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Greywater Reuse Calculator

Calculate potential water savings from reusing greywater for irrigation and toilet flushing. Enter values for instant results with step-by-step formulas.

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Formula

Annual Savings = min(Daily Greywater x 0.9, Daily Demand) x 365 x Cost/Gallon x 2

The calculator estimates daily greywater production from showers, laundry, and sinks, then compares it against irrigation and toilet flushing demand. A 90% recovery rate accounts for treatment losses. Savings are doubled to include both water and sewer cost reductions. The payback period divides system cost by annual savings.

Worked Examples

Example 1: Family of 4 with Garden Irrigation

Problem: A household of 4 people takes 4 showers daily (8 min each), does 5 loads of laundry per week, has 1,000 sq ft of garden, reuses for toilets, and pays $0.005/gallon. System cost is $2,500.

Solution: Shower greywater: 4 x 8 x 2.0 = 64 gal/day\nLaundry greywater: (5 x 30) / 7 = 21.4 gal/day\nSink greywater: 4 x 5 = 20 gal/day\nTotal daily greywater: 105.4 gal\nIrrigation demand: (1000 x 0.623) / 30 = 20.8 gal/day\nToilet demand: 4 x 5 x 1.6 = 32 gal/day\nUsable (90% recovery, capped at demand): 52.8 gal/day\nAnnual saved: 19,272 gal | Annual savings: $192.72\nPayback: 13.0 years

Result: 105.4 gal/day generated | 52.8 gal/day reused | 19,272 gal/year saved | $193/year savings

Example 2: Water-Conscious Couple in Arid Climate

Problem: A couple takes 2 showers daily (10 min each), 3 laundry loads/week, 2,000 sq ft garden, toilet reuse enabled, $0.012/gallon water cost, $3,500 system.

Solution: Shower greywater: 2 x 10 x 2.0 = 40 gal/day\nLaundry greywater: (3 x 30) / 7 = 12.9 gal/day\nSink greywater: 2 x 5 = 10 gal/day\nTotal daily greywater: 62.9 gal\nIrrigation demand: (2000 x 0.623) / 30 = 41.5 gal/day\nToilet demand: 2 x 5 x 1.6 = 16 gal/day\nUsable: min(56.6, 57.5) = 56.6 gal/day\nAnnual saved: 20,659 gal | Annual savings: $495.82\nPayback: 7.1 years

Result: 62.9 gal/day generated | 56.6 gal/day reused | 20,659 gal/year saved | $496/year savings

Frequently Asked Questions

What is greywater and how is it different from blackwater?

Greywater is gently used water from showers, bathtubs, bathroom sinks, washing machines, and sometimes kitchen sinks. It makes up 50 to 80 percent of total household wastewater. Blackwater, in contrast, comes from toilets and contains human waste, making it significantly more hazardous and requiring full sewage treatment before any reuse. Greywater may contain traces of soap, shampoo, dirt, food particles, and cleaning products, but it is generally safe for subsurface irrigation and toilet flushing with minimal treatment. The key distinction is that greywater does not contain significant pathogens from human fecal matter, though it should still be used within 24 hours to prevent bacterial growth. Kitchen sink water is sometimes classified as dark greywater because it contains food waste and grease.

Is it legal to reuse greywater in residential settings?

Greywater reuse regulations vary significantly by state, county, and municipality in the United States. States like California, Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas have progressive greywater regulations that allow residential reuse with minimal permitting for simple systems. California allows residents to divert washing machine water to subsurface irrigation without a permit. Other states like Arizona allow up to 400 gallons per day of greywater reuse without a permit for single-family homes. However, some states and municipalities still prohibit greywater reuse or require expensive permits and inspections. Always check your local building codes and health department regulations before installing a greywater system. Homeowners associations may also have restrictions that affect installation.

What are the main types of greywater reuse systems?

Greywater systems range from simple laundry-to-landscape setups costing $100 to $500 to fully automated treatment systems costing $5,000 to $15,000 or more. The simplest approach is a laundry drum system that collects washing machine discharge and gravity-feeds it to garden beds through mulch basins. Branched drain systems use gravity to distribute greywater through a network of pipes to multiple landscape zones without pumps. Pumped systems add a collection tank and pump for more flexibility in distributing water uphill or over longer distances. The most sophisticated systems include filtration, UV disinfection, and sometimes chlorination to produce water suitable for toilet flushing and surface irrigation. The right system depends on your budget, space, local regulations, and intended reuse applications.

How much water can a household save by reusing greywater?

A typical household of four generates 100 to 150 gallons of greywater per day from showers, sinks, and laundry, which translates to 36,000 to 55,000 gallons per year. This can offset 30 to 50 percent of outdoor irrigation water needs and, if used for toilet flushing, an additional 20 to 30 percent of indoor water consumption. In arid regions where water costs are higher and irrigation demands are greater, savings are most significant. A family in Phoenix or Los Angeles might save $300 to $600 per year on water and sewer bills combined. Over a 20-year period, greywater reuse can conserve 700,000 to over 1 million gallons of potable water per household. The environmental benefit extends beyond individual savings because reducing demand on municipal water systems decreases energy used for water treatment and distribution.

What precautions should I take when using greywater for irrigation?

Always apply greywater below the soil surface or under a thick layer of mulch to prevent direct human contact and reduce pathogen exposure. Never spray greywater through sprinklers or allow it to pool on the surface. Use biodegradable, plant-friendly soaps and detergents because conventional products may contain salts, boron, and chlorine that harm plants and soil health. Avoid using greywater on edible plants where the water would contact the portions you eat, such as root vegetables and leafy greens, although subsurface irrigation of fruit trees is generally considered safe. Rotate application areas to prevent salt buildup in any single zone. Do not store greywater for more than 24 hours because bacteria multiply rapidly in nutrient-rich standing water. Install a three-way diverter valve so you can easily switch between greywater reuse and standard sewer discharge.

Can greywater be used for toilet flushing and is it safe?

Yes, greywater can be safely used for toilet flushing, but it requires additional treatment beyond what simple irrigation systems provide. A filtration and disinfection system removes particles and kills bacteria before the water enters toilet cisterns. The treatment typically includes a mesh filter for large particles, a biological or membrane filter for fine filtration, and UV disinfection or chlorination to eliminate remaining pathogens. This setup costs $2,000 to $5,000 for residential installation but can reduce potable water consumption by 25 to 30 percent since toilet flushing represents a large portion of indoor water use. Most building codes that allow greywater reuse for toilet flushing require the treated water to meet specific quality standards and the system to have fail-safe mechanisms that switch to municipal water if the treatment system malfunctions.

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