Installing a Garbage Disposal: What the YouTube Videos Don't Tell You
Garbage disposal installation looks deceptively simple on YouTube. The tutorial makes it look like a 30-minute job โ swap out the old unit, plug in the new one, done. But there's a lot the 8-minute highlight reel doesn't show: the rusted mounting ring, the drain configuration that doesn't match, the circuit that's already at capacity. Here's what you actually need to know before you start โ and when to call a plumber instead.
- Most disposals require a dedicated 120V, 20-amp circuit or switched outlet under the sink
- Double sinks and dishwasher connections add complexity โ the dishwasher knockout is commonly missed
- Motor size matters more than brand: 1/2 HP for average family, 3/4 HP for larger households
- Old mounting rings often corrode and won't budge โ this is where DIY projects stall
- Labor cost for professional installation: 50โ00 โ often worth it for first-timers
- Never put grease, coffee grounds, fibrous vegetables, or bones in a garbage disposal
Before You Buy: What to Check First
Electrical Requirements
Garbage disposals require a dedicated 120V, 20-amp circuit โ or in many cases they wire into a switched outlet under the sink. Many older kitchens don't have this. If your kitchen doesn't have a switched outlet under the sink, you need an electrician before a plumber. Running a new circuit typically costs 50โ00.
โ ๏ธ Never plug a disposal into an extension cord or non-GFCI outlet under the sink. It's a code violation and a safety hazard. If the outlet isn't GFCI-protected, that needs to be addressed first.
Drain Configuration
Single sink installation is straightforward. Double sinks or dishwasher connections get more complex. Disposals can be connected to dishwasher drains, but it requires removing a specific knockout plug during installation โ a step that's skipped surprisingly often, blocking the dishwasher drain completely.
Permits
A straightforward disposal replacement usually doesn't require a permit. Adding a disposal where there wasn't one before may require an electrical permit. Check with your local building department, or use a licensed plumber who handles permits as part of the job.
Choosing the Right Garbage Disposal
| Motor Size | Best For | Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| 1/3 HP | Light use, 1โ2 people, soft foods only | 0โ00 |
| 1/2 HP | Average family, most food waste | 00โ80 |
| 3/4 HP | Families of 4+, harder food scraps | 50โ80 |
| 1 HP | Heavy use, near-continuous operation | 00โ00 |
For most families, 1/2 to 3/4 HP is the sweet spot. Spend more on motor size and less on brand recognition โ the motor determines longevity.
What the Installation Actually Involves
Disconnect the Old Unit
Turn off power at the breaker. Disconnect the drain line and dishwasher line if present. Most disposals twist off a mounting ring โ but older units may be corroded in place and require significant force.
Remove or Replace the Mounting Assembly
Different brands often use different mounting assemblies. Removing the old one requires cutting through hardened plumber's putty and working from below the sink โ tricky to do solo.
Install the New Mounting Ring
Apply plumber's putty around the drain flange, insert from the top, then attach the mounting assembly from below while maintaining upward pressure on the flange.
Connect Drain and Dishwasher Lines
Connect the P-trap drain line and, if applicable, the dishwasher drain line. If connecting a dishwasher, remove the knockout plug inside the disposal inlet first โ this step is missed more than you would think.
Wire the Electrical Connection
If hardwired, connect to supply wires in the junction box. If plug-in, connect to the switched outlet. Test at the breaker before running water.
Test for Leaks
Run water and check every connection โ sink flange, P-trap, and dishwasher inlet. Run the disposal and listen for unusual sounds indicating something isn't seated correctly.
What Can Go Wrong
- Corroded mounting ring โ old units corrode to the mounting ring and require breaking the unit apart to remove
- Wrong drain height โ the disposal outlet needs to connect cleanly to your P-trap; wrong height means reconfiguring drain pipes
- Dishwasher knockout not removed โ results in dishwasher not draining, often misdiagnosed as a dishwasher problem
- Leaking sink flange โ improper putty application or uneven mounting screws causes slow leaks that go unnoticed for weeks
- Tripped breaker โ if the disposal trips the breaker immediately, the circuit is overloaded and an electrician is needed
When to Call a Plumber
- No switched outlet or dedicated circuit under the sink
- Old disposal is corroded and won't remove
- Double sink with complex drain configuration
- Drain lines need reconfiguring to match the new unit's outlet height
- Not comfortable with any electrical work
- Home is on a septic system โ disposals require special consideration
๐ก Professional installation runs 50โ00. Given the things that can go wrong โ and the potential for water damage from a leaking flange โ professional installation is often worth it for first-timers.
What NOT to Put in Your Garbage Disposal
Grease, fat, or cooking oil โ solidifies in pipes. Coffee grounds โ accumulate and cause clogs. Eggshells โ the membrane wraps around grinding components. Pasta, rice, or bread โ expand with water. Fibrous vegetables like celery โ strings wrap around the motor. Bones or fruit pits โ damages the grinding ring.
How long does a garbage disposal last?
Most quality disposals last 8โ15 years with normal use. Extending their life means running cold water before and after use, never putting hard or fibrous items in, and cleaning monthly with ice and rock salt or a disposal cleaning product.
Can I install a garbage disposal myself?
If you're replacing an existing unit with the same brand and your electrical setup is correct, it's a manageable DIY project. If you're installing fresh, dealing with a corroded old unit, or configuring for a dishwasher, professional installation is the safer choice.
Want a Pro to Handle It?
TotalServe connects you with vetted, licensed plumbers for disposal installation done right the first time. Free, fast, no obligation.
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