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Indoor Plumbing Specialists

Pipe Repair & Replacement

From a slow leak under your sink to a whole-house repipe, TotalServe connects homeowners with vetted, licensed plumbers who repair and replace residential plumbing pipes β€” copper, PEX, CPVC, galvanized, and more.

The Basics

What Is Pipe Repair?

Pipe repair covers everything that happens to the network of supply and drain pipes inside your home β€” the plumbing you can't see behind walls, under floors, in the basement, and through the attic. This is different from water line repair (the buried main pipe coming into your home from the street) and sewer repair (the buried waste pipe going out). Pipe repair is everything in between β€” the working circulatory system of your home.

It includes patching small leaks, replacing pinhole-corroded copper, fixing water hammer damage, swapping out failing polybutylene or galvanized lines, repairing burst pipes after a freeze, and full whole-house repipes when the original plumbing has aged out. The right approach depends on what type of pipe you have, how old it is, where the damage is, and how much of the system is at risk.

Common Indoor Pipe Materials

The repair approach depends entirely on what your home is plumbed with. Most homeowners have no idea what's in their walls until something starts leaking. Here's what to expect from each common material:

Copper

50–70 Years

The premium standard for decades. Long-lasting and reliable, but susceptible to pinhole leaks from acidic water, electrolysis, or pitting corrosion. Expensive to replace but easy to repair section by section.

PEX

40–50 Years

Flexible plastic tubing that's now the standard for new construction and repipes. Resists freezing and corrosion, easy to install with push-fit fittings, and the most cost-effective whole-house option today.

CPVC

50–75 Years

Rigid white or beige plastic. Common in 1980s–2000s homes. Inexpensive and corrosion-resistant, but becomes brittle with age and UV exposure. Cracks easily when bumped or during freezes.

Galvanized Steel

40–50 Years

Common in pre-1960 homes. Rusts from the inside out, restricting water flow and eventually causing leaks. If you have galvanized supply lines anywhere, plan for a full repipe β€” partial replacement just delays the inevitable.

Polybutylene

10–15 Years

Gray plastic installed from the 1970s through the mid-1990s. Now known to fail catastrophically. Insurance often won't cover poly homes β€” replacement is strongly recommended for any home that still has it.

PVC

50–75 Years

White rigid plastic, used mostly for drain lines (cold water and waste, not hot supply). Affordable, durable, and easy to repair. Becomes brittle in cold conditions or with prolonged sun exposure.

Not sure what you have? A plumber can identify your pipe material in under a minute by looking at exposed pipes near your water heater or main shutoff. If your home was built before 1995 and you've never had it inspected, it's worth knowing what's in your walls. For hidden leaks behind walls, see leak detection. For freeze-damaged pipes, see frozen pipes.

Warning Signs

6 Signs You Need Pipe Repair

Most pipe failures give warning signs before they fully fail. Catching them early can save you from water damage, mold, and a much more expensive repair down the road.

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Water Stains on Walls or Ceilings

Yellow or brown stains, especially on ceilings below upstairs bathrooms, mean a pipe is leaking somewhere behind the surface. Don't wait β€” find it before it becomes a flood.

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Drop in Water Pressure

Pressure that's gradually weakening at multiple fixtures often indicates corroded galvanized pipes or sediment buildup narrowing the pipe diameter from the inside.

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Discolored Water

Brown, yellow, or rust-tinted water β€” especially first thing in the morning β€” means corrosion inside aging metal pipes. A red flag for galvanized or older copper systems.

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Banging or Hammering Pipes

Loud bangs when you turn off a faucet or appliance ("water hammer") puts repeated stress on joints. Over time it loosens fittings and causes leaks at the weakest point.

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Spike in Water Bill

An unexplained jump in your water bill almost always means a leak somewhere. Hidden leaks behind walls or under slabs can run for months before you find them.

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Inconsistent Hot Water Temperature

Temperature swings during showers can indicate failing pipes, mineral buildup, or compromised hot water lines. Often a sign of bigger problems developing.

If you have visible flooding or an active leak, that's an emergency. Shut off your main water valve and request emergency dispatch right away.

Repair or Repipe?

How to Decide Between Spot Repair and Whole-House Repipe

The biggest decision in pipe work is whether to keep patching individual leaks or commit to a full repipe. Here's the framework experienced plumbers use to make the call.

Spot Repair Makes Sense When…

The damage is isolated and the rest of the system is healthy.

