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I have a water heater that is on a plywood stand over 18" high. Does the stand need to be replaced with a metal stand or fire rated drywall?

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    No. They sit on unfinished wooden subfloors all the time. – isherwood Sep 13 '17 at 21:00
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    You're welcome, but please use voting and answer acceptance for showing gratitude. We're not a discussion forum. [Take the tour](https://diy.stackexchange.com/tour) for more information. – isherwood Sep 13 '17 at 21:20

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There certainly are codes written for how to install appliances, especially gas ones. There is also specific rules for how to install drinking water appliances, so in the course of a Water Heater, you have both.

Here is an example (google) for Las Vegas Nevada. That is just an example. You should check your local county/town ordinance and verify their rules. Also, check your water heater model # and read the manufacturers guidelines.

I'm not too sure why you would use drywall for a stand? Is there a different portion of the question you meant to ask? You would not want to frame a stand out of Drywall. Conversely, Making a stand out of plywood works, but only if it meets code and is well built to hold the load of the water + tank weight + some % buffer (say, 25% SWAG).

Anyways, here is a really good discussion on this very topic here: How high to raise water heater above floor?

Oh, I almost forgot - based on code & manufacturer, you may not have to raise it at all, but the cinder block approach is pretty foolproof.

noybman
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