Is it best practice to have a manifold per floor for water-based UFH?

Short answer: yes, in most cases a manifold per floor is best practice, especially in multi-storey properties.


Why installers usually go with one manifold per floor

1. Better temperature control (zoning)

Each floor has different heating needs:

  • Ground floors lose heat to the ground
  • Upper floors retain more heat
  • Lofts and basements behave very differently

A manifold per floor lets you:

  • Control each floor independently
  • Set different temperatures and schedules
  • Avoid overheating upstairs while trying to warm downstairs

2. Easier system balancing

Underfloor heating relies on balanced flow through each loop. With a manifold per floor:

  • Pipe runs are shorter and more consistent
  • Flow rates are easier to adjust
  • Less risk of some rooms not heating properly

3. Shorter pipe runs = better efficiency

If you try to serve multiple floors from one manifold:

  • Some loops become very long
  • You may need a larger pump
  • Heat losses increase in the distribution pipework

Keeping manifolds local to each floor keeps things efficient.


4. Simpler installation and maintenance

  • Easier to install in stages (floor by floor)
  • Faults can be isolated to one floor
  • More accessible if placed in cupboards on each level

When a single manifold might be acceptable

You might get away with one manifold if:

  • The property is small (e.g. compact 2-storey)
  • Total floor area is relatively low
  • Pipe runs can all be kept within recommended lengths (~80–100m per loop)
  • Heat loads across floors are similar

Even then, many installers still prefer splitting by floor.


Typical “good practice” layout

  • One manifold per floor
  • Located centrally on that floor (cupboard, utility space, etc.)
  • Each room has its own loop (or multiple loops for larger rooms)
  • Controlled via individual room thermostats and actuators

Rule of thumb

Go with a manifold per floor if:

  • You have 2+ storeys
  • Total area is over ~100 m²
  • Different floors are used differently (e.g. bedrooms vs living areas)
  • You want proper zoning and energy efficiency

Bottom line

It’s not a strict requirement, but a manifold per floor is the preferred approach because it gives you:

  • better control
  • better efficiency
  • easier installation and commissioning
  • fewer headaches long term
SHARE YOUR CART