  • The leak is in one specific, accessible spot
  • The pipe material is modern (PEX, CPVC, or newer copper)
  • You haven't had multiple leaks in the past few years
  • The damage was caused by external factors β€” not corrosion
  • Water pressure and quality are otherwise normal
  • The pipe is less than 30 years old

Whole-House Repipe Is the Right Call When…

The plumbing is at end-of-life or made of problem material.

  • You have galvanized steel anywhere in the system
  • You have polybutylene (gray plastic) pipes
  • You've had multiple leaks in the same year
  • Water pressure has been declining gradually
  • Pinhole leaks are appearing in copper pipes
  • The home is 50+ years old with original plumbing

The general rule: if you've fixed the same type of leak twice in the last few years, you're going to fix it a third time soon. Pinhole leaks in copper, in particular, almost never come alone β€” once one shows up, more are coming. At that point, paying for repeated repairs is just delaying a repipe you'll eventually need anyway. A good plumber will tell you honestly when you've crossed that threshold.

Repair Methods

Spot Repair vs. Whole-House Repipe

When pipe work is needed, modern plumbers offer two fundamentally different approaches with very different costs and timelines. Knowing the difference helps you ask the right questions.

Targeted Fix

Spot Repair

The plumber locates the specific leak, opens just enough wall or floor to access it, replaces or patches the damaged section, and closes everything back up. Fast and affordable for isolated issues, but only addresses the one spot β€” not underlying system-wide problems.

Pros

  • Lower upfront cost
  • Completed in hours, not days
  • Minimal disruption to home
  • No need to move out

Cons

  • Doesn't address aging pipes
  • Future leaks still likely
  • Multiple repairs add up fast
  • Doesn't improve water pressure
Long-Term Fix

Whole-House Repipe

Replacing all the supply lines (and sometimes drain lines) throughout your home, typically with PEX or copper. A larger upfront investment but eliminates future leaks, restores water pressure, and adds value if you sell. Modern repipe techniques minimize wall damage.

Pros

  • Eliminates all old pipe issues
  • Restores full water pressure
  • Insurance-friendly
  • Adds resale value

Cons

  • Higher upfront cost
  • Takes 3–7 days
  • Some wall and ceiling repair
  • Disruption during work

A good repipe contractor will use modern techniques to minimize wall damage β€” strategically opening small access holes rather than tearing down entire walls. Expect some drywall and paint touch-ups afterward, but it should be a fraction of the disruption people imagine. If your home has galvanized or polybutylene pipes, a repipe is almost always the right long-term move.

Pricing

What Does Pipe Repair Cost?

Pipe repair costs vary enormously based on accessibility, the type of pipe, and how much work is involved. Here are realistic national ranges to set expectations.

$150–$650

Single Leak Repair

Patching or replacing one accessible section of pipe. The most common service call. Includes diagnosis, repair, and minor cleanup.

$4,000–$15,000+

Whole-House Repipe

Full replacement of all supply lines throughout the home. Higher end for larger homes, copper installations, or homes with finished basements requiring extensive access work.

Several factors push costs up or down: pipe accessibility (exposed basement runs are cheaper than pipes behind finished walls), the material being installed (PEX is cheaper than copper), whether drywall and paint repair is included in the quote, and whether permits and inspections are required. Most repipes do require permits in U.S. cities.

Red Flags in Pipe Repair Quotes

  • A quote given over the phone without a visual inspection
  • "You need a whole repipe" diagnosis after looking at one leak
  • Refusal to itemize the quote (parts vs. labor vs. drywall repair)
  • No mention of permits β€” most pipe work requires one
  • Quotes dramatically lower than all others (often skip wall repair or required code updates)
  • No written warranty on labor or parts
  • Pressure to sign before you can get a second opinion

This is exactly why TotalServe pre-vets every plumber in our network for licensing, insurance, and quality. Learn more about our matching process β†’

Get Help Now

Need a Pipe Repair Plumber in Your Area?

Fill out the form and we'll match you with a vetted, licensed plumber who specializes in indoor pipe repair β€” from single leak fixes to full whole-house repipes. Free for homeowners, fast matching, no obligation.

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Copper, PEX, CPVC & repipe specialists
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24/7 emergency dispatch for active leaks
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Get Connected Today

Tell us what you need β€” we'll match you with a vetted local plumber fast.

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How It Works

Getting Matched with a Plumber

Most homeowners are matched with a vetted plumber within minutes for emergencies and a few hours for scheduled service. See our full process β†’

1

Submit Request

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

2

We Match

We connect you with a vetted plumber who specializes in residential pipe work.

