Frozen Pipe Thawing & Burst Pipe Repair
Frozen pipes are a ticking clock. Every hour a pipe stays frozen increases the risk of a burst that floods your home. TotalServe connects homeowners with vetted, licensed plumbers who thaw frozen pipes safely and repair damage fast — 24/7, especially during cold snaps.
What Causes Pipes to Freeze?
When water freezes, it expands by about 9%. Inside a sealed pipe, that expansion creates enormous pressure — often over 40,000 PSI — which is far beyond what any residential pipe can handle. What actually bursts the pipe usually isn't the ice itself, though. It's the water pressure trapped between the frozen section and a closed faucet. As the ice blockage grows, it traps water and builds pressure until the weakest point in the line gives way, typically somewhere between the freeze and the faucet — not at the frozen section itself.
Pipes freeze fastest in uninsulated areas exposed to outside air: unheated garages, crawlspaces, attics, exterior walls, basement rim joists, and anywhere an exposed pipe runs near an open vent or poorly sealed window. Once a pipe freezes, homeowners have a narrow window to thaw it safely before it bursts — and thawing it wrong (with a torch, for example) causes its own set of disasters. Professional frozen pipe service exists because the stakes are high and the timing is tight.
Which Pipes Freeze First?
Not all pipes are equally at risk. Knowing which ones in your home are most vulnerable helps you protect them before the cold hits — and identify the likely culprit when something does freeze.
Outdoor Hose Bibs
High RiskExterior faucets and their supply lines are the most common freeze point. If the hose is still attached when temperatures drop, water can't drain out and the freeze propagates into the wall behind it.
Exterior Wall Pipes
High RiskSupply lines running through exterior walls — especially in kitchens and bathrooms on the north or west side of the house — freeze regularly in older homes with poor insulation.
Crawlspaces & Unheated Basements
High RiskExposed pipes in uninsulated crawlspaces or unheated basement sections. Vent openings and gaps let cold air in and pipes freeze before the rest of the home even notices.
Attic Plumbing
Medium RiskPipes run through attics in some construction — especially second-floor bathrooms above unheated attic space. Poorly insulated attics freeze fast during severe cold snaps.
Garage Supply Lines
Medium RiskPipes running to or through an unheated garage. Even if the garage is insulated, an open garage door during a cold day can drop interior temperatures rapidly.
Under-Sink Pipes on Exterior Walls
Medium RiskKitchen sinks against exterior walls have supply lines in the cold wall cavity. Keeping cabinet doors open during cold snaps lets warm room air reach these pipes.
If your pipes have already burst, shut off your main water valve and request emergency dispatch immediately. For underlying pipe problems that make freeze damage worse, see our pipe repair and water line repair services.
6 Signs Your Pipes Are Freezing or Frozen
The warning signs often appear in a specific order. Catching a freeze in the first stage gives you time to thaw it safely. Catching it after a burst means you're dealing with flood cleanup.
Reduced or No Water Flow
The first and most common sign. Turn on a faucet and only a trickle (or nothing) comes out. If it's cold outside, suspect a freeze before anything else.
Visible Frost on Exposed Pipes
White frost or condensation on the outside of a pipe means the water inside is at or near freezing. Act immediately — the pipe isn't fully blocked yet.
Colder Than Normal Rooms
An unexpectedly cold room during a cold snap — especially a bathroom or kitchen on an exterior wall — suggests cold air is reaching pipes in the walls.
Unusual Smells From a Drain
Frozen drain lines can push back sewer gas into the home. A sudden sewer smell during cold weather can mean a vent stack or drain line has frozen.
Clanking or Whistling Sounds
Unusual noises when water is running can indicate partial ice blockage. Water squeezing past a freeze makes sounds it doesn't normally make.
Water Pooling Unexpectedly
Water on the floor with no visible source often means a pipe has already burst in a wall or ceiling — you're seeing the overflow. Shut off main water immediately.
If you suspect a frozen pipe, don't wait for it to thaw on its own. Every hour increases the chance of a burst and expensive water damage. Fill out the form below for immediate dispatch.
When to Thaw It Yourself vs. Call a Plumber
Some frozen pipe situations you can safely handle yourself. Others require immediate professional help. Here's how to tell the difference.
Safe to DIY When…
The pipe is accessible, visible, and hasn't burst.
- You can see and touch the frozen pipe
- The pipe is under a sink, exposed in a basement, or visible
- No signs of a burst or leak yet
- You have time — no active damage happening
- You can use a hair dryer or heating pad safely
- The affected fixture is still giving at least a drip
Call a Plumber Immediately When…
The pipe is hidden, burst, or can't be safely thawed.
- The frozen pipe is behind a wall or ceiling
- The pipe has already burst or is leaking
- Multiple pipes are frozen at once
- Water is not flowing anywhere in the house
- You smell gas near a frozen gas appliance line
- The freeze involves a main water line coming into the home
DIY thawing safety rules: Never use an open flame — torches, propane heaters, or candles — to thaw a pipe. Flames can ignite nearby insulation, wood framing, or combustible materials, and heat a pipe unevenly enough to damage it. Use a hair dryer on low heat, heat tape, or a space heater placed several feet away. Always open the faucet before you start thawing, so melted water has somewhere to go — and so you'll know immediately when flow is restored.
