If you work with piping systems in Canada, you’ve probably heard someone ask:
“Do these drawings have a P.Eng stamp yet?”
For many projects, that stamp is not just a formality. It’s a legal requirement and a key part of demonstrating that your design is safe, code-compliant, and reviewed by a licensed Professional Engineer.
This guide explains what P.Eng stamping is, when you need it on piping projects, and how to prepare your design package so the stamping process is smooth instead of stressful.
What is P.Eng. stamping?
In Canada, a Professional Engineer (P.Eng) is licensed by a provincial or territorial regulator (such as PEO in Ontario or APEGA in Alberta). Their stamp or seal on a document means:
- The document contains engineering work.
- A licensed engineer has reviewed or prepared that work.
- That engineer is taking professional responsibility for the engineering content.
In other words, the stamp is the engineer’s formal sign-off that the design meets applicable codes, standards, and regulatory expectations for safety and performance.
When does a piping project need a P.Eng stamp?
Each province and territory has its own legislation and practice guidelines, but in general, a P.Eng stamp is required when:
- The document is an engineering document (design, calculation, drawing, report, specification, etc.), and
- That document will be used by others to make decisions about construction, operation, or public safety.
Typical piping-related documents that may need a P.Eng stamp include:
- Piping general arrangement (GA) drawings
- Piping isometrics for construction
- Pipe stress analysis reports
- Support design drawings and calculations
- Pressure design calculations (thickness, ratings, branch reinforcements, etc.)
- Design reports submitted to authorities or clients
For pressure piping and pressure equipment, P.Eng stamping often goes hand-in-hand with Canadian Registration Number (CRN) or similar pressure equipment design registration. The stamp confirms professional responsibility; the registration confirms regulatory acceptance of the design.
Important: The exact requirements vary by jurisdiction. Always check the rules for the province or territory where the equipment will be installed.
Who can provide a P.Eng stamp?
A P.Eng stamp can only be applied by:
- An engineer who holds a valid P.Eng licence in the province or territory where the project is located, and
- Is working within their area of competence (for example, piping / mechanical, not unrelated disciplines).
In most provinces, if the engineering work is done as a business (consulting, design services, etc.), the company itself also needs:
- A Certificate of Authorization or Permit to Practice granting it the right to offer engineering services to the public.
For owners and EPCs, this usually means one of two models:
- In-house P.Eng and Permit to Practice – your own engineering team stamps the documents.
- Specialist consulting firm – you outsource some or all of the piping design and have an external firm with the right licenses and permits review and stamp the work.
How to prepare a “stamp-ready” piping package
A smooth stamping process starts long before the engineer picks up their seal. The more complete and clear your package is, the faster and more predictable the review becomes.
At minimum, make sure you have:
- Clear design basis
- Design codes (e.g., ASME B31.1 / B31.3, etc.)
- Design pressures and temperatures
- Fluid properties and service category
- Load cases (thermal, weight, wind, seismic, occasional loads, etc.)
- Up-to-date drawings
- P&IDs, line list, and tie-in points
- Piping GAs and isometrics with consistent line numbers
- Equipment data sheets and nozzle loads
- Engineering calculations
- Pipe stress analysis reports (with load combinations and code compliance checks)
- Pipe wall thickness and rating checks
- Support design and structural checks where needed
- Nozzle load checks against equipment limits
- Materials and specifications
- Piping class / material specifications
- Weld details, inspection requirements, NDE levels
- Insulation, heat tracing, and coating requirements (if applicable)
- Safety and compliance notes
- Any identified special hazards
- Applicable regulatory or client specifications
A P.Eng review is not just a quick stamp on the cover sheet. The engineer must be able to trace design decisions back to basis-of-design, codes, and calculations.
Common pitfalls in P.Eng stamping for piping projects
Here are issues that frequently cause delays or rework:
- Incomplete or inconsistent documentation
- Line lists don’t match P&IDs.
- Isometrics are missing or not coordinated with the stress model.
- Loads allowable by the vessel vendors don’t match the final stress analysis.
- “Stamp at the last minute” approach
- Documents are issued for construction and only then sent for stamping.
- Any changes required by the P.Eng become expensive and disruptive.
- Ignoring pressure equipment registration
- Assuming that “we have a P.Eng stamp, so Piping Registration (CRN) isn’t needed” in provinces where registration is mandatory for certain piping and equipment.
- For regulated pressure piping, you usually need both properly stamped documents and design registration with the relevant safety authority.
Best practices to make stamping straightforward
- Engage a P.Eng early
Involve the reviewing engineer when you define the design basis and major assumptions, not after everything is frozen. - Align on codes and scope upfront
Get written agreement on:- Applicable codes and standards
- What exactly the P.Eng is taking responsibility for (which drawings, which calculations, which systems)
- Use standard templates and checklists
Internal or consultant-provided checklists for stress reports, drawings, and design notes reduce “back and forth” and catch issues before formal review. - Track revisions and approvals
Maintain a clear revision history showing which versions were reviewed and stamped. Avoid multiple, conflicting “final” versions in circulation.
FAQs about P.Eng stamping for piping projects
What is a P.Eng stamp, in simple terms?
It is a professional engineer’s seal, signature, and date on an engineering document, indicating that a licensed engineer has taken professional responsibility for the engineering content.
Is P.Eng stamping mandatory for every piping project?
Not for every single document, but many designs that affect public safety, pressure equipment, or are submitted to regulators, municipalities, or clients must be stamped under the applicable provincial engineering act. When in doubt, consult a licensed engineer in that jurisdiction.
Does a P.Eng stamp replace CRN or pressure equipment registration?
No. For regulated pressure equipment and piping, you typically need both:
- Engineering documents prepared/reviewed and stamped by a P.Eng, and
- Design registration (such as CRN) with the appropriate safety authority.
How long does the stamping process take?
It depends on the quality and completeness of the package. A well-prepared piping package with clear basis-of-design and calculations can often be turned around quickly; incomplete or inconsistent documentation can add days or weeks.
Can any P.Eng stamp my project?
No. They must:
- Be licensed in the province/territory where the project is located, and
- Be competent in the relevant discipline (e.g., piping / pressure equipment).
Final thoughts
P.Eng stamping on piping projects is not “just another checkbox.” It’s the point where a licensed engineer accepts responsibility for your design and confirms that it meets the appropriate codes and safety expectations.
If you don’t have in-house licensed piping engineers, working with a specialist firm that provides piping engineering, pressure equipment design, CRN support, and P.Eng stamping can de-risk your project, avoid delays, and improve overall quality.
