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Main Water Line Specialists

Water Line Repair & Replacement

A damaged main water line doesn't wait. TotalServe connects homeowners with vetted, licensed plumbers who specialize in water line diagnosis, trenchless replacement, and emergency repair β€” nationwide.

The Basics

What Is Water Line Repair?

Your main water line is the single pipe that carries fresh, pressurized water from the municipal supply (or your private well) into your home. Everything downstream β€” your kitchen sink, showers, water heater, washing machine, toilets, dishwasher, ice maker β€” depends on this one line. When it fails, your entire home effectively loses water.

Water line repair covers everything from patching a small leak at a single joint to replacing the entire run from the street to your home. The right fix depends on the pipe's age, material, the cause of the damage, and how long the existing line has left before it fails again.

Common Water Line Materials & Lifespans

The lifespan and typical failure points of your water line depend heavily on what it's made of. Most homeowners don't know what their water line is until something goes wrong.

Copper

50–70 Years

Durable and reliable, but susceptible to pinhole leaks in areas with acidic water. Expensive to replace but generally trouble-free if water chemistry is stable.

PEX

40–50 Years

Flexible plastic tubing that's now standard for new construction. Resists freezing better than metal, relatively inexpensive, and easy to repair.

PVC / CPVC

50–70 Years

Rigid plastic that's common in warmer climates. Affordable and corrosion-resistant, but can become brittle and crack if the ground shifts or freezes.

Galvanized Steel

40–50 Years

Common in homes built before 1960. Rusts from the inside out, causing pressure loss, discolored water, and eventual failure. Plan for replacement.

Polybutylene

10–15 Years

Installed in millions of homes from the 1970s–1990s, now known to fail prematurely. If you have polybutylene, replacement is strongly recommended.

Lead

Replace ASAP

Found in some pre-1940 homes. Lead leaches into drinking water and is a serious health hazard. Immediate replacement is the only acceptable fix.

Unsure what your pipes are made of? A plumber can identify the material during a quick visual inspection at your main shutoff valve. Our network also handles related issues like pipe repair inside the home and leak detection for hidden problems.

Warning Signs

6 Signs You Need Water Line Repair

Most water line failures give warning signs weeks or months before total failure. Catching them early saves thousands.

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Sudden Drop in Water Pressure

If every faucet in your house suddenly feels weak, your main line may be leaking or partially blocked before it reaches your home.

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Unexplained Water Bill Spike

A bill 30–50% higher than normal with no change in usage almost always means a leak. Underground main line leaks are silent culprits.

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Soggy Spots in the Yard

Patches of grass that stay wet during dry weather, or noticeably greener grass in one area, often signal an underground leak.

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Rusty or Discolored Water

Brown, yellow, or rust-colored water can indicate corrosion inside an aging galvanized, iron, or copper main line.

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Hissing or Running Sounds

If you hear water running when no fixtures are on, there's a leak. If the sound is near the main shutoff, it's likely the main line.

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Sinkholes or Yard Erosion

A slow underground leak washes away soil over time, creating low spots, sinkholes, or cracks in driveways and walkways.

If you're seeing any of these signs, don't wait. Request emergency dispatch or fill out the form below for a matched plumber.

Repair or Replace?

How to Decide Between Repair and Replacement

Not every water line issue means digging up your entire yard. Here's the framework plumbers use to decide.

Spot Repair Makes Sense When…

You have an isolated issue on an otherwise healthy pipe.

  • The pipe is less than 20–25 years old
  • The leak is in one clearly identified spot
  • The pipe material is copper, PEX, or modern PVC
  • No history of previous leaks on the same line
  • Water pressure and quality are otherwise normal
  • The damage was caused by external factors β€” not corrosion

Full Replacement Is the Right Call When…

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

  • The pipe is 40+ years old (regardless of material)
  • It's galvanized steel, polybutylene, or lead
  • You've had multiple leaks on the same line within a few years
  • Water pressure has been declining for months
  • You see rust, discoloration, or sediment in the water
  • You're already opening up the yard for excavation

The general rule: if you're going to dig anyway and the pipe is more than 30 years old, replacement almost always beats repair long-term. The biggest cost in water line work is the excavation itself β€” not the pipe.

Installation Methods

Trenchless vs. Traditional Excavation

When a water line needs replacement, the work can be done two fundamentally different ways.

Traditional Method

Open Trench Excavation

The classic approach: a backhoe digs a continuous trench from the street to your home, the old pipe is removed, a new one is laid, and the trench is backfilled. It's been the standard for over a century.

