24/7 Plumbing Los Angeles 1
2905 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Licensed plumber offering drain cleaning, pipe repair, water heater service, and fixture installation. Available for emergency calls 24/7.
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
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Typical cost in Los Angeles
$150–$500 / hr
151 contractors in Los Angeles
2905 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Licensed plumber offering drain cleaning, pipe repair, water heater service, and fixture installation. Available for emergency calls 24/7.
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
7592 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Professional plumbing services including emergency repair, drain cleaning, and preventive maintenance. Transparent pricing and fast respo¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
4145 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Licensed plumber offering drain cleaning, pipe repair, water heater service, and fixture installation. Available for emergency calls 24/7.
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
1600 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Professional plumbing services including emergency repair, drain cleaning, and preventive maintenance. Transparent pricing and fast respo¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
6137 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Master plumber with 20+ years of experience. We specialize in residential plumbing repairs, remodeling, and water quality solutions.
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
3842 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Professional plumbing services including emergency repair, drain cleaning, and preventive maintenance. Transparent pricing and fast respo¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
3633 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Professional plumbing services including emergency repair, drain cleaning, and preventive maintenance. Transparent pricing and fast respo¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
4764 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Reliable plumbing service for all your needs: repairs, installations, drain cleaning, and water heater maintenance. Licensed and fully in¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
6562 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Reliable plumbing service for all your needs: repairs, installations, drain cleaning, and water heater maintenance. Licensed and fully in¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
2158 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Full-service plumbing company with certified technicians. We repair leaks, install fixtures, clean drains, and handle water heater replac¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
2120 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Full-service plumbing company with certified technicians. We repair leaks, install fixtures, clean drains, and handle water heater replac¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
4567 Main Street, Los Angeles, CA
Reliable plumbing service for all your needs: repairs, installations, drain cleaning, and water heater maintenance. Licensed and fully in¦
Serves: 90001, 90002, 90003, 90004 +59 more
For: leak repair, fixture installation, or drain clearing in Los Angeles, CA
Los Angeles plumbing costs rank among the highest in the country — driven by a CSLB-licensed labor market, high cost of living, seismic compliance requirements on pipe materials, and an aging housing stock in neighborhoods like Silver Lake, Echo Park, Los Feliz, and Highland Park where cast iron and galvanized steel drain lines are still in service. According to BLS Occupational Employment Statistics for the Los Angeles-Long Beach-Anaheim MSA (SOC 47-2152 — Plumbers, Pipefitters, and Steamfitters), median plumber wages in the LA metro are approximately $40–$58/hr — the top quartile of U.S. plumbing markets.
LA homeowners also face unique plumbing realities: Proposition 65 water quality concerns, mandatory water-efficient fixture requirements under Los Angeles Municipal Code (LAMC) Chapter 5, Article 5.1, and increasingly, whole-house repiping projects driven by aging galvanized lines that have reached end-of-life.
| Service | Description | Typical Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| Drain clearing (basic) | Toilet, tub, or kitchen sink clog | $150 – $350 |
| Drain clearing (hydro-jetting) | Heavy grease or root intrusion | $350 – $800 |
| Sewer camera inspection | Locate blockage or pipe damage | $200 – $450 |
| Faucet replacement (labor) | Per fixture, kitchen or bath | $150 – $350 |
| Toilet replacement (labor) | Including wax ring, supply line | $200 – $400 |
| Water heater replacement (tank, 40-50 gal) | Labor + unit, standard gas | $1,200 – $2,200 |
| Tankless water heater (gas, whole-house) | Labor + unit + possible gas line upgrade | $2,500 – $5,500 |
| Sewer line repair (partial) | Spot repair, open trench | $1,500 – $4,000 |
| Sewer line replacement (full, trenchless) | Per linear foot | $150 – $250 / lf |
| Whole-house repipe (copper or PEX) | Per linear foot, 1,500 sq ft home | $8,000 – $18,000 |
| Water main / pressure regulator | Street curb to meter connections | $800 – $2,500 |
1. Aging Galvanized and Cast Iron Infrastructure Homes built before 1970 in Los Angeles — and this includes a huge portion of the housing stock in the Heights neighborhoods, Mid-City, Koreatown, Echo Park, and Boyle Heights — were typically plumbed with galvanized steel supply lines and cast iron drain lines. Galvanized steel has a design life of 40–70 years; it corrodes from the inside out, reducing flow, leaching rust, and eventually perforating. Cast iron drain lines crack, root-infiltrate, and belly (sag), collecting standing water that breeds foul odor and backup events. Many LA homeowners discover this reality during a remodel or when a slow drain becomes a full backup. Whole-house repipes in LA average $10,000–$18,000 for a 1,500–2,500 sq ft home using PEX-A (preferred for flexibility and freeze resistance, less relevant in LA) or copper. PEX is the more affordable option at $8,000–$13,000; copper runs $12,000–$18,000.
