Why Upsize a Water Meter at All
A water meter limits how much flow your service can deliver. Most single-family homes start with a 5/8-inch (sometimes called 5/8 x 3/4) meter. When demand grows - more bathrooms, an ADU, irrigation, a pool, or just too many fixtures running together - that small meter can become the bottleneck, showing up as weak flow when several taps are open.
Why It Matters
Upsizing the meter (and often the service line) raises the available flow. It is different from fixing a meter leak or replacing a shutoff - this is about capacity, not a broken part.
Is It the Meter, the Line, or the Pressure?
Low flow has more than one cause. Pressure (psi) is how hard the water pushes; flow (gpm) is how much volume you can draw at once. An undersized 5/8-inch meter or a small/old service line limits flow even when static pressure looks fine.
Diagnose First
A plumber checks static and flowing pressure, fixture count and simultaneous demand, and the size and condition of the service line before recommending a meter upsize. Sometimes the real fix is the service line, a clogged PRV, or corrosion - not a bigger meter. Upsizing when the line is the true limit wastes money.
The Utility Owns the Meter (FL Specifics)
In Florida the water meter belongs to the utility (city, county, or private provider). You do not just buy a bigger meter and install it - you apply to the utility to upsize the service, they set or swap the meter, and they charge the associated fees.
Capacity / Impact Fees
A larger meter usually carries a higher capacity (impact) fee and a higher monthly base charge, because it reserves more system capacity for you. These fees vary a great deal between utilities and can be the largest line item - sometimes more than the plumbing work. Confirm them with your utility before committing.
Meter Sizes & What They Carry
Common residential sizes step up from 5/8 in to 3/4 in, 1 in, and then 1-1/2 in or 2 in for large homes or combined domestic-plus-irrigation demand. Each step up raises the flow the meter can pass.
Right-Sizing
Bigger is not automatically better: an oversized meter costs more up front and monthly, and can under-register low flows. The goal is to match the meter to your realistic peak simultaneous demand - calculated from fixture units and use - which your plumber and the utility help determine.
The Service Line, PRV & Backflow
A bigger meter often calls for a bigger or newer service line from the meter to the house, or the new flow just bottlenecks at the old pipe. In Florida that line may cross a yard or driveway, adding trenching or boring and surface restoration.
Pressure Control
More flow can mean higher pressure reaching the house; a pressure-reducing valve (PRV) keeps it in a safe range and protects fixtures.
Cross-Connection
Added irrigation or certain uses trigger backflow prevention requirements (e.g., an RPZ or approved assembly) to protect the potable supply - often required and sometimes inspected/tested annually.
The Upgrade Process & Timing
Coordinate With the Utility First
Start with the utility application - size, fees, and their meter swap drive the schedule. The plumber's customer-side work is planned around it.
Typical Sequence
- Diagnose demand, pressure, and the existing line. 2. Apply to the utility for the larger meter; confirm capacity/impact fees. 3. Upsize the service line if needed (trench or bore, new pipe, restore the surface). 4. Add or reset the PRV and any required backflow assembly. 5. Utility sets the new meter; plumber ties in and tests pressure/flow.
FL Gotchas
Skipping the demand calc, forgetting the capacity fee, leaving an undersized service line in place, and missing a required backflow device.
ADUs, Irrigation, Pools & Reclaimed Water
The common Florida triggers for a meter upsize are an accessory dwelling unit, a new irrigation system, or a pool that adds fill and equipment demand.
Separate vs Combined
Some homeowners add a separate irrigation meter (sometimes billed without sewer charges, where available) instead of upsizing the domestic meter; in reclaimed-water areas, irrigation may run off reclaimed service entirely. Which path is cheaper depends on your utility's fees and rules.
Plan Ahead
Decide domestic-only vs combined vs separate irrigation before you apply, because it changes the meter size, the fees, and the backflow requirements.
Costs & What Drives Them in Florida
Two separate buckets drive the price: the utility's meter/capacity fees and the plumber's customer-side work. These are planning estimates for the customer-side labor in the FL market; the utility capacity/impact fee is separate and varies widely - confirm it with your provider.
Reason & Demand
A simple low-flow fix on an adequate service line is the low end; adding an ADU or large combined demand is the high end.
Service Line
Meter-only coordination is cheapest; upsizing the service line - especially a long run or a driveway crossing - adds the most.
Size & Extras
The target meter size (and its utility fee), plus a PRV, a backflow assembly, and shutoff/box work each add. Use the calculator to combine reason, service situation, meter size, and add-ons.
FL Permit Requirements
Usually Minor in FL
- Reading or checking your existing meter and pressure
- Adding a PRV downstream on private property (verify locally)
- Routine private-side service-line repair (no upsize)
Permit / Licensed Work Likely in FL
- Upsizing the meter - applied for and set by the utility
- Upsizing the service line from the meter to the house
- Adding a required backflow / RPZ assembly
- Adding an ADU, irrigation, or pool service that raises demand
FL County Permit Fee Reference
The meter itself is upsized by the utility, which charges a meter/capacity (impact) fee that varies widely and is often the largest cost. The customer-side plumbing - upsizing the service line, adding a PRV or backflow assembly, and the connections - is regulated work that is typically permitted. The fees below are the local building-department permit fees for the plumbing work and do NOT include the utility's capacity/impact fee. All figures are approximate — verify with your water utility and local building department / AHJ before starting work.
| County | Permit Fee | Est. Processing |
|---|---|---|
Who Can Pull a Permit in FL?
Upsizing the service line, adding a pressure-reducing valve, and installing a required backflow assembly are regulated plumbing work under the FL Building Code (Plumbing), while the meter is owned and set by your water utility. Service-line sizing, the PRV, cross-connection control / backflow prevention, and the connection follow the adopted code, any local amendments, and the utility's rules, and the work is generally permitted. The utility application and its capacity/impact fee are handled directly with the provider. Per FL Statute 489.105, regulated plumbing work is performed by the appropriate licensed contractor.
Verify any contractor's license at myfloridalicense.com and confirm requirements with your local building department before work begins.