Do CRNs Expire? CRN Renewal Requirements in Canada Explained
A complete guide to understanding which Canadian Registration Numbers require renewal, which ones don't, and how to keep your pressure equipment compliant across every province.
Quick Answer: Do CRNs Need to Be Renewed?
CRNs for fittings expire after 10 years from the date of first provincial approval and must be renewed to remain valid. CRNs for pressure vessels and boilers do not expire, but designs can become obsolete when referenced codes or standards change. Piping systems generally require re-registration for each new installation, unless the system is a duplicate at the same address. The rules vary by province and equipment type, and this guide covers all of them.
Understanding CRN Expiry: Why It Matters for Your Business
A Canadian Registration Number (CRN) is required for every pressure equipment design sold, installed, or operated in Canada. It confirms that a design meets the safety requirements of CSA B51 and applicable ASME or CSA construction codes. Without a valid CRN, equipment cannot be legally supplied or put into service.
What many manufacturers and suppliers don't realize is that not all CRNs are permanent. The renewal and re-registration requirements differ based on the type of equipment. Letting a registration lapse, even unintentionally, can halt production, delay projects, and create significant compliance risk.
This guide breaks down exactly which CRNs expire, which ones don't, what triggers re-registration, and how to manage the process across multiple Canadian provinces and territories.
The word "renewal" applies specifically to fittings under CSA B51. Pressure vessels and boilers follow different rules. Piping systems have their own registration category entirely. Treating them all the same is a common mistake that leads to compliance gaps.
Fitting CRNs: The 10-Year Renewal Rule
Under CSA B51 (clause 4.2.1), CRN registrations for fittings expire 10 years after the date the first province grants approval. This is the most straightforward expiry rule in the CRN system, and it applies to components such as:
- Valves (ball, gate, globe, check, relief, and safety valves)
- Flanges and flange assemblies
- Couplings and connectors
- Strainers and filters
- Expansion joints
- Sight glasses, gauges, and instrument connections
- Any pressure-retaining component classified as a fitting
How the 10-Year Clock Works
If you registered a fitting in Alberta through ABSA in 2015 and then extended the registration to Ontario (TSSA) in 2017, both registrations expire based on the 2015 ABSA approval date. The clock starts with the first province that issued the CRN, not the most recent one.
This catches many companies off guard, especially those who registered across multiple provinces over several years. A manufacturer who added their last province in year eight may discover that the entire registration expires just two years later.
What Happens at Expiry?
Once a fitting CRN expires, the fitting can no longer be referenced in new pressure vessel or piping system design registrations. This means:
- New equipment designs that incorporate the fitting cannot receive CRN approval.
- Existing installations are not affected retroactively, but any modifications or new builds are blocked.
- Manufacturers and distributors may lose their ability to supply the fitting into the Canadian market.
If a commonly used fitting CRN expires without renewal, it can create a ripple effect across dozens or even hundreds of downstream equipment registrations. Every vessel or piping design that references that fitting becomes impossible to register until the fitting CRN is restored.
Pressure Vessel and Boiler CRNs: No Expiry, But Not Permanent
CRNs for pressure vessels and boilers do not have a fixed expiry date. Once a design is approved and registered, you can manufacture unlimited copies of that design without re-registering it. This is a significant distinction from fitting CRNs.
However, "no expiry" does not mean the CRN lasts forever without any action on your part. There are situations where a vessel or boiler CRN effectively becomes obsolete or requires re-registration.
When Re-Registration Is Required
- Code edition changes: When the referenced construction code is updated and the new edition introduces changes that affect the design (for example, the transition from TEMA to ASME UHX rules for tubesheet design in heat exchangers).
- Material specification updates: If allowable stress values change in the referenced material standards, affecting pressure ratings or minimum thickness calculations.
- Design modifications: Any change to nozzle locations, vessel dimensions, materials of construction, or operating conditions typically requires a new CRN submission.
- Jurisdictional rule changes: Provincial authorities may require re-evaluation when their adopted Acts, Codes, or Standards are amended.
Annual Compliance Reviews
While the CRN itself doesn't expire, pressure vessels and boilers require yearly compliance reviews by authorized inspectors. These inspections confirm that the equipment in service continues to meet safety requirements. This is not the same as CRN renewal. It's an operational compliance obligation that applies to the equipment owner and operator, not the design registration holder.