2. Seismic Gas Line Requirements — CSST and Yellow Sleeve All new gas line installations and modifications in the City of LA must comply with LADBS requirements for seismic bonding of CSST (corrugated stainless steel tubing) flexible gas lines. Per LADBS Building Code Bulletin P/BC 2014-067, CSST must be bonded to the electrical ground system to prevent arcing during earthquake ground movement. This is a code-required step that adds $200–$500 to any gas line work but is non-negotiable for permit compliance. Plumbers unfamiliar with LA gas line requirements may skip this — ask explicitly during estimates.
3. LADWP Water-Efficient Fixture Mandates Under LA's Green Building Code (LAMC Section 99.04.306), any permit for bathroom or kitchen work triggers mandatory compliance with low-flow fixture standards: toilets ≤ 1.28 gpf, lavatory faucets ≤ 1.2 gpm, kitchen faucets ≤ 1.8 gpm, showerheads ≤ 1.8 gpm. This applies to permitted replacements — not emergency repairs. LADWP also offers rebates for WaterSense fixtures: $35–$75 per toilet, $40–$50 per showerhead. Ask your plumber to document installed fixture specifications for rebate submission.
4. Sewer Lateral Compliance (Pre-Sale Inspection) The City of Los Angeles requires a Sewer Lateral Certificate of Compliance — commonly called an LASC or "lateral inspection" — before a property can be sold in most cases. This requires a camera inspection of the sewer lateral from the property to the public main. Failed laterals (due to root intrusion, cracks, or bellying) must be repaired or replaced before the certificate is issued. Trenchless sewer repair (pipe bursting or CIPP lining) in LA runs $150–$250/linear foot and is the preferred method for avoiding concrete/asphalt restoration costs.
5. Proposition 65 Water Lead Concerns California's Proposition 65 (Safe Drinking Water and Toxic Enforcement Act) requires disclosure of chemicals known to cause cancer or reproductive harm, including lead. Older LA homes may have lead solder joints at copper supply lines (soldering with lead solder was standard practice before 1986). If your home was built before 1986, request a water lead test ($30–$80 through certified labs) before assuming your supply lines are safe. Replacement of lead-soldered joints is included in a full repipe.
Every plumber performing plumbing work for compensation in Los Angeles must hold a valid California Contractors State License Board (CSLB) license with a C-36 Plumbing classification. This is California state law under Business & Professions Code Section 7028. Performing plumbing work without a C-36 license is a misdemeanor criminal offense for the contractor — and hiring an unlicensed plumber exposes the homeowner to unprotected liability.
Verify any LA plumber at cslb.ca.gov:
Los Angeles requires a plumbing permit from LADBS for any plumbing work that is not a like-for-like replacement at the same location:
LADBS plumbing permits are relatively inexpensive ($150–$400 for most residential work) but critically important: an unpermitted water heater installation voids the unit warranty (manufacturers require code-compliant installation verified by inspection), creates disclosure obligations at resale, and leaves you unprotected if a gas leak or water damage event occurs.
