Backflow Testing Near Me: Nebraska
Backflow Testing in Nebraska: Costs, Requirements & How to Find the Best Certified Testers
Nebraska is a high-regulation state requiring a written CCC plan, an ongoing public awareness program, and record retention for at least 5 years. NDEE certifies backflow testers. Omaha's Metropolitan Utilities District and Lincoln Water System are the state's two largest programs.
Why Backflow Testing Matters in Nebraska
Nebraska’s Department of Energy and Environment (NDEE) certifies backflow assembly testers. Nebraska is classified as high-regulation with written CCC plan, ongoing public awareness program, and 5-year records. Lincoln Water System serves Nebraska’s capital; Metropolitan Utilities District (MUD) serves Omaha. Nebraska’s agricultural Platte River Valley creates irrigation-related cross-connection demands in communities from Kearney to Scottsbluff.
Nebraska Backflow Testing Law — The Plain-Language Version
NDEE-certified tester required. Written CCC plan required. Ongoing public awareness program required. 5-year record retention. Annual testing. Lincoln Water and MUD Omaha are the primary large utility programs.
Full Nebraska Backflow Law Details
Complete regulatory breakdown, certification requirements, and major utility programs: getyourbackflowtested.com/backflow-laws/nebraska-backflow-prevention-laws
How Much Does Backflow Testing Cost in Nebraska?
Omaha metro (MUD, Bellevue, La Vista, Papillion, Gretna, Ralston): $55 – $125 per assembly.
Lincoln metro: $55 – $120 per assembly.
Grand Island, Hastings, Kearney, Norfolk, Columbus: $55 – $115 per assembly.
Western Nebraska (North Platte, Scottsbluff, Alliance): $60 – $130 per assembly; travel surcharges for remote areas.
How Long Does Backflow Testing Take in Nebraska?
Standard tests: 20–40 minutes. Omaha and Lincoln residential: 45–65 minutes. Nebraska’s 5-year records requirement means testers should provide documentation that clearly indicates the test date, assembly details, and test results in a format suitable for long-term retention.
What to Expect on Test Day
Your tester arrives, locates your backflow assembly (typically near the water meter or service entrance), and connects calibrated differential pressure gauges to the test cocks. Water shuts off for 15–30 minutes during testing. You receive a signed test report immediately. Pass: results are filed with your utility. Fail: the tester identifies the fault and repairs or returns within the required compliance window. Always confirm your tester files results with your utility — request confirmation before they leave.
How We Vet Nebraska Backflow Testers — Our Selection Criteria
Every tester listed in our Nebraska city pages meets all of the following before inclusion:
NDEE certified tester: Verified on NDEE certified tester list.
MUD Omaha or Lincoln Water registration: Confirmed as applicable.
5-year records documentation: Testers confirm documentation practices meet Nebraska’s retention standard.
Calibrated equipment + insurance: Standard.
Nebraska Cities and Areas We Cover
Omaha metro: Omaha, Bellevue, La Vista, Papillion, Gretna, Ralston, Elkhorn, Millard. Lincoln, Hastings, Grand Island, Kearney, Norfolk, Fremont, Columbus, Beatrice, North Platte, Scottsbluff. Statewide Nebraska.
Find a Certified Nebraska Backflow Tester Near You
getyourbackflowtested.com | Backflow Testing in Nebraska
