Water heater out, a pipe leaking, a drain backing up — whatever's wrong, you'll reach a real person, get an honest upfront price, and have a licensed plumber on the way. No pressure, no surprises.
What we fix
Whatever's going wrong, a licensed plumber can put it right — the first time. Tap any service to learn more, or just call, tell us what's happening, and we'll take it from there.
No hot water this morning, or a tank weeping onto the garage floor? Peoria has some of the hardest water in the country, and that scale quietly eats a heater from the inside out. We'll tell you honestly whether yours is worth saving or due for replacement — tank or tankless, often same day.
Learn moreSlow sinks, a shower that won't drain, a kitchen line that backs up at the worst time. We find the real clog — not just the part you can reach — and clear it at the source so it stays gone. In older homes, decades of hard-water scale can narrow the pipes themselves, and we'll tell you straight if that's what we find.
Learn moreA burst pipe, a sewage backup, water spreading across the floor at 2am — some problems can't wait for business hours. Call any time, day or night, and we'll send our licensed plumber right away. You'll talk to a real person, not a machine.
Learn moreA warm patch on the floor, a water bill that jumped for no reason, the hiss of running water with everything shut off — classic signs of a slab leak. Out here, homes sit on slabs poured over desert soil that shifts with the heat, which makes slab leaks one of the most common problems we see. We pinpoint the leak and fix it with as little demolition as possible.
Learn moreRusty or discolored water, pinhole leaks that keep coming back, weak pressure throughout the house — in Peoria's older homes, original galvanized steel and aging copper give out after decades of hard water. We repipe the whole house in PEX or copper, cleanly and with minimal disruption, and walk you through it before we ever open a wall.
Learn moreFrom a connection that won't stop dripping to a line that's flooding a room, we shut the water down fast and make the repair before the damage spreads. With all the new construction around Peoria, pressure surges have become a real culprit lately — sometimes the lasting fix is a pressure regulator so it doesn't happen again.
Learn moreThe way we work
No runaround, no mystery pricing, no waiting days for a callback. Just a licensed plumber who shows up when promised and does the job right the first time.
A burst pipe doesn't wait for business hours, and neither do we. Call and we'll send our licensed plumber your way — nights, weekends, and holidays included.
You'll hear the full price before any work begins — a clear, upfront estimate with no hidden fees and no pressure. The number we quote is the number you pay.
Very hard water, older homes still on their original galvanized and copper lines, slabs poured over shifting desert soil — these are the exact problems we work on here every day. Knowing the real cause is half of fixing it right.
The plumber we send is licensed and insured, and stands behind the work — if something isn't right, we make it right. No corners cut, no mess left behind.
Built for Peoria
Peoria grew up around water — the town started at an 1889 well at Grand and Washington, later a water tower that became its civic symbol. That same water still shapes these homes, along with the desert soil they sit on and the age of their pipes. Here's what we watch for.
Peoria's tap water runs about 16 to 20 grains per gallon — several times the national average, and hard enough to leave scale in everything it touches. That buildup chokes water pressure, clouds glass and fixtures, and quietly shortens the life of every water heater in town. It's the single most common reason plumbing wears out here.
Many of Peoria's established neighborhoods went up decades ago — Old Town and the 85345 core in the 1970s, Country Meadows from 1970 to 1999, Park View West from 1979 to 1991, and Westbrook Village from 1982 to 1993. Homes that age often still run their original galvanized steel or early copper, and years of hard water turn that into discolored water, falling pressure, and recurring pinhole leaks. The lasting fix is a repipe in modern PEX or copper.
Most Peoria homes sit on a concrete slab poured straight over desert soil that swells and shrinks with the heat and the seasons. That constant movement works on the water lines underneath until one springs a leak — which is why slab leaks are one of the most common serious problems we see here. The early signs are quiet: a warm spot underfoot, a water bill that climbs for no reason, the faint sound of water running with everything shut off.
Peoria's rapid growth has a side effect homeowners feel directly: all the nearby construction can push pressure spikes through neighborhood water lines, stressing fixtures and joints until something gives — often the lasting fix is a pressure regulator to tame it. Then the summer monsoon rolls in from July through September, when sudden storms overwhelm drains and sewer lines. It's the stretch when emergency calls peak.
Simple from the first call
Tell us what's going on. We'll ask a few quick questions and figure out exactly what you need.
A licensed plumber heads to your Peoria home — fast, with an upfront price before any work begins.
The job gets done right the first time — and you get back to your day with one less thing to worry about.
Good to know
When something goes wrong, you don't need a sales pitch — you need it put right. Call and we'll send our licensed plumber: an upfront price, no pressure, and work done right the first time.
Call (623) 555-0100