An original Plumbing By The Book data study · by Thomas Kwayne · June 2026 · free to cite with attribution (CC BY 4.0)
Most “what does a plumber cost” answers give you one scary number. We did the opposite: we compiled the national-average cost of the 14 most common home plumbing repairs from 11 reputable US cost guides, then worked out, for each one, what it costs to do yourself, what a pro charges, and whether it is honestly a DIY job at all.
Of the 14 most common home plumbing repairs, 7 are clearly DIY-friendly and just 3 truly require a pro. On the DIY-friendly fixes, the parts cost a median of $30 versus a $225 typical professional bill — a median saving of about $160 per repair.
The cheap fixes save the most
Five of the most common repairs — a running toilet, a wax ring, a faucet repair, a shower/tub cartridge, and a clogged drain — cost just $5–$80 in parts versus $75–$400 from a pro. The median saving on that group is about $175.
Biggest DIY win: a shower or tub valve cartridge — about $10–$80 in parts versus a $275 typical pro bill. That is a 71% saving for a part you can change with a single tool.

How much DIY actually saves
We use a deliberately conservative saving: the typical professional total minus the high end of DIY parts. So we under-state, never over-state. On a like-for-like part you usually save more.

When you should just hire a pro
Three of the 14 jobs are pro-only: a main sewer line clog, a burst pipe, and a water-heater replacement — running $350–$2,500. DIY is neither realistic nor safe (gas, code, permits, water damage).
“Replace” jobs (a new toilet or faucet) are a middle case: you save the labor, but if you buy a premium fixture the part alone can rival a basic pro install — which is why our conservative saving reads near $0 for those even though they are DIY-able.
The full data
| Repair | DIY (parts) | Pro (total) | Conservative saving | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Toilet repair (running toilet / flapper / fill valve) | $10–$50 | $75–$350 (typ. $200) | ~$150 (75%) | Usually DIY |
| Toilet leaking at the base (wax ring) | $5–$20 | $100–$350 (typ. $200) | ~$180 (90%) | Usually DIY |
| Toilet replacement (remove old + install new) | $110–$450 | $225–$800 (typ. $375) | — | Usually DIY |
| Faucet repair (cartridge / washers / O-rings) | $10–$40 | $100–$350 (typ. $200) | ~$160 (80%) | Usually DIY |
| Faucet replacement (install a new faucet) | $40–$350 | $150–$600 (typ. $270) | — | Usually DIY |
| Shower / tub valve cartridge replacement | $10–$80 | $100–$400 (typ. $275) | ~$195 (71%) | Usually DIY |
| Clear a clogged drain (sink / tub / shower) | $10–$50 | $110–$350 (typ. $225) | ~$175 (78%) | Usually DIY |
| Main sewer line clog (hydro-jetting / camera) | pro only | $350–$2000 (typ. $475) | — | Call a pro |
| Leaky pipe repair | $10–$50 | $150–$2000 (typ. $500) | ~$450 (90%) | Sometimes DIY |
| Burst / frozen pipe repair | pro only | $400–$2000 (typ. $1000) | — | Call a pro |
| Water heater repair (element / thermostat / valve) | $20–$60 | $150–$750 (typ. $400) | ~$340 (85%) | Sometimes DIY |
| Water heater replacement (40-50 gal tank, installed) | pro only | $900–$2500 (typ. $1500) | — | Call a pro |
| Garbage disposal replacement | $80–$300 | $200–$625 (typ. $400) | ~$100 (25%) | Sometimes DIY |
| Sump pump replacement | $100–$400 | $400–$1200 (typ. $650) | ~$250 (38%) | Sometimes DIY |
The one thing that stops homeowners
Cost is rarely the blocker on the DIY-friendly fixes — the parts are cheap. In our prior study of 227 real homeowner plumbing questions, the #1 thing that stops DIYers was identifying the right part (21%), not the repair itself. That is exactly why we built a free Cartridge & Valve Finder and a Repair Cost Estimator.
Methodology & honesty notes
What this is: a meta-analysis. For each of 14 common home plumbing repairs we compiled national-average cost ranges from 28 figures across 11 reputable US cost guides (Angi, HomeAdvisor, Fixr, HomeGuide, Bob Vila, This Old House, NerdWallet, ConsumerAffairs, Modernize, Porch, Thumbtack; 2024–2026), then computed the DIY parts-only cost, the typical professional total, a conservative DIY saving (typical pro minus the high end of DIY parts), and a DIY-feasibility verdict.
What this is not: a proprietary homeowner survey. These are national averages; your real cost varies by region, severity, access, materials, and brand. We show ranges, not false precision, and we under-state savings on purpose. The underlying model is open and reproducible. Sample: 14 jobs, 28 cited figures across 11 guides.
License: free to cite and reuse with attribution to Plumbing By The Book (CC BY 4.0). Suggested citation: Kwayne, Thomas. “What Common Plumbing Repairs Cost (and How Much DIY Saves): A 2026 Data Study.” Plumbing By The Book, 2026. https://plumbingbythebook.com/plumbing-repair-cost-study/
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Author: Thomas Kwayne, editorial voice of Plumbing by the Book -- researched, spec-checked DIY guidance (not a licensed plumber). Guides + studies are researched and drafted with AI tools and checked against manufacturer specifications and published standards.
Method: Meta-analysis of national-average cost ranges for 14 common U.S. home plumbing repairs, compiled from 28 figures across 11 reputable cost guides (Angi, HomeAdvisor, Fixr, HomeGuide, Bob Vila, This Old House, NerdWallet, ConsumerAffairs, Modernize, Porch, Thumbtack; 2024-2026), plus a computed conservative DIY-vs-pro saving and a DIY-feasibility verdict per job. Not a proprietary survey; national averages, shown as ranges. Free to reuse with attribution (CC BY 4.0).
Charts and stats are free to use with a link to https://plumbingbythebook.com/plumbing-repair-cost-study/. Questions / the underlying classification rules: via the contact page.