By the HMNDP Editorial Team, independent reporting on lawn care, landscaping, water, and the green-industry business.
Last reviewed: June 2026
Irrigation system parts, explained in the order water flows
The main irrigation system parts, in flow order, are the water source, a backflow preventer, a control valve (or valve manifold), lateral supply lines, and the delivery device (a sprinkler head or a drip emitter). A controller and filter support the line. Learn this chain once and you can name, buy, or replace any single part without guessing.
Every residential and small-farm irrigation setup follows the same path. Water leaves the source under pressure, passes a safety and a shutoff point, gets split into zones, travels through pipe or tubing, and exits at the device that wets your plants. The parts change by system type, but the sequence does not.
Beginners get stuck because shopping pages list parts as a flat grid with no logic. Below is the sequence as a labeled parts list you can read like a diagram.
The system-flow parts diagram (source to emitter)
A text irrigation system parts diagram reads as a single line of components in order: water source, then backflow preventer, then main shutoff valve, then filter and pressure regulator, then zone valve or manifold, then lateral line (pipe or tubing), then fittings, then the head or emitter. This is the spine every kit and repair follows.
- Water source (hose bib, main tap, well, or pump) supplies pressure, typically 30 to 75 psi at a home.
- Backflow preventer stops irrigation water from siphoning back into drinking water. Required by many local plumbing codes.
- Shutoff valve isolates the whole system for repairs.
- Filter removes grit that clogs small openings (see the filter section below).
- Pressure regulator drops incoming pressure to a device-safe level (drip usually wants 10 to 30 psi).
- Zone valve / manifold routes water to one zone at a time, opened by the controller.
- Lateral line carries water to the plants: buried PVC or poly pipe for sprinklers, 1/2 inch or 1/4 inch tubing for drip.
- Fittings and connectors join, turn, tee, and cap the line.
- Head or emitter delivers the water: a pop-up sprinkler head or a drip emitter.
Sprinkler parts vs drip irrigation parts, side by side
Sprinkler (in-ground and overhead) parts and drip irrigation parts do the same jobs with different hardware. Sprinklers use rigid buried pipe, risers, and pop-up heads with nozzles to throw water across turf. Drip uses flexible tubing, barbed fittings, and low-flow emitters to drip water at each plant. The table below maps them component for component.
| Function | In-ground / overhead sprinkler | Drip irrigation |
|---|---|---|
| Supply line | Buried PVC or 3/4 in poly pipe | 1/2 in poly mainline tubing |
| Branch line | Funny pipe / swing pipe to head | 1/4 in distribution tubing |
| Delivery device | Pop-up spray head or rotor with nozzle | Emitter, drip line, or micro-sprayer |
| Riser | Threaded riser raises head to grade | Stake raises emitter to plant base |
| Fittings | Slip or threaded PVC fittings | Barbed or compression fittings |
| Typical flow | 1 to 4 GPM per head | 0.5 to 4 GPH per emitter |
| Best for | Lawns, large open turf | Beds, rows, containers, gardens |
Choose by what you water. Open turf favors overhead sprinklers. Beds, vegetable rows, and containers favor drip because it wets roots, not leaves, and wastes less to evaporation. Many properties run both on separate zones. See our drip irrigation system guide and garden sprinkler system guide for full layouts.
Drip irrigation components: emitters, filters, fittings, tubing
Drip irrigation components are the tubing that carries water, emitters that release it, filters that keep openings clear, and barbed fittings that join everything. A pressure regulator and a backflow preventer sit at the head of the line. These five part families cover roughly every drip repair or expansion you will do.
- Tubing: 1/2 inch (0.700 in OD common) mainline plus 1/4 inch feeder line. Inline drip tubing has emitters pre-spaced every 6, 12, or 18 inches.
- Emitters: button or inline, rated 0.5, 1, 2, or 4 GPH. Pressure-compensating (PC) emitters hold flow steady on slopes and long runs.
- Filter: a 150 to 200 mesh screen filter is standard for drip; without it, emitters clog.
- Fittings: barbed tees, elbows, couplings, and end caps for 1/2 inch line; goof plugs seal mistaken holes.
- Stakes and anchors: hold tubing and emitters in place (covered below).
Full drip irrigation kits
A full drip irrigation kit bundles the head assembly (backflow preventer, filter, pressure regulator, hose adapter), a roll of mainline tubing, an emitter assortment, fittings, and stakes into one box. Kits from brands like Rain Bird, DIG, and Raindrip typically cover 25 to 100 plants and cost roughly 30 to 80 US dollars, which suits most first-time gardeners.
