrier before storm season.
Troubleshooting a Sump Backup System
Backup Never Starts
(1) Dead or disconnected battery; (2) tripped/failed charger; (3) stuck backup float; (4) controller in fault. Test the battery first — it is the most common cause.
Runs Constantly
(1) Failed check valve letting discharged water drain back into the pit; (2) very high water table or storm inflow; (3) float set too low. A bad check valve causes rapid short-cycling.
Short Runtime on Battery
(1) Aged AGM battery that no longer holds charge (replace on schedule in FL heat); (2) undersized battery for the inflow; (3) charger not maintaining the battery between events.
Water-Powered Unit Weak or Noisy
(1) Low municipal pressure; (2) clogged inlet screen; (3) backflow assembly fouled or due for test. Water-powered output drops with supply pressure.
Discharge Freezes or Blocks
Rare in most of FL, but a discharge line that ponds, sags, or is buried too shallow can block. Keep it sloped to daylight and clear of debris.
FL Permit Requirements
Usually No Permit in FL
- Replacing the backup battery in an existing system (maintenance)
- Swapping a like-for-like battery backup unit into an existing, code-compliant pit and discharge
- Cleaning the pit, float, or check valve on an existing system
Permit Required in FL
- New or relocated sump discharge piping (plumbing permit)
- Installing a water-powered backup — potable cross-connection requires backflow protection (plumbing permit)
- New dedicated circuit or outlet for the charger/controller (electrical permit)
- New or enlarged sump basin / pit as part of a permitted project
FL County Permit Fee Reference
For work that requires a plumbing or electrical permit (many simple jobs do not). Fees and timelines are approximate — verify with your local building department / AHJ before starting work.
| County | Permit Fee | Est. Processing |
|---|---|---|
Who Can Pull a Permit in FL?
Per FL Statute 489.105, new sump discharge piping and any potable-supply cross-connection (water-powered backups) are performed under a licensed plumbing contractor (CFC/CPC), and new circuits under a licensed electrical contractor (EC). Replacing a backup battery or a like-for-like unit on an existing, compliant system generally needs no permit. The homeowner exception applies only to owner-occupied single-family dwellings where the owner personally performs the work.
Verify any contractor's license at myfloridalicense.com and ask for proof of insurance before work begins.