Plumbing Repair Providers

The providers catalogued here represent licensed plumbing repair contractors operating across the United States, organized by service category, geographic coverage, and licensing classification. Each entry reflects verified professional standing within state-regulated frameworks, covering residential, commercial, and specialty plumbing repair sectors. The Provider Network Purpose and Scope establishes the eligibility standards governing which providers appear in this index.

What each provider covers

Each provider in this network corresponds to a single licensed plumbing repair business or sole proprietor holding an active contractor or journeyman license issued by a state plumbing board or equivalent regulatory authority. The United States has no single federal plumbing licensing body — licensing authority is distributed across 50 state jurisdictions, with the contractor classification thresholds, examination requirements, and continuing education mandates varying by state.

Providers are structured around 4 primary service classifications:

Providers do not represent endorsements, ratings, or ranked recommendations. The provider network describes the service landscape as a structured reference, consistent with the framework detailed on the How to Use This Plumbing Repair Resource page.

Geographic distribution

Providers are distributed nationally across all 50 states and the District of Columbia. Concentration is highest in the 10 most populous states — California, Texas, Florida, New York, Pennsylvania, Illinois, Ohio, Georgia, North Carolina, and Michigan — where licensed contractor populations are largest and plumbing board enforcement infrastructure is most developed.

State-level regulatory bodies that govern contractors appearing in this network include agencies such as the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB), the Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners (TSBPE), and the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR). Each state board maintains its own public license verification portal, which serves as the primary authoritative source for confirming a verified contractor's current standing.

Rural coverage varies significantly. States with lower population density — including Wyoming, North Dakota, and Vermont — have smaller licensed contractor pools, and providers in those areas may reflect broader geographic service radii of 75 miles or more from a contractor's registered business address.

How to read an entry

Each provider network entry is structured with discrete data fields to allow consistent comparison across providers. A standard entry contains the following components:

Permit and inspection requirements embedded in entries reflect state plumbing code mandates. Under both the UPC and IPC frameworks, repair work involving alterations to drain-waste-vent (DWV) systems, supply line replacements, or fixture additions typically triggers a permit requirement enforced by the local AHJ, not the state board.

What providers include and exclude

Included:

Excluded:

Sewer-specific repair providers — including those performing trenchless relining, pipe bursting, and lateral replacement — are catalogued separately at Sewer Repair Authority, which covers the distinct licensing requirements and inspection protocols that apply to below-grade sewer infrastructure. Pump repair specialists, including well pump and booster pump contractors, fall under the scope maintained at Pump Repair Authority.

Cross-referencing between provider network verticals is documented in the Plumbing Repair Providers index, which maintains the master taxonomy linking service classifications across all plumbing repair provider categories tracked within this network.

References


The law belongs to the people. Georgia v. Public.Resource.Org, 590 U.S. (2020)