Kitchen Sink Plumbing: How It All Connects

By Music City Plumbing Pros • Kitchen Plumbing

Open the cabinet under most kitchen sinks and you'll find a tangle of pipes, hoses, and valves that nobody ever explained to you. It looks intimidating, but the system is actually pretty logical once you know what each piece does. Here's a clear walk-through of kitchen sink plumbing — what every component is, what it's for, and where things tend to go wrong.

The Two Sides of the System

Every kitchen sink has two completely separate plumbing systems running to it.

They never touch each other inside the wall, and they fail for completely different reasons. Most kitchen plumbing problems live on the drain side.

The Supply Side, Top to Bottom

Behind the sink, two pipes come out of the wall (or up through the floor) — one for hot, one for cold. Each one has a small valve called a shutoff or angle stop. From those valves, flexible braided supply lines run up to the bottom of the faucet.

Things that go wrong on the supply side:

The Drain Side, Piece by Piece

Now the interesting part. Under your sink, working from the sink basin down, you'll find:

  1. The strainer or basket strainer. The metal ring you see in the sink, sealed to the porcelain or stainless with plumber's putty.
  2. The tailpiece. A short straight pipe dropping down from the strainer.
  3. The continuous waste / tee. If you have a double-bowl sink, this is the horizontal pipe that ties the two sides together.
  4. The P-trap. The U-shaped bend that holds standing water to block sewer gas.
  5. The drain arm. Connects the trap to the drain stub coming out of the wall.

If you have a garbage disposal, it replaces the basket strainer and tailpiece on one side. If you have a dishwasher, its drain hose connects either to the disposal or to a tee on the drain — and on most installs, it loops up high to an air gap or a high loop under the counter to keep dirty sink water from siphoning back into the dishwasher.

The Failure Points

Years of experience under thousands of kitchen sinks turns up the same handful of problems again and again.

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The Dishwasher Connection

The dishwasher's drain hose runs from the back of the dishwasher to either the side of the garbage disposal or a tee on the sink drain. Two issues come up here often:

Slow Drain? Try These Steps Before Calling

If only the kitchen sink is slow, the clog is usually in the trap or just past it. A few things worth trying:

When It's a Plumber Job

If pulling the trap doesn't fix it, if you have a leak inside the wall, if the drain stub crumbles when touched, or if both sides of a double-bowl back up at once, you've left DIY territory. A plumber can snake the line from the cleanout, replace failing fittings with modern PVC, and put your kitchen back together cleanly.

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