Fire Sprinkler Services
NFPA 25 Five-Year Internal
Sprinkler Inspection Service
Licensed internal pipe obstruction investigation for commercial fire sprinkler systems across Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, and Monroe Counties. Required every five years by NFPA 25.
- 01What Is the Five-Year Internal Sprinkler Inspection?
- 02What Obstructions Are We Looking For?
- 03What Triggers an Earlier Investigation?
- 04What Does Our Five-Year Internal Inspection Cover?
- 05How Does the Process Work?
- 06Why This Is Critical in South Florida
- 07Governing Codes and Standards
- 08Which South Florida Areas Do We Serve?
- 09Frequently Asked Questions
The NFPA 25 five-year internal sprinkler inspection is a required internal examination of fire sprinkler system piping conducted every five years. It involves opening the system at multiple locations to inspect the interior of pipes for obstructions including organic growth, sediment, scale, and debris. If obstructions are found, corrective flushing or cleaning is required before the system is returned to service. It is the most commonly skipped NFPA 25 requirement in South Florida commercial buildings.
Overview
NFPA 25 Five-Year Internal Fire Sprinkler Inspection for South Florida Commercial Buildings
The five-year internal obstruction investigation is the fire sprinkler inspection requirement that most South Florida commercial buildings have either never had performed or cannot document. It targets something that no external visual inspection, no annual flow test, and no quarterly check can reveal: what is growing and accumulating inside your sprinkler pipes.
We're a licensed fire sprinkler company that has performed five-year internal investigations across Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, and Monroe Counties since 1998. South Florida's humid coastal climate makes this investigation especially important here. Internal corrosion, biological growth, and sediment buildup in older galvanized steel systems occur faster in this region than anywhere else in the country.
A sprinkler system that passes every annual inspection can still have internal obstructions significant enough to prevent adequate water delivery during a fire. The five-year investigation is the only way to know what's actually inside your pipes, and in South Florida, the findings often surprise building owners who assumed their system was in good shape.
The five-year internal investigation is the NFPA 25 requirement most commonly missing from ITM records in South Florida commercial buildings.
A system that passes every annual inspection can still have internal blockages that prevent adequate water delivery. External tests cannot detect what is inside the pipe.
Last updated: May 2026
The Requirement
What Is the Five-Year Internal Fire Sprinkler Inspection and Why Is It Required?
The NFPA 25 five-year internal obstruction investigation is an internal pipe inspection required every five years for all commercial fire sprinkler systems. Unlike the annual inspection, which examines the exterior of system components and performs functional tests, the five-year investigation goes inside the piping itself. It requires opening the system at specific locations to physically inspect the interior of pipes for conditions that could reduce or prevent water flow during a fire event.
The reason this inspection exists is straightforward: a fire sprinkler system that looks perfectly functional from the outside can have pipes that are significantly obstructed internally. Organic growth, iron deposits, sediment, and foreign debris build up silently inside the piping over years. The system continues to show normal pressure readings, pass flow tests, and operate normally during routine testing, all while carrying a blockage that would reduce water delivery where it matters most.
Florida AHJ inspectors in both Broward and Miami-Dade Counties have increased their scrutiny of five-year investigation records in recent years. When a facility cannot produce documentation showing the investigation was performed, that is a citation, regardless of how current the annual inspection records are. The two requirements are independent. One does not satisfy the other.
All commercial fire sprinkler systems subject to NFPA 25 require the five-year internal investigation. This includes wet pipe systems, dry pipe systems, pre-action systems, and deluge systems. Warehouses and industrial facilities with dry pipe systems are particularly at risk for internal obstruction because the air-filled piping in dry systems is more prone to internal corrosion than wet pipe systems kept full of water. Hotels and high-rise properties with older galvanized systems in Miami-Dade and Broward are among the most frequently cited facilities for missing five-year investigation records.
What We Look For
What Obstructions Are We Looking For Inside the Pipes?
