What Local Law 142 Changed About LL152 Inspections
The core rule under LL152 has not changed. NYC buildings with gas piping, except one- and two-family homes and buildings classified in Occupancy Group R-3, must have their gas piping inspected every four years by a Licensed Master Plumber (LMP), or by a qualified individual working under the LMP’s direct and continuing supervision.
The “under the supervision of” part is where Local Law 142 stepped in. Before LL142, that phrase was loosely defined in terms of credentials. Now it’s tightly defined. Any technician performing an LL152 inspection who is not themselves the LMP must meet two specific qualifications — both of them, every time.
The Two New Credential Requirements for LL152 Technicians
Registered Journeyman Plumber. The technician must hold a Journeyman Plumber Registration issued by the NYC Department of Buildings. Local Law 142 made this a specific qualification for non-LMP individuals performing LL152 inspections under the direct and continuing supervision of a Licensed Master Plumber.
7-Hour DOB Periodic Gas Inspector Training. The technician’s training and qualifications should be documented and verifiable through DOB-recognized credential systems, including the Digital Worker Wallet process where applicable.
Both credentials are required. Journeyman registration alone is no longer enough. A technician without a Worker Wallet entry for the 7-hour training is not authorized to perform an LL152 inspection under LL142, even if they have years of plumbing experience.
Why Licensed Master Plumbers Are Exempt From the 7-Hour Training
This is the detail that trips most building owners up: Licensed Master Plumbers themselves don’t have to complete the 7-hour training. Their LMP license already embeds the qualification, and they don’t need a Worker Wallet entry to perform an inspection themselves.
The 7-hour training requirement only applies to technicians who are performing the inspection on behalf of an LMP. If the person on site is the LMP listed on your filing, the Worker Wallet check doesn’t apply to them personally. If the person doing the actual inspection isn’t the LMP — which is the typical setup for any busy plumbing operation — that technician needs both credentials, verifiable in the Worker Wallet, before the inspection is considered valid.
What This Means If You’re a Building Owner or Property Manager
If your building is on the four-year LL152 cycle, the practical implication is simple: the company you hire needs to field a properly credentialed team, not just a properly licensed firm. A reputable inspector should be able to answer three questions without hesitation, and produce verification if asked.
Who is the Licensed Master Plumber of record on our filing? If the LMP isn’t on site, is the inspecting technician a DOB-registered journeyman plumber? Is that technician’s 7-Hour Periodic Gas Inspector training uploaded into the DOB Digital Worker Wallet?
If you get vague answers, hold the inspection until you have clear ones. A non-compliant credential trail can invalidate the inspection, leaving you exposed to fines, a re-inspection charge, and a missed deadline — all on top of what you’ve already paid for.
How to Verify Your LL152 Inspector’s Credentials
The DOB built the Digital Worker Wallet to make verification fast. Your contractor should be able to show that the technician’s 7-hour training is uploaded under their name, and the LMP of record should be clearly identified on the inspection report and on the DOB NOW filing. If your contractor can’t produce that information on request, that’s itself a signal worth acting on.
For owners managing a portfolio across multiple buildings, it’s worth standardizing this verification step in your inspection vendor intake — even a short pre-inspection checklist will protect you across cycles.
Why LL142 Was Tightened in the First Place
Gas piping inspections aren’t visual formalities. They involve pressure testing, leak detection, and a careful read of joints, valves, and fittings in spaces that aren’t usually scrutinized between four-year cycles. The DOB tightened the credential rules under LL142 because the inspection’s value depends on the inspector — not just on the firm that signs the report. A formal credential trail through the Worker Wallet system makes it possible to enforce quality without slowing down filings.
For building owners, the credential question is now also a quality question. A team that has invested in the 7-hour Periodic Gas Inspector training is a team that has invested in doing the inspection correctly the first time.
Scheduling Your Next LL152 Inspection
Energo offers LL152 gas piping inspections across all five NYC boroughs. Every LL152 filing requires a Licensed Master Plumber of record, and any technician performing the inspection on the LMP’s behalf must now carry both DOB journeyman registration and the 7-Hour Periodic Gas Inspector training verifiable through the Digital Worker Wallet. If you’d like to confirm credentials before scheduling, ask up front — a credible contractor will walk you through who is doing the work and how their qualifications are documented.
If your building is approaching its four-year LL152 cycle deadline, or you’re not sure whether your last inspection was filed by a credentialed team under LL142’s tightened rules, Energo can pull the filing history, confirm where you stand, and schedule the next inspection on the right side of the law.
Common NYC DOB Violations: Heating, Boilers & Gas
The DOB and DEP violations NYC building owners get fined for most: LL152 gas piping, boiler inspections, LL84/LL97, No. 4 oil, and permits.
NYC Local Law 152 Inspection Checklist: What’s Checked and What Happens Next
An NYC Local Law 152 inspection is a periodic visual inspection of a covered building’s exposed gas piping, performed by a New York City Licensed Master Plumber. The inspection focuses on what the plumber can safely and legally see and evaluate — exposed piping, valves, joints, meters, and any signs of leakage, corrosion, damage, or conditions that may be unsafe or out of code.