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24/7 Emergency Dispatch

Emergency Plumbing Service

Burst pipe? Sewage backup? Major leak? TotalServe connects homeowners with vetted, licensed plumbers for round-the-clock emergency dispatch — nights, weekends, and holidays included. Don't wait for morning.

The Basics

What Counts as a Plumbing Emergency?

A plumbing emergency is any situation where water, sewage, or gas is causing — or about to cause — significant damage to your home, your health, or your safety. The defining test isn't how dramatic it looks. It's whether waiting until business hours will make things worse. Burst pipes flood floors and ruin drywall in minutes. Sewage backups create biohazards. Gas leaks risk explosion and asphyxiation. None of these wait until 9am Monday.

The other half of the equation is cost. Every minute a real plumbing emergency goes unaddressed multiplies the damage — and the cost to fix it. A burst pipe caught in the first 10 minutes might cost a few hundred dollars to repair. The same burst pipe left running for 6 hours can cause $20,000+ in water damage, mold remediation, and flooring replacement. The plumber's after-hours rate is almost always cheaper than the damage of waiting.

Common Plumbing Emergencies

Not every plumbing problem is an emergency. But these are the situations where you should request dispatch immediately, regardless of the time of day.

Burst Pipe

Critical

Water actively flooding the home. Causes structural damage, mold, and electrical hazards within hours. Shut off main water immediately, then call.

Sewage Backup

Critical

Wastewater coming up through drains, toilets, or floor drains. Biohazardous and indicates a major main line blockage. Avoid contact and dispatch immediately.

Gas Leak (Smell)

Critical

Sulfur or rotten egg smell near gas appliances or water heater. Leave the home, call your gas utility's emergency line first, then a plumber.

No Water at All

Urgent

Complete loss of water with no city outage notice. Could be a frozen line, a broken main line, or a pump failure. Needs immediate diagnosis.

Major Leak Under Sink

Urgent

Active leak you can't stop with the local shutoff valve. Shut off main water if needed, then dispatch. Don't wait if it's spreading.

Water Heater Failure

Urgent

Tank leaking water across the floor, or hot water pouring from a relief valve. Indicates failure that can flood the area or scald someone.

Frozen / Burst Risk Pipes

Urgent

Pipes that have frozen and aren't yet burst. Time-critical — every hour increases burst risk. See our frozen pipes service.

Toilet Overflow Won't Stop

Urgent

Toilet that keeps overflowing even after you've shut its supply valve, or overflow that's reaching electrical outlets or spreading to other rooms.

Sump Pump Failure During Storm

Urgent

Basement sump pump not running during active flooding. Risk of complete basement flood. See our sump pump service.

If you're not sure whether your situation qualifies, err on the side of calling. Our network plumbers are dispatched 24/7 and would rather respond to a borderline call than have you wait while real damage happens. For underlying issues that often cause emergencies, see water line repair, sewer repair, and pipe repair.

Warning Signs

6 Signs You Need Emergency Dispatch Right Now

These are the red-flag situations where waiting even an hour multiplies the damage. If you're seeing any of these, don't try to diagnose — request dispatch.

💦

Water Pooling on Floors

Standing water anywhere it shouldn't be — basement, kitchen, bathroom — means an active leak. Find the source, shut it off if possible, and dispatch.

🌊

Visible Flooding

Water actively spreading across rooms, into walls, or down through ceilings. This is a critical emergency. Shut off your main water valve immediately.

🚽

Sewage in Tubs or Sinks

Brown water, sludge, or sewage smell coming up through drains means your main sewer line is fully blocked. Health hazard — avoid contact.

Gas Smell Near Appliances

Sulfur or rotten egg smell near your water heater, stove, or gas line. Leave the house, call your gas utility first, then dispatch a plumber.

❄️

Frozen Pipes

No water flow on a cold day, or visible frost on exposed pipes. Frozen pipes burst as they thaw — every hour matters before damage occurs.

Water Near Electrical

Any water leak near outlets, panels, or appliances creates a shock and fire risk. Shut off the affected circuit and dispatch immediately.

Don't try to diagnose first. Don't watch a YouTube video. Don't wait for morning. Fill out the form below — emergency requests are dispatched immediately, 24/7.

Wait or Call?

How to Decide: Emergency or Can It Wait?

Not every plumbing problem needs after-hours dispatch. Knowing the difference saves you the premium emergency rate when it isn't necessary — and ensures you don't wait when you shouldn't.

Call Now (Don't Wait)

Damage is happening or imminent.

  • Active flooding or visible standing water
  • Sewage backing up into the home
  • Gas smell anywhere in the house
  • Burst pipe with water actively flowing
  • Complete loss of water in the home
  • Water heater leaking or tank rupture
  • Water near electrical outlets or panels
  • Frozen pipes that haven't burst yet

Can Usually Wait Until Morning

Annoying, but no immediate damage risk.

