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    About Greywater

    About Greywater

    Greywater is a major part of onsite wastewater planning, but it is often misunderstood. This page explains what greywater is, why it matters, how it differs from blackwater, and why not every project follows the same pathway.

    If you are planning a home, bach, tiny home, commercial, or off-grid project, this page is the best place to start.

    What counts as greywater?

    Greywater is household wastewater that has not come into direct contact with toilet waste. In practical terms, it commonly includes water from showers, baths, hand basins, laundries, washing machines, kitchen sinks, and dishwashers.

    Toilet wastewater is different. That is blackwater, and it belongs in a different category with a different management pathway.

    One of the most common points of confusion is kitchen wastewater. WCTNZ® does not treat kitchen wastewater as blackwater. It is still greywater. However, it is usually one of the heavier and more demanding forms of greywater because it can carry higher grease, oil, food solids, and organic loading than lighter bathroom sources.

    That does not change its category, but it does change how carefully it needs to be managed.

    Greywater vs blackwater

    The distinction matters because the reuse, discharge, and treatment options are not the same. Blackwater contains toilet waste and carries a different level of contamination risk and infrastructure requirement. Greywater, by contrast, can sometimes be reused or redirected more simply, but only where the source, site, and system pathway support that outcome.

    This is one reason composting toilet projects often lead people to think more carefully about greywater. A waterless composting toilet changes or removes the toilet-waste stream, but the household still produces wastewater from showers, basins, laundries, kitchens, and other fixtures. That greywater still needs its own proper pathway.

    Important: Kitchen wastewater is still greywater. It is not blackwater. It is simply a heavier and more demanding greywater source that often needs more careful design.

    Why greywater matters

    Greywater often makes up a large share of household wastewater volume. In many homes, especially where water efficiency and onsite resource use matter, greywater becomes one of the key design questions.

    Managed well, it can support more efficient onsite living and more purposeful use of wastewater. Managed poorly, it can create odour, loading, maintenance, and site-discharge issues.

    For homes using composting toilets or other reduced-blackwater pathways, greywater is often the main wastewater stream left to solve. That is why it should never be treated as an afterthought.

    Reusing greywater

    One of the main reasons people become interested in greywater is reuse. Reuse can support better water efficiency, lower demand on water supplies, and more resource-conscious site planning. In the right situation, greywater can become part of an irrigation or controlled discharge strategy rather than simply being treated as waste with no further value.

    That said, reuse is not automatic. It depends on the source of the water, the quality of the water, the site conditions, and the system pathway chosen. Lighter greywater sources may lend themselves to simpler diversion-based outcomes in some projects, while heavier or kitchen-inclusive greywater may push the project toward more controlled treatment before reuse or discharge.

    The most common reuse goal people think of is irrigation, and that can absolutely be part of a well-designed greywater project. But reuse only works well when the system and the site have been matched properly.

    Can greywater be stored?

    Greywater should not be casually stored for extended periods. Once it sits too long, it can deteriorate, become more difficult to handle, and create odour or quality issues. This is one of the biggest misunderstandings around greywater design.

    Short-term holding or surge management is a different matter. In many systems, greywater first moves into a surge or collection stage before being discharged onward to irrigation, diversion, or treatment. That is a controlled part of system function. It is not the same thing as long-term storage.

    How a greywater system works

    At a broad level, a greywater system collects wastewater from selected household sources and moves it into the next stage of handling. In many cases, that begins with water from showers, basins, baths, laundries, or kitchens entering a surge or collection stage.

    From there, the water may move by gravity or pump into a direct irrigation pathway, a diversion-based arrangement, or a more developed treatment system.

    Some systems are quite simple. Others combine several parts, such as surge management, filtration, pumping, irrigation, and treatment. Supporting components like filters and tanks may also need maintenance attention over time, because greywater is not a static or maintenance-free medium.

    Not all greywater systems are the same

    There is no single greywater answer that suits every property. The right pathway depends on the wastewater source, the level of use, the intended reuse or discharge outcome, and the site itself.

    A tiny home with light-use bathroom greywater is not the same as a standard family home. A standard residential site is not the same as a commercial or shared-use project. Kitchen-inclusive systems are not the same as bathroom-only systems.

    Some projects suit simpler diversion-based pathways. Some require treatment. Some benefit from pressurised irrigation or more controlled discharge layouts. Some require filters, pumps, or transfer components as part of the wider design. And some sites need a more developed commercial response rather than a domestic one.

    That is why WCTNZ® treats greywater as a project-by-project system question rather than a one-size-fits-all product choice.

    Explore Greywater in More Detail

    These pages break the subject down further, from quick beginner answers through to system pathways, technology types, and choosing the right solution for a real project.

    1. Greywater Basics FAQ

    Quick answers to the most common beginner questions about what greywater is, what it is not, and how it is usually managed.

    2. Greywater Questions & Answers

    Broader explanations covering practical questions, misunderstandings, reuse logic, and how greywater fits into onsite planning.

    3. Greywater System Pathways

    Learn how projects are grouped into different pathways depending on wastewater source, use level, site conditions, and intended outcome.

    4. Types of Greywater Technologies

    A closer look at diversion, treatment, irrigation, filtration, pumping, discharge, and other supporting greywater technologies.

    5. Choosing the Right System

    The practical decision page for identifying the likely pathway for your site and moving into the right enquiry form.

    Need Help Choosing a Greywater System?

    Every greywater project is a little different. Some sites are simple. Some are not. Some people already know they need a diversion-based setup, while others need help working out whether treatment, irrigation, pumping, or a broader system package is more appropriate.

    That is why WCTNZ® scopes greywater projects case by case. If you already know what kind of project you have, use the enquiry form that best matches your likely pathway. If you are not sure, that is fine too — the right next step is still to enquire.

    Helpful details to include: project type, property location, expected use, wastewater sources involved, site constraints, and what stage the project is at.
    Greywater Diversion (GDD) (Small Residential Systems) Form

    Best for simpler greywater diversion projects where there is already a septic, sewer, or other onsite treatment pathway, or where a very small residential setup may suit a simpler system package.

    Greywater Diversion (GDD) (Standard Residential Systems) Form

    Best for standard residential diversion projects where the site and wastewater source may suit a more developed greywater diversion arrangement rather than treatment.

    Greywater Treatment System (GTS) (Standard Residential Systems) Form

    Best for residential projects that may require treatment rather than simple diversion, including more complex home wastewater layouts or projects involving kitchen wastewater.

    Commercial Greywater Enquiry Form

    Best for commercial, shared-use, accommodation, public, and larger-scale greywater projects where the team will assess the most suitable pathway for the site.