The core difference
| 30/50 psi | 40/60 psi | |
|---|---|---|
| Cut-in | 30 psi | 40 psi |
| Cut-out | 50 psi | 60 psi |
| Tank precharge | 28 psi | 38 psi |
| Best suited to | Single-story homes, older or lower-rated plumbing | Two-story-plus homes, high simultaneous demand |
Why height matters: the elevation-head math
Water loses roughly 1 psi of pressure for every 2.31 feet it has to climb. Moving from a 30/50 to a 40/60 setting adds 10 psi of cut-out pressure, which is equivalent to giving the system about 23 additional feet of vertical lift it can overcome — the difference that keeps pressure adequate on a second or third floor after line losses. This is why 40/60 is "often desired in multi-story homes or properties where simultaneous water use causes a significant pressure drop," per EngineerFix's breakdown (see Sources).
Why plumbing age matters
The higher setting means your pipes, joints, and fittings hold 60 psi continuously instead of 50. Modern PEX and copper systems generally handle this without issue. Older galvanized plumbing or fittings of unknown condition see "accelerated wear on seals and gaskets" and are more prone to joint failure at the higher sustained pressure — a real reason 30/50 stays the safer default for older homes even when a taller structure might otherwise call for 40/60.
Check your pump before you commit to 40/60
Your pump has to be able to generate at least the cut-out pressure plus a safety margin — roughly cut-out + 5 psi — at its maximum shut-off (dead-head) point. A pump sized only to reach 50-55 psi will short-cycle or never satisfy a 40/60 switch no matter how you adjust it. Check your pump's performance curve or nameplate rating before buying a 40/60 switch.
Reset tank precharge when you change settings
Whichever setting you land on, the tank's air precharge should be set 2 psi below cut-in — 28 psi for 30/50, 38 psi for 40/60 — checked with the tank fully drained and the pump powered off. This is the manufacturer rule from the Amtrol Well-X-Trol installation manual (see Sources).
Can you just adjust your existing switch?
On most adjustable Square D Pumptrol-style switches, yes — the range nut moves both cut-in and cut-out together. See our step-by-step adjustment guide for the procedure and turn counts. If your switch is old or won't hold a new setting, see when to replace instead.