  • Slow drain in one fixture
  • Running toilet (with water still working)
  • Small drip from a faucet
  • Low water pressure in one fixture
  • Minor leak under sink (caught in a bucket)
  • Loud pipes or banging sounds
  • Discolored hot water occasionally
  • Garbage disposal jammed

The general rule: if water is actively damaging your home, sewage is present, gas is involved, or someone could be hurt — it's an emergency. If it's just inconvenient or cosmetic, it can usually wait for normal business hours and save you the after-hours premium. When in doubt, dispatch — the cost of waiting on a real emergency is always higher than the cost of an after-hours service call.

Immediate Action Steps

What To Do Right Now (Before the Plumber Arrives)

The first 5 minutes of a plumbing emergency matter more than the next 5 hours. Here's exactly what to do for the most common emergencies — in order — while you wait for dispatch.

Burst Pipe or Major Leak

Stop the water first

Every second counts. Find your main water shutoff valve (usually in the basement, crawlspace, garage, or outside near the meter) and turn it clockwise until it stops fully.

  1. Locate and close the main water shutoff valve
  2. Open the lowest faucet in the home to drain remaining pressure
  3. Move valuables and furniture away from the water
  4. Place towels or buckets to contain pooling water
  5. Take photos of the damage for your insurance claim
  6. Request emergency dispatch via the form below
Sewage Backup

Avoid contact, contain the area

Sewage water is biohazardous. Don't try to clean it up yourself with regular cleaning supplies. Get people and pets out of affected areas.

  1. Stop using all drains, toilets, dishwashers, and washing machines
  2. Keep children and pets out of affected areas
  3. Open windows to ventilate (if safe)
  4. Don't use chemical drain cleaners — they make things worse
  5. Take photos of affected areas for insurance
  6. Request emergency dispatch immediately
Gas Leak Smell

Leave the house immediately

Don't flip switches, light matches, or use phones inside the home. Even small sparks can ignite a gas leak. Get everyone out first.

  1. Get all people and pets out of the house immediately
  2. Don't turn lights on or off (sparks can ignite gas)
  3. Once outside, call your gas utility's emergency line first
  4. Then call a plumber once the gas leak is confirmed safe
  5. Don't return until utility crews give the all-clear
Water Heater Failure

Cut power and water to the unit

A leaking or failing water heater can flood a basement quickly and create electrical or scalding hazards. Isolate the unit before doing anything else.

  1. Shut off the cold water supply valve to the water heater
  2. Turn off the gas valve (gas units) or breaker (electric units)
  3. Open a hot water faucet to relieve internal pressure
  4. Don't try to drain the tank yourself — water may be scalding
  5. Move stored items away from the water heater area
  6. Request dispatch — see also our water heater repair service
Pricing

What Does Emergency Plumbing Cost?

Emergency plumbing rates are higher than standard daytime rates because of the after-hours dispatch, faster response, and the complexity of unexpected problems. Here's what to expect.

$150–$350

Emergency Service Call

The base rate for after-hours, weekend, or holiday dispatch. Includes the trip and initial diagnosis. Repair costs are additional.

$1,500–$5,000+

Major Emergency Work

Main water line breaks, full sewer line clearing, water heater replacement, major flooding repair. The high end of emergency dispatch.

Emergency rates are typically 1.5x to 2x normal rates depending on time of day, day of week, and how quickly the plumber needs to arrive. A weeknight call at 8pm costs less than a 3am Sunday call. Holidays and snowstorms push rates higher because plumbers are scarce. The biggest cost driver is almost always the actual repair work, not the after-hours premium itself.

Red Flags in Emergency Plumbing Calls

  • A plumber who quotes a fixed price over the phone without seeing the issue
  • Pressure to authorize thousands of dollars of work before any diagnosis
  • Refusal to provide a written estimate before starting
  • "Specialists" who showed up without being requested (storm chaser scams)
  • No license number visible on the truck or invoice
  • Demands for cash payment only or large up-front deposits
  • Claims that the entire system needs replacement based on a single visible issue

This is exactly why TotalServe pre-vets every plumber in our network for licensing, insurance, and customer complaints — even for emergency dispatch. When you're stressed, panicked, and dealing with active damage, the last thing you need is to wonder if the person showing up is legitimate. Learn more about our matching process →

Get Help Now

Need Emergency Plumbing Help in Your Area?

Fill out the form and we'll match you with a vetted, licensed plumber for immediate emergency dispatch. Available 24/7 — nights, weekends, and holidays. Free for homeowners and no obligation.

Every plumber licensed, insured & background-checked
24/7 dispatch — nights, weekends, holidays
Local plumbers who can arrive fast — not a national call center
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Get Connected Today

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How It Works

Getting Emergency Help from TotalServe

Most homeowners are matched with an emergency plumber within minutes. See our full process →

1

Submit Request

Fill out the form with your location and emergency. Takes about 60 seconds.

2

Immediate Match

We connect your request to a vetted emergency plumber on duty in your area.

