Hosepipe Ban in South Tipperary 2026: Water Conservation Order
Published:
Only in part. Most of South Tipperary is not covered. The Water Conservation Order applies to South Tipperary from 16 July 2026 until 26 August 2026. Because the boundary follows the water supply network rather than the county line, check Uisce Éireann's own map for your address.
The Order names South Tipperary specifically, separate from the Greater Dublin Area. Uisce Éireann's supply map is the definitive source for individual addresses.
Check your exact address
The Order follows Uisce Éireann's supply network, not the county boundary. We do not build an Eircode boundary checker, because that would mean guessing the supply lines. Use the official map instead.
Uisce Éireann supply map →What the Order bans in South Tipperary
Within the covered area, a hosepipe may not be used to water a garden, wash a private car or wash a private leisure boat. Filling or maintaining a domestic swimming or paddling pool is banned, except a small pool filled by hand-held containers directly from a tap. Filling or maintaining a domestic pond is banned, but fish ponds are excluded. Filling or maintaining an ornamental fountain is banned, except for commercial use. See what you can still do and the fine structure.
Explore the Irish picture
- Ireland Water Conservation Order hub, all affected areas.
- What is a Water Conservation Order? how it differs from a UK hosepipe ban.
- How long will it last? the fixed window and how it can end early or extend.
- Night-time water restrictions, the separate overnight instrument.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is there a hosepipe ban in Tipperary?
In South Tipperary, yes. The Water Conservation Order names South Tipperary, running from 16 July to 26 August 2026. Northern parts of the county are not named in the Order. Check Uisce Éireann's supply map for your address.
What is banned under the Water Conservation Order in South Tipperary?
Using a hosepipe to water a garden, wash a private car, or wash a private leisure boat; filling or maintaining a domestic swimming or paddling pool (except a small pool filled by hand-held containers directly from a tap); filling or maintaining a domestic pond (fish ponds are excluded); and filling or maintaining an ornamental fountain (commercial use is excepted). Using a watering can or bucket is always allowed, and Uisce Éireann encourages reusing household water.
What is the fine for breaching the ban in South Tipperary?
Breaching a Water Conservation Order is an offence under section 56(18) of the Water Services Act 2007. Uisce Éireann can issue a fixed payment notice of 125 euro, which is prosecuted if it is not paid within 21 days; on summary conviction a court can impose a fine of up to 5,000 euro. In practice, prosecutions are effectively unheard of: Uisce Éireann relies on a request to desist and on the Order itself signalling the seriousness of the situation.
Area-to-supply routing is a guide, not a guarantee: Uisce Éireann's supply boundaries do not follow county lines. The definitive answer for your address is the Uisce Éireann supply map. ← Back to the Ireland hub