Sillcocks and hose bibbs handle outdoor water shutoff at the point of use, typically for garden hoses, washdown, and seasonal watering. A standard hose bibb places the shutoff at the exterior. A frost-free sillcock places the shutoff deeper inside the wall, which helps reduce freeze damage risk in cold climates.
Frost-free options are commonly split into anti-siphon and non-anti-siphon styles. Anti-siphon designs add backflow protection at the outlet, which matters any time a hose can sit in a bucket, a puddle, or a sprayer full of chemicals.
Related aisles that pair naturally with outdoor faucets:
Frost-free sillcocks:
https://www.supplyhouse.com/Frost-Free-Sillcocks-Frost-Proof-316000
Hose bibbs:
https://www.supplyhouse.com/Hose-Bibbs-13520000
Vacuum breakers and hose-connection backflow parts:
https://www.supplyhouse.com/Vacuum-Breakers-1620000
and
https://www.supplyhouse.com/Hose-Connection-Vacuum-Breakers-611000
Garden hoses and hose-end fittings:
https://www.supplyhouse.com/Garden-Hoses-38360000
and
https://www.supplyhouse.com/Garden-Hose-Fittings-19990000
Shutoff valves for an interior isolation point:
https://www.supplyhouse.com/Ball-Valves-21773000
How to narrow the right sillcock or hose bibb fast
Start with freeze risk.
Frost-free sillcocks fit exterior installs where winter temperatures routinely drop below freezing. Standard hose bibbs make more sense where freezing is not a concern, or where the piping can be fully drained seasonally.
Decide on anti-siphon vs non-anti-siphon early.
Anti-siphon is the safer default when a hose can be submerged or connected to chemical sprayers. Hose bibb vacuum breakers also exist as add-ons for many hose-thread outlets.
Match the inlet connection to the piping plan.
Outdoor faucet bodies and sillcocks come in different inlet types, including PEX and push-to-connect variants depending on the model. PEX-focused sillcock categories exist for common PEX install paths.
https://www.supplyhouse.com/PEX-Frost-Free-Sillcocks-1762000
and
https://www.supplyhouse.com/F1960-PEX-Sillcocks-23301000
Pick the operating style that fits the use case.
Quarter-turn models are fast and simple for frequent use. Multi-turn models provide more gradual throttling and are common in general outdoor faucet replacements.
Add an interior shutoff where serviceability matters.
A dedicated interior ball valve upstream of the exterior faucet makes seasonal service, replacement, and winter shutoff less painful.
https://www.supplyhouse.com/Ball-Valves-21773000
FAQs
What is the difference between a sillcock and a hose bibb?
A hose bibb is an outdoor faucet with the shutoff at the exterior. A frost-free sillcock moves the shutoff deeper into the structure so water drains out of the exterior portion when shut off, which helps reduce freeze damage risk.
What does “frost-free” really change?
Frost-free designs place the working valve deeper inside and use a long stem to the handle outside. Freeze resistance still depends on correct pitch and drainage, plus hose removal during cold weather.
What does “anti-siphon” mean on an outdoor faucet?
Anti-siphon indicates built-in backflow protection at the outlet to reduce the chance of contaminated water being pulled back into the potable supply. Vacuum breakers are the common backflow component family used for this job.
Is a hose bibb vacuum breaker the same as an anti-siphon sillcock?
Both aim at backsiphonage protection at the hose connection point. Anti-siphon sillcocks build protection into the faucet assembly. Hose-connection vacuum breakers are add-ons for many hose-thread faucets.
Why do outdoor faucets fail in winter?
Frozen water expands inside the body and cracks the casting. Hoses left attached can trap water in the outlet section, so removal matters for frost-free designs.
When does a quarter-turn hose bibb make sense?
Quarter-turn fits frequent on and off use and quick shutoff. Multi-turn can be preferable when throttling flow is useful.