NFPA 25 identifies specific obstruction types that the internal investigation is designed to detect. In South Florida, some of these occur more frequently and more aggressively than in cooler, less humid markets.
Microbiologically influenced corrosion and organic slime deposits are among the most aggressive obstruction types in South Florida systems. Warm temperatures and high humidity accelerate biological growth inside piping, particularly in wet pipe systems. Deposits can be significant enough to restrict or fully block individual sprinkler heads without any external indication.
High Risk in South FloridaIron oxide scale and corrosion deposits form over time on the interior walls of steel pipe. In older galvanized systems, particularly those within a few miles of the coast in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Monroe Counties, internal corrosion is significantly accelerated by salt-laden air and coastal humidity. Heavy scale buildup reduces effective pipe diameter and can deposit at sprinkler heads.
High Risk in South FloridaSand, dirt, and other sediment enter the system through the water supply, through the main drain test process, or during installation or repair work. Sediment settles at low points in the piping and at sprinkler head connections. Debris left in the pipe during installation or repair is a common finding in systems that have had recent work performed without proper flushing.
Moderate RiskHard water deposits accumulate on interior pipe surfaces over time. South Florida's municipal water supply in certain areas of Miami-Dade and Palm Beach Counties has elevated mineral content that contributes to scale formation inside sprinkler piping. These deposits build up gradually and are invisible from outside the pipe.
Moderate RiskPipe caps, rags, wire, and other foreign objects left inside the piping during installation, renovation, or repair work are found during five-year investigations more often than most building owners expect. These items can completely block flow at the point where they lodge, with no external indication that a problem exists.
Moderate RiskPitting corrosion in copper or steel pipe creates localized deposits at the corrosion site that can break loose and travel to sprinkler heads. These deposits are a leading cause of individual head blockage in systems that otherwise appear clean. They're especially common in dry pipe systems where air-water interfaces promote aggressive internal pitting.
High Risk in Dry SystemsEarlier Investigation Required
What Triggers an Internal Investigation Before the Five-Year Interval?
NFPA 25 requires an internal investigation to be performed immediately, regardless of when the last five-year investigation was conducted, when any of the following conditions are present. These are not optional early checks. They are mandatory triggers.
| Trigger Condition | Why It Matters | Action Required |
|---|---|---|
| Discharge of obstructed sprinkler head | A blocked head that activates during a fire delivers little or no water to the fire area | Immediate Investigation |
| Failure of the system to deliver water within required time during a flow test | Delayed water delivery indicates potential blockage in the supply piping | Immediate Investigation |
| Discolored water during a main drain test | Rust, brown, or discolored water indicates internal corrosion or sediment buildup | Immediate Investigation |
| Presence of confirmed microbiological activity | Biological growth in the system indicates conditions favorable for rapid obstruction development | Immediate Investigation |
| System connected to untreated raw water supply | Untreated water sources introduce sediment and biological material at a higher rate | Investigation Required |
| Pinhole leaks found in the system piping | Pitting corrosion that causes leaks also produces internal deposits that travel to heads | Immediate Investigation |
Seen discolored water during a drain test or had a pinhole leak repaired recently? These are immediate investigation triggers under NFPA 25. Call us and we will get it scheduled promptly.
Full Scope
What Does Our Five-Year Internal Inspection Service Include?
Our five-year internal investigation covers every element required by NFPA 25 Section 14.3, from planning the impairment through final documentation and system restoration.
Our Process
How Does the Five-Year Internal Inspection Process Work?
This inspection requires more coordination than a standard annual visit because it involves a planned system impairment. Here is exactly what the process looks like from first contact to final report.
Pre-Investigation Planning
Before any work begins, we review your system documentation, identify all required inspection locations per NFPA 25, and coordinate the planned impairment schedule with you. We notify the AHJ and monitoring station as required by NFPA 25 before the system is taken out of service. We schedule the impairment window during low-occupancy periods wherever practical to minimize risk during the investigation.