Pros

  • Works in any soil or situation
  • Lower equipment cost
  • Easy to inspect the full line
  • Widely available

Cons

  • Destroys landscaping
  • Takes 2–5 days
  • Yard restoration adds cost
  • Disrupts driveways
Modern Method

Trenchless Replacement

Trenchless methods β€” primarily pipe bursting and pipe lining β€” replace or reline the water line without digging a continuous trench. Small access pits are dug at each end, and specialized equipment does the rest underground.

Pros

  • Preserves landscaping
  • Often completed in one day
  • No driveway demolition
  • Lower restoration cost

Cons

  • Higher equipment cost
  • Not every situation fits
  • Specialty crew required
  • Existing path must be usable

Trenchless isn't always possible β€” it depends on the existing pipe path, soil conditions, and the type of damage. A good plumber will assess your property and tell you honestly whether trenchless is a fit.

Pricing

What Does Water Line Repair Cost?

Water line work is one of the higher-ticket plumbing jobs because most of the cost comes from excavation and labor β€” not the pipe itself.

$350–$1,500

Minor Spot Repair

Single leak repair on an accessible, healthy pipe. Includes digging one access hole, patching a section, and backfilling.

$4,000–$15,000+

Full Replacement

Full line replacement from the street to the home. Higher end for trenchless, long runs, or complex properties.

Several factors push costs up or down: the length of the line, how deep it's buried, the pipe material being installed, whether driveways need to be cut and restored, local permitting costs, and whether it's an emergency call.

Red Flags in Water Line Estimates

  • A quote given over the phone without an on-site inspection
  • Pressure to "decide today" before you can get other opinions
  • Vague line items like "miscellaneous" with no breakdown
  • No permit mentioned β€” most cities require permits for main line work
  • Quotes dramatically lower than all others (corners will be cut)
  • No written warranty on labor or materials
  • Contractor can't produce proof of license and insurance

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

Get Help Now

Need a Water Line Plumber in Your Area?

Fill out the form and we'll match you with a vetted, licensed plumber who specializes in water line repair and replacement. Free for homeowners, fast matching, and no obligation.

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Every plumber licensed, insured & background-checked
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Trenchless specialists available in most metro areas
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24/7 emergency dispatch for active leaks and breaks
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100% free for homeowners β€” we're paid by the contractors

Get Connected Today

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

Free service Β· We never sell your info Β· No obligation

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 repairs. See our full process β†’

1

Submit Request

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

2

We Match

We connect you with a vetted plumber who specializes in water line work.

3

Plumber Contacts You

Your matched pro calls promptly with a clear upfront estimate.

4

Job Done Right

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

Common Questions

Water Line Repair FAQs

Everything homeowners commonly ask about main water line issues, repair, and replacement.

1
How do I know if it's my water line or the city's responsibility?
Generally, the city owns the line from the water main up to your property line. Everything from that point to your home is your responsibility. The exact cutoff varies by municipality. Your matched plumber can confirm the specific division for your location.
2
How long does water line repair or replacement take?
A spot repair on an accessible pipe can often be completed in 4–8 hours. A full traditional trench replacement typically takes 2–5 days. Trenchless replacement is the fastest β€” often completed in a single day.
3
Will I need a permit for water line work?
Almost always, yes. Main water line work requires a permit and inspection in virtually every U.S. city. A licensed plumber handles the permit application. If a contractor says "we don't need a permit," that's a major red flag.
4
What is trenchless water line replacement?
Trenchless methods like pipe bursting and pipe lining replace a water line without digging a continuous trench. Small access pits are dug at each end, and specialized equipment pulls the new pipe through the path of the old one. It preserves landscaping and is usually faster.
5
Does homeowners insurance cover water line repair?
Standard homeowners insurance typically does NOT cover repair of the water line itself β€” it's considered maintenance. However, it may cover water damage from a broken line. Some insurers offer separate "service line coverage" as an add-on.
6
Is a water line leak an emergency?
It depends on severity. A small slow leak can often wait. But complete loss of water, visible flooding, or a break near electrical systems is an emergency β€” shut off your main water valve and request emergency dispatch right away.
7
What causes water lines to fail?
The most common causes are age and corrosion, tree root intrusion, ground shifting, freeze damage, physical damage from excavation, and premature failure of problem materials like polybutylene.
8
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. Learn more β†’
9
Is your service really free for homeowners?
Yes β€” completely free. We're compensated by the licensed contractors in our network when we refer qualified leads. You never pay us anything.

Water Line Issue? Don't Wait.

Small leaks turn into major damage fast. Get matched with a vetted water line specialist in your area β€” free, fast, and no obligation.

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