3

Plumber Calls You

Your matched pro calls you within minutes to confirm dispatch and arrival time.

4

On-Site Repair

Plumber arrives with the right equipment, gives an upfront estimate, then fixes it.

Common Questions

Emergency Plumbing FAQs

Everything homeowners commonly ask about after-hours dispatch, costs, and what to do during a plumbing emergency.

1
How fast can a plumber actually arrive in an emergency?
Most TotalServe network plumbers can be on-site within 60–90 minutes during normal hours, and within 2–3 hours during overnight or holiday calls. Response time depends on your location, current weather, and how many active calls the network is handling. For life-safety situations like gas leaks, always call your utility's emergency line first — they typically arrive within 30 minutes for gas emergencies.
2
How much more does emergency plumbing cost vs. a normal call?
Emergency rates typically run 1.5x to 2x standard daytime rates. A weeknight evening call is on the lower end; a 3am holiday call is on the higher end. The biggest cost is usually the repair work itself, not the after-hours premium. A burst pipe caught early is cheap. The same pipe left running for hours costs ten times more in water damage repair than the after-hours service call ever would have.
3
How do I shut off the main water valve?
Every home has a main shutoff valve, usually located where the water line enters the house — basement, crawlspace, garage, or outside near the water meter. Turn the valve clockwise (right) until it stops. If it's a lever-style valve, turn it 90 degrees so the handle is perpendicular to the pipe. If you can't find it or it's stuck, the city can shut off water at the curb stop valve in true emergencies. Locate yours now, before you need it.
4
What should I do if a pipe bursts in the middle of the night?
First: shut off the main water valve immediately to stop the flow. Second: open the lowest faucet in the house to drain remaining pressure. Third: move valuables and furniture away from the water. Fourth: take photos for your insurance claim. Fifth: request emergency dispatch. Don't try to repair it yourself in the middle of the night — your priority is stopping the water and documenting the damage. Underlying cause is often pipe failure from age or freeze.
5
Is sewage backing up always an emergency?
Yes — always. Sewage water is biohazardous and indicates your main sewer line is fully blocked. Continued use of any drains, toilets, or appliances will push more sewage into the home. Stop using all water immediately, keep people and pets out of affected areas, and request emergency dispatch. Don't try to clear it yourself with chemical drain cleaners — they don't work on main line blockages and create hazards for the plumber. See also our sewer repair service.
6
I smell gas. What do I do first?
Get out of the house immediately. Don't flip light switches, don't light matches, don't use your phone inside (sparks from any of these can ignite gas). Once you're safely outside, call your gas utility's emergency line first — they handle gas leak diagnosis and shutoff. After the gas situation is confirmed safe, then call a plumber to address the underlying problem. Never re-enter the home until utility crews give the all-clear.
7
Will my homeowners insurance cover emergency plumbing damage?
Most standard homeowners policies cover the resulting damage from a burst pipe (ruined flooring, drywall, furniture) but NOT the cost of fixing the pipe itself — that's considered a maintenance issue. Sewer backups typically require a separate "sewer backup" rider, which most homeowners don't have. Take photos of all damage immediately, document everything with timestamps, and contact your insurance carrier as soon as the immediate emergency is contained. Some insurers also offer emergency plumber referrals as part of your policy.
8
What's the difference between calling 911 and calling a plumber?
Call 911 if there's an active fire, electrical emergency with someone in danger, or someone is injured (slip, scald, electrocution risk from water near outlets). Call your gas utility's emergency line for any suspected gas leak. Call a plumber for everything else — burst pipes, sewage backups, water heater failures, frozen pipes. If you're unsure whether the situation involves a structural or electrical hazard, err on the side of 911 first, plumber second.
9
Can I prevent most plumbing emergencies?
Many of them, yes. Insulate exposed pipes before winter to prevent freezing. Replace old galvanized or polybutylene water lines proactively. Get an annual water heater inspection. Don't pour grease down kitchen drains. Have older sewer lines camera-inspected if you have mature trees nearby. Replace washing machine hoses every 5 years. The cheapest plumbing emergency is the one you never had — preventative maintenance pays for itself many times over.
10
Does TotalServe employ the plumbers directly?
No. TotalServe is a referral and dispatch service — we don't employ plumbers or perform plumbing work ourselves. The plumbers in our network are independent licensed contractors we've vetted for licensing, insurance, and quality. We act as a trusted connector between homeowners and pros we already know are reliable, even at 3am. Learn more about how we operate →
11
Is your service really free for homeowners?
Yes — completely free. TotalServe charges nothing to homeowners at any point, including for emergency dispatch. We're compensated by the licensed contractors in our network when we refer qualified leads to them. You only pay the plumber for the actual repair work — same price you'd pay if you found that plumber directly.

Plumbing Emergency? We're Here 24/7.

Don't wait for morning. Burst pipes, sewage backups, and major leaks need immediate dispatch — our network is ready around the clock.

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