System Impairment and Opening
The system is placed on impairment per proper NFPA 25 impairment procedures. We open the piping at the required locations: flushing connections, the ends of branch lines, cross mains, and any locations identified during the planning phase as higher-risk based on system age, pipe material, or prior inspection history. Each opening location is documented before we proceed.
Internal Inspection
At each opening, we physically examine the interior of the pipe using inspection tools and lighting. We assess the type, extent, and distribution of any deposits found. All findings are photographed and documented in real time. The specific obstruction type matters because it informs both the corrective action required and the recommendation for future inspection frequency.
Corrective Flushing Where Required
When obstructions are found, NFPA 25 requires a full obstruction investigation to determine the source and extent of the problem, followed by corrective flushing of the affected piping. We perform or coordinate the flushing required to clear the system and verify clear flow after flushing is complete. The system is not returned to service until we have confirmed it is clear.
System Restoration and Documentation
After inspection and any corrective work, all openings are closed, the system is returned to full service, and we notify the AHJ and monitoring station that the impairment is complete. A full ITM report is issued the same day covering every inspection location, all findings, corrective actions taken, and recommendations for follow-up. We also coordinate this visit with your backflow preventer testing to combine compliance requirements under a single planned impairment where possible.
Why It Matters Here
Why the Five-Year Internal Inspection Is Especially Critical in South Florida
South Florida's environment creates internal pipe conditions that make the five-year investigation more important here than in virtually any other market in the country. These are the specific factors our technicians see consistently across Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, and Monroe Counties.
Accelerated MIC in Warm, Humid Conditions
Microbiologically influenced corrosion thrives in warm, humid environments. South Florida's average temperatures and humidity levels are close to optimal for the bacterial activity that drives MIC inside sprinkler piping. We find significant biological growth and MIC deposits in South Florida systems as young as eight to ten years old. In cooler markets, the same pipe material might not show comparable growth until 15 to 20 years of service. Buildings along the coastline in Miami Beach, Hollywood, and the Florida Keys are consistently the most affected.
Galvanized Steel Systems in Older Commercial Stock
A significant portion of South Florida's commercial building stock was constructed between the 1970s and 1990s with galvanized steel sprinkler piping. These systems are now 30 to 50 years old and are well beyond the point where internal condition can be assumed from external observation. We routinely find heavily obstructed piping in these buildings during five-year investigations, even in facilities with current annual inspection records. The annual inspection cannot reveal what the galvanized pipe looks like inside.
Post-Hurricane Renovation Work Without Proper Flushing
South Florida's exposure to tropical storms and hurricanes means that sprinkler system repairs and pipe replacements happen in bursts following storm events. Repairs performed under time pressure, often by contractors less familiar with fire sprinkler requirements, frequently leave debris and foreign material in the piping. We find construction debris in systems that were repaired after hurricane damage across Miami-Dade and Broward Counties regularly during five-year investigations.
Dry Pipe System Corrosion in Industrial and Warehouse Facilities
Broward and Palm Beach Counties have a significant concentration of warehouses and cold storage facilities with dry pipe sprinkler systems. Dry pipe systems are substantially more prone to internal corrosion than wet pipe systems because the air-water interface in the piping promotes aggressive pitting. The five-year investigation in these facilities consistently finds more advanced internal corrosion than in comparable wet pipe systems of the same age. We strongly recommend scheduling this investigation on the earlier end of the five-year window for any dry pipe system in this market.
Not sure when your last five-year investigation was performed or whether it's on record? We can review your ITM documentation and schedule the investigation before your next AHJ inspection.
Governing Standards
Which Codes Require the Five-Year Internal Sprinkler Inspection?
Every five-year internal investigation we perform is documented against these standards. These are the codes enforced by AHJ inspectors across all four South Florida counties.
Standard for the Inspection, Testing, and Maintenance of Water-Based Fire Protection Systems. Section 14.3 specifically governs the five-year internal obstruction investigation, trigger conditions for earlier investigation, required inspection locations, corrective action procedures, and documentation requirements.
