If your home still runs on original copper, galvanized or polybutylene lines, you're living with pinhole leaks waiting to happen. A whole-house re-pipe replaces the aging system once — permitted, inspected and warrantied.
Get a Free EstimatePinhole-prone aging copper replaced throughout the home with modern, code-approved piping.
Corroded galvanized and failure-prone polybutylene lines — materials insurers flag — fully retired.
Lines routed through attics and walls with surgical openings, patched and ready for paint when we finish.
Every fixture gets new supply lines and shutoff valves — the small parts that cause big floods.
Re-pipes require permitting in Florida municipalities. Ours pass inspection the first time.
Documentation of the new system for your insurer — often unlocking better rates on older homes.
Recurring pinhole leaks, rusty or discolored water, dropping pressure, or an insurer refusing to renew over polybutylene or galvanized pipe are the common triggers. If you're patching leaks more than once a year, the math already favors re-piping.
Most single-family homes take a few days for piping plus a day or two for wall patching. Water stays on each night — we cut over to the new system in stages.
No. Modern re-piping uses strategic access openings, and patching them is included. The goal is that after paint, you can't tell we were there.
Very much — Florida insurers routinely surcharge or decline homes with polybutylene or galvanized supply lines. A documented, permitted re-pipe removes that flag and often pays for part of itself in premiums.