State Water Heater Age: Serial Number Decoder
State water heaters are built by A.O. Smith and use the same date code: the first four digits of the serial number are the build date, with the first two being the year and the next two the week. That gives you an exact year, with no 20-year guesswork.
How old is my State water heater?
The first four digits of the serial number are the build date: the first two are the year and the next two are the week. Type your serial for an instant date, or read it by eye with the steps below.
e.g. Where's my serial number?
Standard State tank models use this code. Some specialty or non-standard units may use a different serial format.
Where to find your serial number
- Find the rating/specification label on the side of the tank, usually in the upper third of the unit.
- The serial number sits next to the model number; the first four digits are the date code (for example, 1210A002243).
- This applies to State, State Select, and older State Industries tanks — all built by A.O. Smith.
- On tankless models, check the label on the front or side of the cabinet.
How to read a State serial number
Rules last verified 2026-05-31Read the first four digits of the serial number. The first two are the year (20YY) and the next two are the week of that year (01 through 53). A single letter may sit in front of the digits. The week tells you roughly which month.
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Find the rating plate and serial number
Look for the rating label on the side of the tank, usually in the upper third. The serial number is printed next to the model number.
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Read the first two digits for the year
The first two digits are the year of manufacture. For example, 12 means 2012 and 18 means 2018. A single letter in front of the digits can be ignored.
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Read the next two digits for the week
The third and fourth digits are the week of the year, 01 through 53. Week 10 is early March, week 26 is late June, week 40 is early October. That gives you the approximate month.
Older / discontinued State and A.O. Smith serial formats
Mostly pre-2008, though some styles persisted into roughly 2008–2010. Older State Industries codes are letter-based and overlap, so treat the result as an estimate and confirm with the official lookup.
| Serial example | How it decodes |
|---|---|
| AF04A093001 | Digits after the letters = year (04 → 2004); 2nd letter = month (A=Jan … M=Dec, skipping I), so F = June 2004. |
| GG03-1495366-S29 | Digits after the letters = year (03 → 2003); 2nd letter = month, so G = July 2003. |
| E07A135491 | 1st letter = month (E = May); next two digits = year (07 → 2007). |
| A20-H-78-015482 | 1970s style: digits between the hyphens = year (78 → 1978); 2nd letter = month (H = August). |
Worked examples
1210A002243 12 is the year 2012; 10 is week 10, which falls in early March. Built around March 2012.
S1318F000046 Ignore the leading S. 13 is the year 2013; 18 is week 18, in early May. Built around May 2013.
1836111786352 18 is the year 2018; 36 is week 36, in early September. Built around September 2018.
State, State Select, and the A.O. Smith family
State (sold today as State and State Select, and earlier as State Industries) is an A.O. Smith brand, so its serial date code is identical to A.O. Smith's. The same first-four-digit year-and-week rule applies, and State's own warranty tool reads State serials. American, Reliance, and U.S. Craftmaster are other A.O. Smith brands that use the same code. If your unit is a very old State Industries model and the first four digits are not a year and week, use the older-formats table above or the official lookup.
What your manufacture date tells you
Warranty
Your build date sets the warranty baseline. State residential warranties run in tiers (commonly 6 or 10 years on many models; some lines differ). Start-date rules vary by model: many run from the installation or purchase date, and the manufacture date encoded in the serial may be used when proof is missing. Enter your serial in State's Warranty Verification tool to see the exact coverage and expiration for your unit.
Check warranty by serial at State ↗
How long they last and when to replace
A.O. Smith, which builds State water heaters, puts most of its water heaters at about 8 to 12 years, and suggests replacement is worth considering after 10 years if the unit leaks or runs erratically.
Home inspectors generally treat 10 to 12 years as the typical service life for a tank water heater, and many flag units past 15 years for replacement. (Industry guidance.)
Gas tankless units often last 15 to 20 years with descaling and good water quality. This is a general industry estimate.
Watch for these replacement warning signs:
- Age past 10 to 12 years. At or beyond typical tank service life; start planning a replacement.
- Rusty hot water. Discoloration from the hot tap can signal internal tank corrosion.
- Rumbling or popping. Noise usually means sediment buildup, which cuts efficiency and stresses the tank.
- Leaks at the base. Water around the base needs immediate attention and often means the tank is failing.
Why the age matters
State recalls and your serial
State-branded gas water heaters were part of A.O. Smith's recall of about 616,000 Ultra-Low NOx units (30, 40, and 50 gallon) over a fire hazard, and the recall is keyed to the same first-four-digit serial code this page decodes. The burner screen can tear and let the burner throw excess radiant heat.