Kits win when you are starting fresh and unsure which parts pair together. Buy individual components instead when you are extending an existing line or replacing one worn part.
Sprinkler parts and accessories: heads, nozzles, risers
Sprinkler parts and accessories center on three items: the head that pops up and distributes water, the nozzle that shapes the spray pattern, and the riser that sets the head at ground level. Spray heads cover short ranges (up to about 15 feet); rotor heads throw farther (up to 45 feet or more) for large lawns.
| Part | Job | Common spec |
|---|---|---|
| Pop-up spray head | Rises, sprays fixed pattern | 2, 3, 4, 6, 12 in pop-up height |
| Rotor head | Rotates a stream over large turf | Adjustable 40 to 360 degrees |
| Nozzle | Sets pattern and radius | Quarter, half, full circle; matched precipitation |
| Riser | Connects head to lateral line | 1/2 in NPT threaded, cut-off, or swing |
Valves, filters, fittings, and controllers
Valves control which zone gets water, filters protect small openings, fittings join the line, and the controller (timer) tells valves when to open. These are the shared plumbing parts both sprinkler and drip systems depend on. A weak or failed part here usually explains a zone that will not start, will not stop, or runs dirty.
- Zone valve: a solenoid-driven valve opens each zone on a controller signal. Common sizes are 3/4 inch and 1 inch.
- Manifold: groups several zone valves at one point for easy access.
- Filter / filter assembly: screen or disc, rated by mesh (higher mesh = finer). Clean or replace when flow drops.
- Fittings and connectors: slip, threaded, barbed, or compression. Match the joining method to the pipe type.
- Controller: mechanical or smart Wi-Fi timer that schedules each zone.
Which part controls water flow to each zone
The zone valve (also called a control or solenoid valve) is the part that controls water flow to each zone. The controller sends a low-voltage signal that opens the valve’s solenoid, water flows to that zone only, and the valve closes when the signal stops. One valve equals one zone, which is why multi-zone systems group valves in a manifold.
Ground cover anchors, stakes, and other accessories
Anchoring pins and stakes hold tubing, landscape fabric, and drip line in place so water lands where you planned. Galvanized or plastic staples (often 6 inch U-shaped pins) pin drip tubing to soil; landscape fabric staples secure ground cover. Emitter stakes lift 1/4 inch line to the base of a plant or container.
These low-cost accessories (a few cents each) prevent tubing from creeping, floating, or shifting when soil settles. Budget one pin every 3 to 5 feet along exposed tubing.
How to identify irrigation parts by name and picture
To identify an irrigation part, check three things: its size marking, its connection type, and where it sits in the flow. A part with a threaded end and a solenoid coil is a valve; a small barbed nub in tubing is an emitter; a screw-in cylinder that raises a sprinkler is a riser. Match those cues to the parts list above.
Look for stamped codes on the part. Rain Bird, Hunter, Orbit, and Toro print model numbers on heads and valve bodies. Photograph the code and the connection ends, then compare against the manufacturer’s parts page or the diagram in this guide before you buy a replacement.
Sizing and brand compatibility: buy the right part the first time
Irrigation parts fit by three specs: tubing diameter, thread type, and flow rating. 1/2 inch drip tubing and 3/4 inch NPT threads are near-universal, so most fittings interchange across brands. Emitters and specialty heads are more brand-specific, because barb size and pop-up mechanisms vary. Match the spec, not the logo.
| Spec | Common values | Interchangeable? |
|---|---|---|
| Drip mainline OD | 0.700 in (many) vs 0.620 in (some) | Only if OD matches the fitting |
| Thread type | 3/4 in NPT (US), MHT/FHT hose thread | Yes across brands if same standard |
| Emitter flow | 0.5, 1, 2, 4 GPH | Function yes, barb fit varies |
| Sprinkler riser | 1/2 in NPT | Broadly interchangeable |
Are Rain Bird and other brand parts interchangeable?
Rain Bird parts are partly interchangeable. Standard threaded and 1/2 inch tubing fittings from Rain Bird, Hunter, Orbit, and DIG generally mix, because they share NPT and common tubing sizes. Proprietary items (rotor internals, some emitter barbs, and pop-up nozzle systems) are not cross-compatible. When in doubt, replace a specialty part with the same brand and model.
