Material Comparisons

Plastic Pipes and Drinking Water: What To Know Before Choosing Pipework

Last reviewed: Reviewed by Ridgeline technical team

Quick answer

Quick answer

Approved plastic pipe systems are widely used for drinking-water plumbing. The question for many projects is not simply whether plastic can be compliant. It is whether the client wants plastic as the internal water-contact surface for the lifetime of the building.

Ridgeline offers a different route: corrugated 316L stainless steel tube with no plastic surface in contact with drinking water.

Compliance Comes First

Any pipe, fitting or material used in a drinking-water system must be suitable for its intended use and comply with the relevant water fittings requirements.

The Drinking Water Inspectorate explains that approval routes for products used with drinking water can include testing for effects on odour, flavour, appearance, growth of aquatic microorganisms, extraction of substances, extraction of metals and cytotoxicity.

That means the right question is:

Is this specific pipe system approved and correctly installed?

Not:

Is this broad material family always good or always bad?

What Plastic Pipe Does Well

Plastic pipe systems became popular because they are:

  • lightweight
  • flexible
  • quick to install
  • easy to handle
  • often lower material cost
  • familiar in modern domestic work

PEX, PB, push-fit plastic and multilayer composite systems all have legitimate places in the market.

Why Some Buyers Want To Avoid Plastic In The Water Path

The concern is usually not about a single approved system passing a test. It is about material philosophy.

Some homeowners, specifiers and developers ask:

  • Do we want plastic touching drinking water for decades?
  • What happens as plastic pipe ages?
  • How do we think about taste, odour and material migration?
  • What about future perception of plastic drinking-water contact?
  • Is there a non-plastic alternative that still installs quickly?

Those are reasonable questions.

Microplastics: What We Can And Cannot Say

WHO has reviewed microplastics in drinking-water and identified knowledge gaps. The available evidence is still developing, and the responsible position is to avoid alarmist claims.

Do not say:

"Plastic pipe is unsafe."

Do say:

"Research into microplastics in drinking-water is ongoing, and some clients prefer to remove plastic pipe material from the water path where a practical alternative exists."

Ridgeline's claim is structural and clear:

The drinking water is in contact with 316L stainless steel, not plastic.

PEX Vs Ridgeline

Question PEX / plastic pipe Ridgeline
Is it commonly used? Yes Newer premium category
Can it be approved for drinking water? Yes, if the system is approved Yes, supported by Ridgeline approvals/documentation
Water-contact surface Plastic 316L stainless steel
Flexibility Yes Yes
Thermal movement High Lower metal-family movement, corrugation absorbs movement
Fitting strategy System-dependent Long continuous runs, fewer direction-change fittings
Material perception Plastic Stainless steel

The Better Framing

This page should not attack plastic. It should position Ridgeline as the premium choice for projects where the buyer wants:

  • no plastic in contact with drinking water
  • a corrosion-resistant metal water path
  • fewer hidden fittings
  • whole-home stainless steel plumbing
  • a stronger story for future-focused homes

FAQs

Move from research to product proof.

Hold a length of corrugated 316L stainless steel tube. Read the data sheets. Or talk to the team about a specific project.

316L marine-grade stainless WRAS approved KIWA certified 15 bar at 150 °C UK designed