Plumber prices in Augusta, GA
| Project | Time | Typical cost | Range |
| Standard service call (diagnosis + minor repair) |
1–2 hours |
$162 |
$132 – $194 |
| Drain cleaning (sink, tub, or floor drain) |
30–90 min |
$94 |
$77 – $113 |
| Single-fixture leak repair (faucet, supply line) |
1–2 hours |
$171 |
$140 – $205 |
| Toilet replacement (you supply fixture) |
2–3 hours |
$197 |
$162 – $237 |
| Water heater replacement (40–50 gal tank) |
4–6 hours |
$1,148 |
$941 – $1,378 |
| Sewer line repair (spot repair, not full replace) |
1–2 days |
$1,842 |
$1,510 – $2,210 |
| Whole-house re-pipe (1500 sq ft, PEX) |
3–5 days |
$5,189 |
$4,255 – $6,226 |
Local rate = BLS national mean × 2.4 markup × (GA COL 90.8/100). Materials adjusted by the same factor.
What a plumber in Augusta actually does
A licensed plumber handles anything that touches the pressurized water supply, the DWV (drain-waste-vent) system, the gas line, or fixed gas-fired appliances like water heaters and pool heaters. A typical service call begins with a 15–30 minute diagnosis: the plumber will run faucets, check water pressure at a hose bib (40–80 PSI is normal), inspect supply lines and shut-off valves, and — if the call involves a drain — usually run a snake or scope a camera before quoting the repair. Bigger jobs (re-pipes, sewer-line work, water-heater swaps) require a written scope, a permit pulled in the homeowner's name, and at least one rough/final inspection by the local building department.
Questions to ask before you hire in GA
- Are you licensed in this state, and what is your license number?
- Do you carry general liability and workers' comp? (Get the policy number, not just a "yes.")
- Is the price flat-rate or hourly, and what does it include — diagnosis, parts, disposal, permit?
- If the job grows in scope, how is the change order priced and approved?
- What is the warranty on labor and on the manufacturer parts?
- Will you pull the permit, or do you expect me to?
A plumber who quotes a major job sight-unseen, refuses to put the price in writing, or asks for more than 30% up front. Door-to-door "I noticed something wrong with your house" pitches after a storm are almost always scams.
4 licensed plumbers in Augusta
Scott Hydro Services
📍 1420 Garden Way, Augusta, GA 30904
★ 4.3 / 5 · 54 reviews · 16 years in business
✓ Licensed ✓ Insured BBB A- 24/7 Emergency 16 yrs
Specialties: Toilet replacement, Garbage disposal, Pipe burst repair
Patriot Rooter
📍 7741 Jefferson Pkwy, Augusta, GA 30912
★ 4.2 / 5 · 10 reviews · 35 years in business
✓ Licensed ✓ Insured BBB A+ 35 yrs
Specialties: Re-piping, Toilet replacement, Sewer line repair
Patriot Pipeline
📍 2163 Cedar Pkwy, Augusta, GA 30901
★ 5.0 / 5 · 73 reviews · 7 years in business
✓ Licensed ✓ Insured BBB A- 7 yrs
Specialties: Leak repair, Re-piping, Toilet replacement, Garbage disposal, Sewer line repair
Perez Hydro Services
📍 1920 Main Pkwy, Augusta, GA 30904
★ 3.9 / 5 · 306 reviews · 18 years in business
✓ Licensed ✓ Insured BBB A+ 18 yrs
Specialties: Toilet replacement, Faucet install, Sump pump, Drain cleaning
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Seasonal plumbing checklist for Augusta homeowners
Spring
- Run every faucet, shower, and outdoor spigot for 60 seconds; watch for slow drains, drips at the base, and drops in pressure.
- Inspect the water heater anode rod if your unit is over 5 years old; replace if more than 50% consumed.
- Test the sump pump by pouring a 5-gallon bucket of water into the pit; the pump should activate and the pit should empty within 30 seconds.
- Re-aim sprinklers and clear hose-bib vacuum breakers before the irrigation season.
- Snake or enzyme-treat slow drains before summer guest season.
Fall
- Disconnect garden hoses and shut off exterior hose-bib valves before the first hard freeze.
- Insulate any exposed pipes in crawlspaces, garages, or unheated basements with foam sleeves.
- Drain and winterize irrigation lines (most municipalities and HOAs require this by mid-November).
- Flush the water heater tank to clear sediment that reduces efficiency.
- Test main water shut-off valve so you can find it fast in an emergency.
Winter
- Open cabinet doors under sinks on outside walls during cold snaps to let warm air reach pipes.
- Let faucets on outside walls drip overnight when temperatures drop below 20°F.
- Maintain at least 55°F indoors even when the home is unoccupied.