Even though vessel and boiler CRNs don't expire on a fixed schedule, manufacturers should monitor code revisions closely. Building a vessel to an outdated code edition can result in provincial authorities rejecting the registration for new builds. Staying current with ASME and CSA code requirements is essential for ongoing compliance.
| Equipment Type | CRN Expiry | Renewal Required? | Re-Registration Triggers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fittings | 10 years from first approval | Yes, mandatory | Time-based expiry under CSA B51 |
| Pressure Vessels | No fixed expiry | No, unless triggered | Code changes, design modifications, material updates |
| Boilers | No fixed expiry | No, unless triggered | Code changes, design modifications, material updates |
| Piping Systems | Per installation | Re-registration per address | Each new installation (with exceptions) |
Piping System CRNs: Re-Registration Requirements
Pressure piping systems follow a completely different registration model than fittings or vessels. In most provinces, piping CRNs are tied to a specific installation at a specific address. This means the same piping design must be re-registered each time it's installed at a new location.
The General Rule
If you install an identical piping system at a different address, you'll typically need a new CRN registration for that installation. The only common exception is duplicate systems installed at the same facility address.
Fitting Classification for Small Piping Assemblies
There is a practical workaround for smaller piping assemblies. If a piping system has an internal volume of 1.5 cubic feet or less, it can often be registered as a fitting rather than a piping system. This changes the registration model entirely, as fitting CRNs allow unlimited copies (within their 10-year validity period) without per-installation re-registration.
For larger assemblies exceeding 1.5 cubic feet, some jurisdictions offer a Category H fitting registration through the Authorized Chief Inspectors (ACI) group. This can allow a piping system to be registered as a fitting even if it exceeds the volume threshold.
When Burst Testing May Be Required
Provincial authorities may require burst testing as part of the registration process for piping components or small assemblies seeking fitting classification. This is especially common when:
- Engineering calculations alone cannot fully validate the design.
- The component has a non-standard geometry or uses uncommon materials.
- The authority requires physical proof of pressure capacity beyond theoretical analysis.
Burst testing establishes the actual failure pressure of a component, providing definitive evidence of its pressure-containing capability. If your piping components or fittings may need this type of validation, working with a qualified burst testing provider early in the process prevents delays during the review stage.
Provincial Updates and Jurisdictional Differences
CRN registration in Canada is governed at the provincial and territorial level. While CSA B51 provides the national framework, each jurisdiction interprets and enforces it through its own regulatory authority. This creates real differences in how renewals, re-registrations, and special cases are handled.
Here are several important jurisdictional developments that affect CRN renewal and piping registration.
Ontario (TSSA)
The Technical Standards and Safety Authority has been developing a Standard Piping registration process. This would allow certain piping designs to be registered once and used across multiple installations within the province, similar to how fitting CRNs work.
Alberta (ABSA)
The Alberta Boilers Safety Association created a Mobile Piping registration process. This addresses piping systems installed on mobile equipment (such as oil and gas well service units) that move between sites within Alberta.
Saskatchewan
Saskatchewan requires piping system re-registration for each installation address. There is no blanket exemption for duplicate systems at different locations within the province.
ACI (National)
The Authorized Chief Inspectors group offers a Category H fitting registration option. This allows piping systems exceeding 1.5 cubic feet to be registered as fittings, reducing the need for per-installation registration.
These jurisdictional differences highlight why managing CRN registrations across multiple provinces is complex. Each province may have different timelines, documentation requirements, and interpretations of what constitutes a "new installation" versus a "duplicate."
For manufacturers selling pressure equipment across Canada, understanding these provincial nuances is critical. Our CRN experts work with every Canadian jurisdiction and can help you navigate multi-province registration and renewal efficiently.
The CRN Renewal Process: Step by Step
For fitting CRNs approaching their 10-year expiry, a structured renewal process is essential. Here's what's involved.
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1
Identify Expiring Registrations
Review your CRN portfolio to determine which fitting registrations are approaching their 10-year anniversary. Remember that the clock starts from the first province's approval date, not the most recent one.
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2
Verify Current Code Compliance
Confirm that the fitting design still meets the current edition of the applicable construction code. If the code has been updated since the original registration, the design documentation may need to be revised.
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3
Update Design Documentation
Prepare updated engineering calculations, drawings, and material specifications as needed. All documents must reference current code editions and meet current provincial requirements.
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4
Submit to Provincial Authorities
File the renewal application with each province where the fitting is registered. Multi-province renewals require coordination across multiple regulatory bodies. Processing times vary by jurisdiction.
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5
Address Review Comments
Provincial reviewers may issue comments or requests for additional information. Responding promptly and accurately is critical to avoiding extended review cycles and potential lapses in registration.
