Repiping Cost Calculator
Use our free Repiping Cost Calculator to quickly estimate material, labor, and disposal costs for full or partial repipes based on inputs like linear feet of pipe, pipe material (PEX, copper, CPVC), fixture count, and job complexity. Perfect for plumbers, remodelers, and homeowners planning a repipe project.
Get StartedProject Details
Enter a positive size
More bathrooms increase complexity
Typical range: $2.50-$5.00 per sq ft
Cost Estimate
Materials = Size × Pipe $/sq ft
Labor = Size × Labor $/sq ft
Bath Complexity = Bathrooms × $250
Total = Materials + Labor + Bath Complexity + Add-Ons
Estimate only. Actual costs may vary based on specific project requirements, local market rates, accessibility, and unforeseen complications.
All calculations are estimates and should be verified by a professional.
Repiping Cost Formula
The calculator aggregates length-based material costs and labor estimates, adds fixed line items (permits, water heater work), and applies a contingency factor to produce a planning-level project cost.
How this repiping calculator works
Starting from total pipe length and fixture count, the calculator estimates required pipe and fitting quantities, multiplies by unit prices, and estimates labor from industry-standard installation rates adjusted for job access and complexity. It then adds permit, disposal, and contingency to provide a complete project-level estimate. Use results for budgeting—obtain on-site quotes for final pricing.
When to use this Repiping Cost Calculator
When budgeting a full-house repipe before contractor bids
To estimate costs for converting pipe material (copper → PEX)
When planning partial repipes (kitchen/bathroom wing) or service line replacement
For preliminary homeowner quotes and financing applications
To compare labor vs material cost impacts across materials and access conditions
Want to convert estimates into professional quotes?
Use ServiceAgent.ai to automate repipe estimates, generate itemized proposals, track supplier pricing, and schedule jobs—streamline quoting to installation.
Book a Free DemoTypical Repiping Cost Ranges & Benchmarks
Benchmarks vary by region, home layout, access, and material. Use these ranges to sanity-check inputs.
PEX material (pipe only)
~$0.75 – $2.50 per linear ft (varies by diameter and brand)
Copper material (pipe only)
~$2.50 – $6.00 per linear ft (depending on diameter and market)
Fittings & valves
$200 – $1,200 depending on scope and number of fixtures
Labor (installed)
$50 – $120 per hour; typical full-house repipe labor often ranges $2,000 – $6,000 depending on complexity
Typical total (full-house, PEX)
$1,500 – $6,000+ (small homes) to $6,000–$15,000+ (larger/complex homes)
Typical total (full-house, copper)
$4,000 – $12,000+ (varies widely with copper pricing and access)
Use local contractor quotes to refine these benchmarks—access, wall/ceiling finishes, and home age are major cost drivers.
Frequently Asked Questions
How accurate is this repiping cost calculator?
It gives a planning-level estimate. On-site inspections reveal hidden costs (wall/ceiling repairs, access issues). Always get contractor quotes.
Which pipe material is most cost-effective?
PEX is typically cheaper and faster to install than copper; copper costs more in material and labor but can be chosen for longevity or code preferences.
Do you need permits for a repipe?
Most jurisdictions require plumbing permits and inspections for repiping—include permit fees in budgeting.
How does access affect cost?
Hard access (finished walls, ceilings, multi-story homes) increases labor and patch/repair costs significantly—plan for higher labor multipliers in those cases.
What about replacing the main service line?
Service line replacement (from meter to house) is a separate scope with its own permitting and costs—include as an additional line item if relevant.
Can I do a partial repipe to save money?
Yes—targeted branch replacements are cheaper but may not resolve systemic issues; evaluate based on pipe condition and failure risk.
How should I budget for drywall/finish repairs?
Add separate allowances for patching and finishing per affected area or ask contractors for combined install + repair quotes.
Is PEX suitable for all homes?
PEX is widely used in modern repipes but check local code, water chemistry, and compatibility with existing systems (e.g., certain polybutylene issues).