Standard for the Installation of Sprinkler Systems. Informs five-year investigation findings related to pipe material, system design, and the potential performance impact of identified obstructions on water delivery requirements.
OSHA automatic sprinkler systems standard for workplaces. Employers bear direct liability when sprinkler system obstruction failures that could have been detected through required maintenance contribute to fire-related workplace injuries.
State-level adoption of NFPA 25 enforced by the Florida State Fire Marshal and local AHJ inspectors. Five-year investigation records are verified during commercial building inspections across Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, and Monroe Counties.
Service Areas
Which South Florida Areas Do We Serve for Five-Year Internal Inspections?
Firemax is a licensed fire sprinkler company serving commercial facilities across four South Florida counties. If you've been looking for a fire sprinkler inspection company near me that can perform the five-year internal investigation, our technicians cover the full region from our Miami base. Select your county below.
Our home base. Miami-Dade's coastal environment and large stock of older commercial buildings makes the five-year internal investigation especially important. We know local AHJ requirements and have performed internal investigations across the full county.
Full five-year internal investigation coverage across Broward, including the high concentration of older commercial and industrial facilities in Davie, Miramar, and the Dania Beach area where galvanized steel systems are common.
Serving Palm Beach County commercial facilities including the large warehouse and industrial sector in the western areas of the county where dry pipe systems require particularly close internal monitoring.
Five-year internal investigations for commercial facilities throughout the Florida Keys. Monroe County's saltwater environment is among the most aggressive for internal corrosion in the entire state, making this investigation critical for any sprinkler system in the Keys.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions About the Five-Year Internal Sprinkler Inspection
The NFPA 25 five-year internal inspection is a required internal examination of fire sprinkler system piping conducted every five years. It involves opening the system at specific locations to inspect the interior of pipes for obstructions including organic growth, sediment, scale, and foreign debris. If obstructions are found, corrective flushing or cleaning is required before the system is returned to service.
The annual inspection covers the external condition and operational testing of the fire sprinkler system. The five-year internal inspection goes inside the piping itself to check for blockages that external inspection cannot detect. A system that passes every annual inspection can still have significant internal obstructions that would prevent it from delivering adequate water during a fire.
South Florida's humid coastal environment accelerates internal corrosion and biological growth inside sprinkler system piping. Older galvanized steel systems in buildings within a few miles of the coast in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Monroe Counties frequently show significant internal deposits that would not be visible from outside the pipe. The five-year investigation is the only way to identify and address these conditions before they affect system performance.
When obstructions are found, NFPA 25 requires a full obstruction investigation to determine the source and extent of the blockage, followed by corrective flushing or cleaning of the affected piping. We document all findings in the ITM report, perform or coordinate the required corrective work, and confirm the system is clear before returning it to service.
A standard five-year internal inspection at a mid-size commercial facility typically runs four to six hours including system opening, inspection at all required locations, documentation, and system restoration. Facilities where obstructions are found will require additional time for flushing and cleaning. We provide a time and cost estimate before scheduling.
Yes. Opening the system piping for internal inspection requires a planned system impairment. We coordinate the impairment with the building owner, notify the AHJ and monitoring station as required, and restore the system to full service as quickly as possible. We schedule these visits during low-occupancy periods where practical to minimize risk during the impairment window.
This page was written and reviewed by the licensed technicians and fire protection specialists at Firemax Fire Protection. Our team holds Florida fire protection licenses and has performed NFPA 25 five-year internal obstruction investigations for commercial facilities across Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, and Monroe Counties since 1998. All content reflects current NFPA 25 requirements and Florida fire code standards as enforced by local AHJ inspectors.
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Ready to Schedule Your Five-Year Internal Inspection?
Firemax Fire Protection has been a trusted fire sprinkler company serving South Florida since 1998. Our licensed technicians handle the full five-year internal investigation, any required corrective flushing, and complete AHJ-ready ITM documentation. Don't let missing records or undetected internal obstructions put your facility at risk.