SprinklerMap
26 aprile 2026 · 7 min read

Irrigation timer: how to choose and program

Guide to choosing an irrigation timer: mechanical, digital and smart Wi-Fi controllers. How to program schedules, zones and rain sensors to maximise water savings.

Timer types: mechanical, digital and smart

Mechanical timers work with peg discs: simple, cheap (€15–30) but only fixed cycles with no per-zone control. Digital timers with display (€30–80) handle 2–8 independent zones with separate schedules. Smart Wi-Fi timers (€80–200) add app control and live weather integration.

Water savings with smart timers are real: in Mediterranean climates they reduce consumption by 30–40% compared to a fixed schedule.

How many zones do you need

Each zone is a group of sprinklers running simultaneously. Zone count depends on available pressure and flow. A typical zone holds 4–6 pop-ups at 180–220 l/h each.

With 4 zones you can manage a 200–300 sq m garden without pressure issues.

Rain sensor: required by law in many regions

In many Italian regions a rain sensor is legally required for automatic irrigation systems. It stops irrigation when a configurable rainfall threshold is reached (usually 5–10 mm) and resumes only after the sensor dries.

Annual water savings with a rain sensor are 20–35%. For a 200 sq m garden irrigated 4 months a year that means 15–25 cubic metres saved.

Optimal scheduling: times and frequency

Irrigate early morning (5–8 am) or after sunset (8–10 pm). Never at midday. Morning is preferred because leaves dry during the day, reducing fungal disease.

Watering every 2–3 days with longer sessions (20–30 min per zone) is more effective than short daily watering: water reaches deeper, encouraging deeper root growth.

Smart timers: worth the extra cost?

Smart timers like Rachio, Hunter Hydrawise or Gardena Smart use local weather data to adjust schedules automatically: if rain is forecast, the night cycle is suppressed. If it's been unusually hot, duration increases by 20%.

The extra cost (€50–120 over a standard digital timer) pays back in 2–3 seasons where water is expensive. The main practical benefit: you never need to remember to switch off the timer when a storm arrives.

Free tool: Use SprinklerMap to design your irrigation system — draw your garden, place sprinklers and generate your material list in minutes.

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