3

Plumber Contacts You

Your matched pro calls promptly with a clear upfront estimate.

4

Job Done Right

Professional repair or repipe with no surprises. We stay in your corner.

Common Questions

Pipe Repair FAQs

Everything homeowners commonly ask about pipe leaks, repairs, and whole-house repipes.

1
How do I know what type of pipes I have?
Look at exposed pipes near your water heater, in the basement, or under sinks. Copper is reddish-brown metal. Galvanized steel is gray-silver and threaded. PEX is flexible plastic in red, blue, or white. CPVC is rigid beige or off-white plastic. Polybutylene is gray plastic with metal or plastic crimped fittings. If you have polybutylene, treat it as a known liability and get it replaced β€” many insurers won't cover homes that still have it.
2
What is a pinhole leak and why do they keep happening?
Pinhole leaks are tiny perforations in copper pipes caused by pitting corrosion from inside the pipe. They're triggered by acidic water, electrolysis, or chemical imbalances in the water supply. The frustrating part: once one pinhole leak appears, more are almost always on the way. The underlying chemistry that caused the first leak is still affecting every other inch of copper in your home. Most plumbers recommend a whole-house repipe (usually to PEX) once the second pinhole leak appears.
3
How long does a whole-house repipe take?
Most whole-house repipes take 3–7 days depending on home size, pipe material, and accessibility. PEX repipes are usually faster than copper because the material is more flexible and easier to install. Expect to be without water service for portions of each day, but you can typically still live in the home during the work. The drywall repair and paint touch-up afterward usually adds another 2–4 days.
4
Is a leaking pipe always an emergency?
It depends on severity. A small drip you can catch in a bucket isn't an emergency β€” schedule a regular service call. But active flooding, water spreading across rooms, water near electrical outlets, or any leak you can't stop with a local shutoff valve is an emergency. Shut off your main water valve and request emergency dispatch immediately.
5
Will my homeowners insurance cover pipe repair?
Standard homeowners insurance typically does NOT cover the pipe itself when it fails (considered a maintenance issue), but usually DOES cover resulting damage to your home β€” ruined drywall, flooring, and personal property. Sudden burst pipe damage is generally covered; gradual leaks that have been happening unnoticed for months often aren't. Document everything immediately and contact your insurer as soon as the immediate emergency is contained.
6
Should I repipe with copper or PEX?
For most homes today, PEX is the better choice. It's significantly cheaper, faster to install, more flexible (which helps in tight spaces), highly resistant to freezing damage, and immune to the pinhole corrosion that plagues copper. Copper still has advantages β€” it's more durable in the very long term and slightly preferred by some traditionalists β€” but PEX has become the modern standard for residential repipes for good reason.
7
Can I repair polybutylene pipes instead of replacing them?
Technically yes, but it's almost never recommended. Polybutylene is a known failure material β€” it deteriorates from the inside out and can rupture without warning. Spot repairs just delay the inevitable. Many homeowners insurance policies won't cover homes with polybutylene, and it's a major red flag during home sales. If you have it, plan for a full repipe.
8
Why are my pipes making banging noises?
It's called water hammer β€” the loud banging that happens when fast-flowing water suddenly stops, sending a pressure wave back through the pipes. It's caused by quick-closing valves on dishwashers, washing machines, and modern faucets. Beyond being annoying, water hammer puts repeated stress on joints and fittings, eventually causing leaks. The fix is usually installing water hammer arrestors at the offending fixtures β€” relatively cheap and prevents future damage.
9
How can I prevent pipe problems?
Insulate exposed pipes before winter to prevent freezing. Don't ignore small leaks β€” they get worse, not better. Have your water tested if you have copper pipes, since acidic water dramatically shortens their lifespan. Replace washing machine hoses every 5 years (they're a leading cause of catastrophic floods). And if your home is 40+ years old with original plumbing, get a plumber's assessment before you have a problem β€” proactive replacement is always cheaper than emergency repair.
10
Does TotalServe employ the plumbers directly?
No. TotalServe is a referral and dispatch service β€” 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. Learn more about how we operate β†’
11
Is your service really free for homeowners?
Yes β€” completely free. TotalServe charges nothing to homeowners at any point. We're compensated by the licensed contractors in our network when we refer qualified leads. You only pay the plumber for the actual repair work β€” same price you'd pay if you found that plumber directly.

Pipe Problem? Don't Wait.

Small leaks become big floods fast. Get matched with a vetted pipe repair specialist in your area β€” free, fast, and no obligation.

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