PRICING GUIDE
Clearer guidance on what changes the cost of a water backup system in Pretoria, without hiding behind vague promises.
How pricing usually works
Water backup pricing depends on the system size, the site conditions, and how integrated the final solution needs to be. Two homes can both want “backup water” and still need very different scopes.
Rather than pretending every project fits a single number, we explain the major cost drivers so you can understand where your quote is coming from and what level of system makes sense.
- No-obligation quoting process
- Package-based starting points with room for custom scope
- Designed to help compare options realistically
COMMON SYSTEM LEVELS
These are the tiers already reflected across the site, now separated into a clearer pricing-support page.
Package A
Best for households that want straightforward municipal outage protection with a properly installed starter system.
- 1000L to 2500L storage focus
- Municipal refill and pressure pump
- Concrete slab and tie-in planning
- Good fit for essential daily backup
Package B
Best for homeowners who want a more complete resilience setup with rainwater potential and upgraded filtration.
- 2500L to 5000L and above
- Rainwater integration potential
- Multi-stage filtration options
- Good fit for households planning long term
Custom Systems
Best for larger homes, unusual site conditions, or properties that need staged implementation over time.
- Multi-tank or higher-capacity layouts
- Tailored pump and pressure design
- Advanced filtration or harvesting scope
- Planned around the property and usage pattern
WHAT AFFECTS COST MOST
These are usually the first variables that move a project up or down in price.
Tank Size & Capacity
Larger storage usually means a higher project cost, but it also changes how much cover the household actually gets during a real interruption.
Pump & Pressure Requirements
Multi-bathroom homes and larger properties often need different pump sizing and pressure planning than smaller backup-only setups.
Site & Installation Conditions
Access, slope, existing slab conditions, visible install areas, and plumbing distance all affect the final scope.
Filtration & Harvesting
Adding sediment, carbon, UV, or rainwater harvesting changes both the material scope and the complexity of the system.