Plumbing – connect an indoor water meter to water heater with PEX

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So I have a water meter in our basement, connected to the city line via copper (it's also our electrical ground). From the meter is decades-old galvanized leading to a leaky shutoff (which I plan to replace). This galvanized goes forth through the house, with more recent connections to rooms made with PEX.

I moved the kitchen water line yesterday and we had a whole-house pressure drop. I believe corrosion has dislodged and become stuck in the line, so I plan to replace the remaining cold water galvanized with PEX.

My question with this: is there a reason to avoid PEX coming from the indoor meter? I'm thinking not, because it's cold water (I know I need 18" copper going into the water heater). I'd rather redo the line in PEX and go into a manifold if I can. But, I can do copper if there's a compelling reason to do so. I plan to check with the city on the meter itself, but thought I'd ask you-all first. 🙂

Best Answer

IMO I would use something more robust like copper, galvanized, or brass from the meter to the shut off if exposed at all. Then use PEX after the shutoff.

Just know PEX is not designed to be left exposed to UV light like the sun or physical abuse of any kind. If receives much of either, I would use another material or get it covered up.

On that note, we see PEX all the time on both sides of a shutoff and you probably (not entirely sure of your circumstances) can use PEX from your meter to your shutoff without any problems.