Fixtures, fittings, and pipe runs, counted before your coffee gets cold.
Division 22 takeoff is on the roadmap, built on the engine that reads full sets today. The waitlist shapes what ships first.
Manual takeoff works on plumbing today. The form below is the AI counting list.
Detected
Roadmap trade
Waitlist open for Division 22
Illustrative canvas, not a live count. Your numbers come from your own set
You know this feeling.
“Count the fixtures. Trace the runs. Estimate the fittings: 25 percent for CPVC? 45 for PEX? Now do it again, because the engineer changed the riser diagram.”
The canvas takes the retyping out today. AI counting is what the list below is for.
AI counting for plumbing takeoff (Division 22) is not live yet; the AI waitlist is stated plainly, while the collaborative canvas already works for plumbing today, free: upload a set and run fixture counts manually with your team. The takeoff engine reads full drawing sets in the browser today for Division 8 doors and windows with 4 Eyes cross-checking. Fixture counts, fitting allowances, and pipe runs are roadmap scope. Waitlist estimators get first access and set the output formats.
What would Division 22 takeoff look like here?
Fixtures counted against the plumbing schedule, runs traced with lengths, and fitting allowances applied as rules you set instead of guesses you repeat. The same schedule-versus-plan reconciliation that catches missed openings applies naturally to fixture schedules. It ships when it reads real sets reliably; the waitlist sees it first.
What is live at Quoting.ai today?
Doors and windows, Division 8, live in the browser on full sets. Framing is in early access. Run a set through doors today and you have seen the engine plumbing will get.
Estimator questions
Is this live?
AI counting is not; the canvas is. Upload a plumbing set today and work it manually with your team, free. The AI waitlist gets first access.
Will it read riser diagrams?
Roadmap scope is decided with waitlist estimators on real sets. Floor plans and schedules come first; riser handling is exactly the kind of call early users make.