- Affected models
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30, 40 & 50-gallon gas Ultra-Low NOxSold as State / A.O. Smith / American / Kenmore / Reliance / U.S. Craftmaster / Whirlpool - Affected serials
- First four serial digits 1115 through 1631 — week 15 of 2011 through week 31 of 2016 (built April 8, 2011 to August 1, 2016). CPSC recall announced November 8, 2018.
- Hazard
- A torn burner screen can cause excess radiant heat and a fire if the heater sits directly on a wood or other combustible floor.
- Remedy
- Check your model and serial at waterheaterrecall.com for a free repair kit, or call State / A.O. Smith / Reliance / Kenmore at (866) 880-4661.
A separate 2005 recall of Robertshaw R110 gas control valves also covered State-family units. Other older A.O. Smith / State recalls exist — search the CPSC site by brand if your unit falls outside the range above.
Read the official CPSC recall notice ↗ Recall list last checked 2026-05-31
Can't read the serial number?
If the rating plate is corroded, painted over, or missing, try these in order.
- If the rating plate is damaged, check a building permit, install sticker, or service tag for an installation date as a rough age.
- Use State's Warranty Verification tool with the serial number to confirm the build date and coverage.
- Contact State support with the model and serial number for help dating an older or State Industries unit.
Model number vs serial number
The model number identifies the unit's size and configuration, not its build date. Only the serial number's first four digits carry the year and week. In many State residential model numbers a two-digit number indicates the nominal tank capacity in gallons, but confirm exact specs on the official spec sheet.
Frequently asked questions
How do I tell the age of my State water heater?
Read the first four digits of the serial number on the rating plate. The first two are the year (for example, 12 = 2012) and the next two are the week of that year. Enter the serial in the decoder above for an instant build date.
What do the first four digits of a State serial number mean?
The first two digits are the year of manufacture (20YY) and the next two are the week, 01 through 53. A single letter in front of the digits can be ignored. The week tells you the approximate month.
Is State the same as A.O. Smith? What about State Select and State Industries?
State, State Select, and older State Industries water heaters are all built by A.O. Smith and share the same first-four-digit year-and-week date code, so this decoder works for all of them.
Where is the serial number on a State water heater?
On the rating/specification label on the side of the tank, usually in the upper third, next to the model number.
My State serial doesn't start with four digits. How do I read it?
Older State Industries units (mostly pre-2008) use letter-based date codes. See the older-formats table above, or use State's Warranty Verification lookup with your serial.
How precise is the date? Does State give the exact year?
Yes. Unlike brands that reuse a letter every 20 years, the A.O. Smith code State uses gives the exact year plus the week, so there is no decade ambiguity.
Does State base the warranty on the manufacture date or the install date?
Residential warranties generally run from the installation date and come in tiers (commonly 6 or 10 years; some lines differ). Use State's Warranty Verification tool with your serial for the exact coverage.
How long do State water heaters last?
A.O. Smith, which builds State, puts most of its water heaters at about 8 to 12 years, with replacement worth considering after 10 years. Tankless units often run 15 to 20 years (general industry estimate).
Is my State unit part of the Ultra-Low NOx recall?
State-branded gas Ultra-Low NOx units with serial first-four-digits 1115 through 1631 (built April 2011 to August 2016) were recalled for a fire hazard. Check your model and serial at waterheaterrecall.com.
Sources & verification
The serial and date-code rules and examples are sourced below — from manufacturer and inspector references — with recall data from the CPSC. Edge-case formats and broader context (lifespan, inspection, insurance, code) are separately sourced too. Confirm an individual unit with the official lookup.
State (including State Select and older State Industries) water heaters are built by A.O. Smith and use the same first-four-digit year+week serial date code; example 1210A002243 = 2012, week 10.
Official A.O. Smith tool/guidance: the manufacturing date is read from the serial number's leading digits (year then week).
Official State tool that returns warranty status and coverage from the water heater's serial number.
~616,000 30/40/50-gallon gas Ultra-Low NOx water heaters built Apr 8 2011–Aug 1 2016 (serial first-four-digits 1115 through 1631) recalled for a burner-screen fire hazard (recall announced Nov 8 2018); sold under A.O. Smith, State, American, Kenmore, Reliance, U.S. Craftmaster, and Whirlpool. Check model+serial at waterheaterrecall.com. Recall hotline differs by brand: American/Whirlpool/U.S. Craftmaster 866-854-2793; A.O. Smith/State/Reliance/Kenmore 866-880-4661.
2005 recall of Robertshaw R110 gas control valves (made July 25 to August 14, 2005) installed on water heaters from many brands (including Bradford White and A.O. Smith-family units); broken valve screws could leak gas (explosion/fire risk).