Any plumber performing gas line work in Los Angeles must also ensure compliance with SoCal Gas service rules and LADBS seismic bonding requirements (see CSST bonding note in the cost guide). Gas work requires both a LADBS mechanical/plumbing permit AND a final inspection with pressure test before gas service is restored. Never allow a plumber to reconnect gas service without a passed LADBS inspection.
For gas appliance connections, verify the plumber has experience with LA's CSST bonding requirements under LADBS Bulletin P/BC 2014-067. Correctly bonded CSST is a life-safety requirement during earthquakes.
Insurance denial. Homeowner's insurance policies in California almost universally have exclusions for damage resulting from work performed by unlicensed contractors. A burst water line from an improperly installed supply line by an unlicensed plumber — a scenario that causes $20,000–$60,000 in damage — may be denied.
LADBS stop-work orders. If LADBS inspects your property and discovers unpermitted plumbing work, they can issue a stop-work order, require opening of walls to verify work, and assess retroactive permit fees of 2x–3x the original permit cost.
Personal injury liability. A worker injured in your home who lacks workers' compensation coverage from their employer can sue you personally under California law. CSLB-licensed plumbers with documented WC coverage eliminate this exposure.
Plumbing has a steeper DIY ceiling than most home trades. In Los Angeles, California's CSLB licensing requirements, LADBS permit mandates, and the consequences of water damage in the city's dense housing stock (condos, attached townhomes, apartments with shared walls) mean that even moderately complex DIY plumbing can create enormous downstream liability.
| Factor | DIY | Professional |
|---|---|---|
| Materials (basic repair) | $25–$200 | $25–$200 (same) |
| Labor cost | Your time (1–6 hrs) | $150–$600 |
| CSLB license required | No — owner can work on own home | Yes — C-36 required for hire |
| LADBS permit required | Owner-builder possible | Contractor pulls permits |
| Code compliance assurance | Self-verified | LADBS inspection |
| Water-efficient fixture spec | Risk of wrong spec | Correct spec + rebate docs |
| CSST gas bonding (LA requirement) | High risk of non-compliance | Standard practice |
| Sewer lateral compliance | Cannot complete LASC certification | Licensed plumber certifies |
| Water damage risk | Higher (improper fittings, no inspection) | Lower |
| Insurance coverage | Possible exclusion (unlicensed work) | Protected |
| Condo / shared wall risk | Extremely high | Managed by professional |
Basic minor repairs — no permit required:
For these repairs, DIY saves $150–$350 in service call fees. The work is genuinely low-risk and does not require permits or licensed contractors.
When to call a plumber even for "simple" jobs in LA:
Water heater replacement — LADBS permit required; seismic strapping of the tank with dual-strap seismic isolation is mandatory under LADBS seismic code for water heaters. Uninspected water heater installation voids warranty and is non-compliant.
Any supply or drain line extension or relocation — Permit required; new runs must connect to approved cleanouts and meet LA Plumbing Code slope requirements (1/4" per foot minimum for 3" drain lines).
Whole-house repipe — This is a multi-day project involving access through walls, ceilings, and crawl spaces (slab homes require saw-cutting). Only a CSLB C-36 licensed contractor can legally complete and permit this work in LA.
Sewer lateral repair or replacement — The LASC certification process requires a camera inspection signed off by a licensed contractor; trenchless CIPP or pipe-burst work requires LADBS oversight.
Any gas line work — Gas line modification without LADBS permit and CSST bonding is an illegal and life-threatening DIY attempt in LA.
DIY plumbing in Los Angeles is appropriate for basic repairs under $300 that don't involve permits — flappers, aerators, drain clearing, supply hose replacement. For anything involving permits (water heaters, supply line changes, sewer lateral work, gas lines), California's CSLB licensing requirement and LADBS inspection mandate make DIY legally non-compliant and insurance-voiding. The $200–$600 professional cost for permitted work is an order of magnitude cheaper than the $20,000–$60,000 water damage event that results from a failed DIY attempt on aging LA plumbing infrastructure.
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