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6
Receive Renewed CRN
Once approved, the fitting receives a renewed CRN valid for another 10 years. Update your internal records and notify downstream customers who reference the fitting in their own CRN registrations.
Start the renewal process at least 12 to 18 months before expiry. Provincial review timelines can be unpredictable, and any required design updates or additional testing will add time. Waiting until the last minute is the most common cause of CRN lapses.
Consequences of Letting a CRN Lapse
Allowing a CRN to expire or become obsolete without action creates tangible business and compliance risks.
Operational Impact
- Blocked new registrations: Any new pressure vessel or piping design referencing an expired fitting CRN cannot be registered. This can stall projects and manufacturing schedules.
- Supply chain disruption: If you supply fittings to other manufacturers, their CRN applications are also blocked. This can damage commercial relationships.
- Market access loss: You cannot legally sell, distribute, or install pressure fittings in Canada without a valid CRN.
Regulatory and Legal Risk
- Provincial enforcement actions: Installing or selling unregistered pressure equipment violates provincial safety legislation. Penalties can include fines, stop-work orders, and equipment seizures.
- Liability exposure: Operating equipment with an expired CRN can create insurance and liability complications in the event of an incident.
- Audit findings: Quality audits and regulatory inspections will flag expired registrations as non-conformances.
The cost of proactive renewal is always lower than the cost of reactive compliance recovery. Companies that track their CRN expiry dates and plan renewals in advance avoid these risks entirely.
How to Stay Ahead of CRN Compliance
Managing CRN renewals and re-registrations across multiple equipment types and provinces requires a systematic approach. Here are practical strategies that help manufacturers, suppliers, and operators stay compliant.
1. Maintain a CRN Registry
Keep a centralized database of all your CRN registrations, including fitting type, approval date (per province), expiry date, referenced code edition, and the provinces where each registration is active. This is the foundation of proactive compliance management.
2. Set Renewal Reminders Early
Flag fitting CRNs for renewal at least 18 months before their expiry date. This gives you time to update documentation, conduct any required testing, and work through the provincial review process without risking a lapse.
3. Monitor Code Updates
Subscribe to updates from ASME and CSA for the codes that apply to your equipment. When a new edition is published, assess whether it affects any of your existing CRN registrations. Code engineering support can help you evaluate the impact efficiently.
4. Coordinate Multi-Province Renewals
If your fittings are registered in multiple provinces, coordinate all renewals together. This ensures consistent documentation across jurisdictions and prevents gaps where a fitting is valid in some provinces but expired in others.
5. Work with CRN Specialists
The complexity of multi-province CRN management, code compliance tracking, and renewal coordination is significant. Working with a firm that specializes in CRN registration and compliance reduces the burden on your internal engineering team and minimizes the risk of errors or missed deadlines.
6. Invest in CRN Training
Building internal knowledge of CRN processes, code requirements, and provincial regulations strengthens your compliance posture. CRN training programs give your engineering and quality teams the skills to manage registrations confidently.
Frequently Asked Questions About CRN Renewal
It depends on the equipment type. CRNs for fittings expire after 10 years from the date of first provincial approval and must be renewed under CSA B51. CRNs for pressure vessels and boilers do not have a fixed expiry, but designs can become obsolete when referenced codes or standards change. Piping systems generally require re-registration for each new installation address.
Timelines vary by province and complexity. Simple fitting renewals with no code changes can be processed in a few weeks. Renewals that require design documentation updates, additional testing, or multi-province coordination can take several months. Starting 12 to 18 months before expiry is recommended to avoid lapses.
Burst testing is typically required when a fitting or component cannot be fully validated through calculations alone. Provincial authorities may request burst test data for non-standard fittings, complex geometries, uncommon materials, or cases where the design falls outside the scope of code formulas. It establishes the actual failure pressure of the component.
The primary standards are CSA B51 (the national standard for boilers, pressure vessels, and pressure piping) and the ASME Boiler and Pressure Vessel Code (BPVC), particularly Section VIII for vessel design. Pressure piping systems fall under ASME B31.3 or other applicable B31 codes. Provincial safety legislation determines which code editions are adopted in each jurisdiction.
The fitting can no longer be referenced in new pressure vessel or piping CRN registrations. Any new equipment designs using that fitting will be unable to obtain CRN approval until the fitting registration is restored. Existing installations are not retroactively affected, but new manufacturing and new projects are blocked.
Don't Let an Expired CRN Stall Your Operations
Titan Research Group helps manufacturers, suppliers, and operators manage CRN renewals, new registrations, and multi-province compliance across Canada. Our engineering team handles the entire process so you can focus on building.