How Plumbers Thaw Frozen Pipes
Professional frozen pipe service uses methods that are faster, safer, and work in situations where DIY thawing won't — especially for hidden pipes inside walls, ceilings, and crawlspaces.
Heat Guns & Thermal Blankets
Professional-grade heat guns, infrared heaters, and heated thermal blankets warm the pipe and the surrounding area from the outside. Best for pipes in accessible locations — under sinks, in crawlspaces, basements, and exposed exterior runs. Safe, controlled, and effective for most residential freeze situations.
Best For
- Exposed or accessible pipes
- Crawlspaces and basements
- Under-sink supply lines
- Exterior hose bibs
Limitations
- Needs physical access to pipe
- Slower on heavily insulated pipes
- Can't reach pipes in walls
- Requires continuous monitoring
Electric Pipe Thawing Machines
Specialized electrical thawing machines pass low-voltage, high-amperage current through the frozen section of metal pipe, generating heat from the inside out. Dramatically faster than external heating — often thawing long runs in minutes rather than hours. The go-to method for serious freeze emergencies and hidden pipes.
Best For
- Hidden pipes in walls
- Long frozen sections
- Emergency time-critical freezes
- Buried water lines
Limitations
- Only works on metal pipes
- Requires specialty equipment
- Not safe for all configurations
- Not every plumber has one
For PEX and plastic pipes, electric thawing isn't an option — plumbers rely on direct heat methods or, in severe cases, opening walls to access the frozen section directly. A skilled frozen pipe specialist will know which method to use based on your pipe material and where the freeze is located.
What Does Frozen Pipe Service Cost?
Frozen pipe service costs depend heavily on whether the pipe has burst, how accessible it is, and whether it's an emergency call during a cold snap (when plumbers are in high demand).
Basic Thawing
Thawing a single accessible frozen pipe that hasn't burst. Most common service call when a freeze is caught early. Includes diagnosis and safe thawing.
Hidden Pipe Thawing
Locating and thawing a frozen pipe behind walls, ceilings, or in difficult-to-access areas. Often requires electric thawing or targeted wall access.
Burst Pipe Repair
Repair or replacement of a pipe that has already burst, plus initial water mitigation. Higher end includes wall, ceiling, or floor access work and water damage.
During cold snaps, frozen pipe service calls spike dramatically — in some northern cities, plumbers get 10x their normal call volume during a polar vortex or hard freeze. Rates rise, and wait times grow. The best way to protect your budget is prevention: insulate exposed pipes before winter, keep interior temperatures above 55°F even when away, and let a trickle of water run during the worst cold.
Red Flags in Frozen Pipe Calls
- A quote given over the phone without knowing the pipe material or location
- Plumbers refusing to thaw and only offering to "replace the whole section"
- Claims of massive structural damage without showing evidence
- Storm-chasing companies that appear during cold snaps from out of state
- Pressure to sign up for a "freeze prevention plan" before doing any work
- No license number visible on the truck or invoice
- Cash-only demands or unusually large up-front deposits
This is why TotalServe pre-vets every plumber in our network. Cold snap emergencies attract scammers — we screen for licensing, insurance, and local presence so you can trust who shows up. Learn more about our matching process →
Need a Frozen Pipe Plumber in Your Area?
Fill out the form and we'll match you with a vetted, licensed plumber who specializes in frozen pipe thawing and burst pipe repair. Free for homeowners, fast matching, no obligation — and 24/7 during cold snaps.
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Getting Matched with a Plumber
Most homeowners are matched with a vetted plumber within minutes for freeze emergencies. See our full process →
Submit Request
Fill out the form with your location and freeze situation. Takes about 60 seconds.
We Match
We connect you with a vetted plumber who specializes in frozen pipe work.
Plumber Contacts You
Your matched pro calls immediately — freeze situations are top priority.
Pipes Thawed
Professional thawing and any necessary burst repair. We stay in your corner.
Frozen Pipe FAQs
Everything homeowners commonly ask about freezing pipes, prevention, and what to do during a cold snap.
Frozen Pipe Service in Your City
TotalServe connects homeowners with vetted frozen pipe specialists across the country — especially in cold-weather markets. View all service areas →
Youngstown, OHScranton, PABismarck, NDJoplin, MOUtica, NYCanton, OHAkron, OHWarren, OHMansfield, OHLima, OHSandusky, OHFindlay, OHWheeling, WVParkersburg, WVHuntington, WVWilkes-Barre, PAHazleton, PAAltoona, PAJohnstown, PAWilliamsport, PAErie, PABinghamton, NYElmira, NYRome, NYWatertown, NYGrand Forks, NDMinot, NDFargo, NDSioux Falls, SDRapid City, SDSioux City, IAWaterloo, IACedar Rapids, IADubuque, IAMorgantown, WVCumberland, MDHagerstown, MDSaginaw, MIBay City, MIFlint, MIBattle Creek, MIJackson, MIMuncie, INTerre Haute, INDecatur, ILSpringfield, ILPeoria, ILLewiston, MEManchester, NHNashua, NHNew Bedford, MA) to auto-populate as new city pages launch.
Frozen Pipe? Act Fast.
Every hour a pipe stays frozen increases the chance of a burst. Get matched with a vetted frozen pipe specialist in your area — free, fast, and 24/7 during cold weather.
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