Which irrigation parts fail most, and what to replace
The parts that fail most are the moving or small-opening ones: sprinkler nozzles clog, valve solenoids and diaphragms wear, emitters plug with mineral scale, and filters foul. Match the symptom to the part below, replace just that component, and you avoid re-plumbing the whole zone. Most of these parts cost under 20 US dollars.
| Symptom | Likely failed part | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Whole zone low pressure | Clogged filter or partly open valve | Clean/replace filter; inspect valve |
| Zone will not shut off | Valve diaphragm or solenoid debris | Clean or replace diaphragm/solenoid |
| Zone will not start | Solenoid or controller wiring | Test solenoid; check controller output |
| Uneven spray coverage | Clogged or wrong nozzle | Clear or swap the nozzle |
| One plant stays dry (drip) | Plugged emitter | Flush line; replace emitter |
| Head won’t retract | Grit in pop-up spring | Rinse or replace the head |
Keep a small spares kit: two nozzles, two emitters, one solenoid, and a filter screen. For pricing on a full build or overhaul, see our irrigation system cost breakdown.
Where to shop for irrigation parts
Buy irrigation parts from three channels: big-box stores (Home Depot, Lowe’s) for common heads and kits, dedicated irrigation suppliers (SprinklerWarehouse, DripDepot, Ewing) for full part ranges and pro-grade valves, and manufacturer sites for exact replacement models. Local pro distributors carry contractor stock and staff who can identify a part from a photo.
Take the model number and a photo of both connection ends before you shop. Our directory of lawn care stores and pro distributors near you lists suppliers that handle irrigation parts and matching.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the main parts of an irrigation system?
The main parts, in flow order, are the water source, backflow preventer, shutoff valve, filter, pressure regulator, zone valve or manifold, lateral supply line, fittings, and the delivery device (sprinkler head or drip emitter). A controller times the zones. Sprinkler systems add risers and nozzles; drip systems add tubing and stakes. Every system follows this same source-to-emitter chain.
What is the difference between sprinkler and drip irrigation parts?
Sprinkler parts use rigid buried pipe, threaded risers, and pop-up heads with nozzles to throw water across turf at 1 to 4 GPM each. Drip parts use flexible 1/2 inch and 1/4 inch tubing, barbed fittings, and low-flow emitters (0.5 to 4 GPH) to wet roots directly. Sprinklers suit lawns; drip suits beds, rows, and containers with far less evaporation loss.
What does an irrigation system parts diagram look like?
A parts diagram is a single flow line: water source, then backflow preventer, then shutoff valve, then filter and pressure regulator, then zone valve or manifold, then lateral line, then fittings, ending at the sprinkler head or drip emitter. Reading it in order tells you where any part sits and what comes before and after it when you diagnose or replace something.
What are the parts of a drip irrigation system?
A drip system uses a head assembly (backflow preventer, 150 to 200 mesh filter, pressure regulator, hose adapter), 1/2 inch mainline tubing, 1/4 inch feeder tubing, emitters rated 0.5 to 4 GPH, barbed fittings (tees, elbows, couplings, end caps), and stakes to hold tubing and emitters in place. A full kit bundles all of these for 25 to 100 plants.
How do I identify irrigation parts by name?
Check three cues: the part’s size marking, its connection type, and its position in the flow. A threaded body with a solenoid coil is a zone valve; a barbed nub in tubing is an emitter; a screw-in cylinder under a sprinkler is a riser. Photograph any stamped model number (Rain Bird, Hunter, Orbit) and compare it to the manufacturer’s parts page.
Which irrigation part controls water flow to each zone?
The zone valve, also called a control or solenoid valve, controls flow to each zone. The controller sends a low-voltage signal that opens the valve’s solenoid, water flows to that one zone, and the valve closes when the signal ends. Multi-zone systems group these valves in a manifold, with one valve dedicated to each zone.
What irrigation parts wear out or need replacing most often?
Nozzles, emitters, valve diaphragms, solenoids, and filter screens fail most because they move or have small openings that clog with grit and mineral scale. Symptoms map to parts: a zone that won’t shut off points to the valve diaphragm, uneven spray points to a nozzle, and one dry drip plant points to a plugged emitter. Most replacements cost under 20 US dollars.
Are irrigation parts brand-specific (e.g. Rain Bird) or interchangeable?
Many parts interchange. Standard 3/4 inch NPT threads and 1/2 inch tubing fittings from Rain Bird, Hunter, Orbit, and DIG generally mix because they share sizing standards. Proprietary items (rotor internals, some emitter barbs, pop-up nozzle systems) are not cross-compatible. Match the spec (thread, tubing OD, GPH) rather than the brand, and replace specialty parts with the same model.