Bathrooms accumulate smells and moisture that can lead to potentially hazardous mold and mildew. Bathrooms benefit from some type of exhaust venting system. What type of bathroom fan venting do you need, if any?
Topic | Code | Summary |
Windows | Section R303.3 | A window in the bathroom, when used in lieu of an exhaust fan, must be at least 3 square feet in area. |
Fans | Section R303.4 | If your local code includes this section, it may mean that an exhaust fan is required and that an open window is not a code-approved substitute. |
Porting air | Section M1507.2 | This section states that vented air needs to be sent to the exterior and not into an interior space such as an attic. |
Fan capacity | Section M1507.4 | The fan minimum is 50 cubic feet per minute (cfm) intermittent or 20 cfm continuous. |
What Is the Bathroom Fan Venting Code?
Bathroom code addresses the issue of moving odor- and moisture-laden air from the bathroom to the outside. Surprisingly, bathroom fans are not required by some building codes. All municipalities have different requirements, but some do not draw a hard line on requiring exhaust fans. In those areas, ventilation in bathrooms is required, but it can be from a window or fan, your choice.
Building code is a model code that each community can adopt and adapt according to its own needs. So, you will need to check with your city or county planning and permitting department to find out code requirements regarding bathroom fans. Also, the code numbering in your area may differ from those listed here.
Bathroom Exhaust Fan Venting Code Summary
Section R303 of the International Residential Code discusses light and ventilation regulations in general. Section R303 works in conjunction with all of International Residential Code Section M1507, which covers Mechanical Ventilation.
Section R303.3: Bathrooms Must Have Windows
When this section is adopted by a community, it essentially says that, for venting purposes, bathrooms must have windows that open. The code reads that the window must have "aggregate glazing area...of not less than 3 square feet (0.3 m2), one-half of which must be openable."
Summarized, if you install a window in the bathroom, it must be at least 3 square feet in area. This window only needs to be able to open halfway. This means that the total open window space would be 1 1/2 square feet.
Windows that open can provide highly effective ventilation in bathrooms that have no shower or tub. With no bathing facilities, far less moist air is produced. While powder rooms can benefit from exhaust fans, they can usually operate just as well with a window that opens.
Section R303.4: Bathrooms Require Exhaust Venting Fans
In some communities, this section may be in lieu of Section R303.3 or in addition to it. If Section R303.4 is included but the previous section has been struck-through or not included, this may mean that your bathroom must have a bathroom fan and that a window cannot be used as a substitute venting method. Be sure to clarify this with your local permitting department.
Section M1507.2: Exhausted Air Terminal Point
This section notes that air exhausted from the bathroom must be sent outdoors, not indoors to the same residence or indoors to any other dwelling unit. It cannot move air to a crawlspace or attic.
While this may seem obvious, homeowners may, out of convenience, direct the vent into either of these locations. While this is not smart, it is understandable: attics and crawlspaces are often the shortest possible route for the vent. Even well-meaning homeowners may explore their attics, only to find ducting that has become disconnected on its own. Exhaust fans may run for years like this before the break is noticed.
Routing vertically out of the roof or routing through the upper part of the wall (to the exterior) are time-consuming, invasive projects. The end of the vent run should also have a grille or screen to prevent vermin from entering your home.
Section M1507.4: Exhaust Capacity
This section discusses the minimum exhaust capacity of the exhaust fan: 50 cubic feet per minute (cfm) intermittent or 20 cfm continuous.
Exhaust Fan Sound (Sones) Ratings
While not required by the building code, purchasing a quieter low-sone exhaust fan can add to the comfort level of your bathroom time by keeping the noise level down.
Sones | Sounds Like | With Exhaust Fans |
0.3 sones or less | Barely perceptible up close; silent from a distance | The quietest possible sones level for exhaust fans |
0.3 to 0.9 sones | A rushing air sound in a small environment like a bathroom; not annoying to most people | A majority of exhaust fans fall in this range |
1.0 sones | Sounds like a refrigerator's compressor | Exhaust fans become less expensive as they reach 1 sones and more |
3.0 sones | Sounds like a clothes dryer | The maximum noise level found in exhaust fans |
Why Your Bathroom Should Have an Exhaust Vent Fan
Bathroom venting fans are about more than just eliminating noxious odors. Bad odors are annoying but are hardly life-threatening, and they do not impact the integrity of the building structure at all.
Bath exhaust fans are about keeping your house in top shape by moving water out of your bathroom. Water is everywhere in a bathroom: splashing on the floor, beading up on the walls, dripping down the mirror. And there is one other invisible place where you will find water in the bathroom: in the air.
Because windows provide light as well as ventilation, if you choose the fan-only route you need to install artificial lighting. This should already be a given, as electrical code requires that habitable rooms be supplied with a switch-controlled light.
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Does an exhaust fan need GFCI protection?
When the fan is located directly above a shower or bathtub, it needs to be connected to a GFCI-protected circuit. This can either be in the form of a GFCI outlet or upstream, in-line GFCI protection.
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Should you use an exhaust fan or an open window?
Though an open window is allowed by code, it is passive air ventilation. An exhaust fan is active air ventilation. Venting fans pull moisture-laden air out of that small space, slowing or altogether preventing it from condensing on walls, on the ceiling, or worst of all, inside the ceiling itself.
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What is the danger of uncontrolled bathroom moisture?
When moisture spreads in a bathroom, mold, mildew, and even insects begin to proliferate. Costs spiral as you put the home under a pest control contract and undergo extensive remodeling work to shore up weakened studs. It can be an ugly sight to crawl above a poorly ventilated bathroom's ceiling. You might find mounds of black-moldy blown-in insulation, as well as joists and rafters weakened from years of moisture abuse.