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🔧 Cost Guide · Oklahoma City, OKA plumber in Oklahoma City charges $68/hour for a standard service call — that's 14% below the US median of $79/hour. The differential reflects the OK cost-of-living composite of 86.8 (US average = 100) applied to BLS OEWS national mean wage data for SOC 47-2152.
| Project | Time | Typical cost | Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard service call (diagnosis + minor repair) | 1–2 hours | $154 | $127 – $185 |
| Drain cleaning (sink, tub, or floor drain) | 30–90 min | $90 | $74 – $108 |
| Single-fixture leak repair (faucet, supply line) | 1–2 hours | $163 | $134 – $196 |
| Toilet replacement (you supply fixture) | 2–3 hours | $188 | $155 – $226 |
| Water heater replacement (40–50 gal tank) | 4–6 hours | $1,097 | $900 – $1,317 |
| Sewer line repair (spot repair, not full replace) | 1–2 days | $1,761 | $1,444 – $2,113 |
| Whole-house re-pipe (1500 sq ft, PEX) | 3–5 days | $4,960 | $4,067 – $5,952 |
Sources: BLS OEWS May 2024 (SOC 47-2152), MERIC State Cost of Living Index 86.8 for OK, NAHB Construction Cost Survey 2024.
At an effective contractor rate of $68/hour, Oklahoma City sits meaningfully below the national median for plumber work. Homeowners here will see lower-than-average prices on labor-intensive jobs (re-pipes, panel upgrades, full system replacements) where labor is the bulk of the cost. Materials-heavy jobs (water-heater swaps, furnace replacements, large appliance installs) will track somewhat below the national figure because regional materials inflation in OK runs about 13% below the US benchmark.
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.
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.
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