Bathroom Fan Venting In Attic
See bathroom vent duct termination for details about how to terminate the bath exhaust vent duct.
Bathroom fan venting in attic. Use rigid metal ducting aluminum or galvanized steel with lengthwise seams facing up and joints sealed with foil tape or duct mastic or rigid plastic pipe. Bathroom fan vent code requirements include no venting to attic areas to help reduce mold or structural problems. No you should not vent a bathroom fan directly into an attic. Let me tell you.
This is much easier to do if you have attic access because if you don t you usually have to remove some ceiling drywall and run the ducts along a joist. Example model ventilation codes. Exhaust air from toilet rooms and bathrooms shall not discharge into attic crawl space or other areas inside building. No you cannot vent your bathroom exhaust fan into the attic.
Through the roof or an exterior gable wall. Options for venting a bathroom exhaust fan include best to worst. It s all outdoor air anyways right. Depending on the location of the bathroom it may be easy to vent the exhaust fan through the roof.
The building code requires a bathroom exhaust fan to vent outside the building so installation of a new bathroom fan necessarily involves installation of ductwork. This involves running ductwork from the fan usually though an attic and out through the roof. When venting a bathroom exhaust fan make sure to vent the air to the outside rather than into your attic where it can cause mold and mildew to form. Your attic is not a temperature controlled environment is never the same temperature as your living space and generally closer to the temperature outside.
It seems like such an easy solution just leave a bathroom vent hose in an attic. In order to accomplish this the roof has to have a hole cut in it. Improperly ending a bathroom vent inside an attic can lead to unintended consequences and builders have stopped this bad practice many years ago. It can be an ugly sight to crawl above a poorly ventilated bathroom s ceiling.
You should never exhaust the bathroom fan directly into the attic. Bathroom ventilation codes require a bathroom exhaust fan to vent to the exterior not the attic for health and structural reasons. It is because of this that many builders tend to advise against this method. Exhausting of the bath vent fan must indeed be to the building exterior.
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 in the ceiling. If you vent through a soffit where attic vents are often located the moisture will get sucked back up into the attic or roof venting.