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HomeCost GuidesPlumber Cost › Virginia Beach, VA

🔧 Cost Guide · Virginia Beach, VA

Average Plumber Cost in Virginia Beach, VA (2026)

A plumber in Virginia Beach charges $80/hour for a standard service call — that's +1% above the US median of $79/hour. The differential reflects the VA cost-of-living composite of 102.1 (US average = 100) applied to BLS OEWS national mean wage data for SOC 47-2152.

Plumber project costs in Virginia Beach, VA

ProjectTimeTypical costRange
Standard service call (diagnosis + minor repair) 1–2 hours $182 $149 – $218
Drain cleaning (sink, tub, or floor drain) 30–90 min $106 $87 – $127
Single-fixture leak repair (faucet, supply line) 1–2 hours $192 $157 – $230
Toilet replacement (you supply fixture) 2–3 hours $222 $182 – $266
Water heater replacement (40–50 gal tank) 4–6 hours $1,291 $1,059 – $1,549
Sewer line repair (spot repair, not full replace) 1–2 days $2,071 $1,698 – $2,485
Whole-house re-pipe (1500 sq ft, PEX) 3–5 days $5,834 $4,784 – $7,001

Sources: BLS OEWS May 2024 (SOC 47-2152), MERIC State Cost of Living Index 102.1 for VA, NAHB Construction Cost Survey 2024.

How Virginia Beach compares

At an effective contractor rate of $80/hour, Virginia Beach sits right around the national median for plumber work. Homeowners here will see higher-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 above the national figure because regional materials inflation in VA runs about 2% above the US benchmark.

What the work involves

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.

Six questions to ask any plumber in VA

  1. Are you licensed in this state, and what is your license number?
  2. Do you carry general liability and workers' comp? (Get the policy number, not just a "yes.")
  3. Is the price flat-rate or hourly, and what does it include — diagnosis, parts, disposal, permit?
  4. If the job grows in scope, how is the change order priced and approved?
  5. What is the warranty on labor and on the manufacturer parts?
  6. 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.

Featured plumbers in Virginia Beach

Young Water Works

📍 9984 Forest Ter, Virginia Beach, VA 23451
★ 5.0 / 5 · 170 reviews · 32 yrs
✓ Licensed 24/7

Martinez Pipe Pros

📍 4911 Main Ter, Virginia Beach, VA 23454
★ 3.8 / 5 · 181 reviews · 30 yrs
✓ Licensed

Virginia Beach Water Works

📍 7626 Park Rd, Virginia Beach, VA 23451
★ 4.7 / 5 · 125 reviews · 26 yrs
✓ Licensed 24/7

Virginia Beach Drain Co

📍 9781 Bay Ave, Virginia Beach, VA 23460
★ 3.9 / 5 · 73 reviews · 35 yrs
✓ Licensed

Virginia Beach Pipeline

📍 2652 Maple St, Virginia Beach, VA 23454
★ 4.6 / 5 · 273 reviews · 34 yrs
✓ Licensed 24/7

See all Plumbers in Virginia Beach →

By ZIP code in Virginia Beach

Seasonal plumbing checklist

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.
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