The Most Common Plumbing Problems We See in Local Homes
Drain clogs top the list. Hair, grease, soap buildup, and food debris accumulate and restrict flow until water backs up into sinks, tubs, and showers. Most homeowners reach for a bottle of chemical drain cleaner first, but those products can corrode pipe walls and rarely clear the full blockage. A plumber uses a drain snake or hydro-jetting equipment to clear the line completely rather than just pushing the clog deeper.
Leaking fixtures and supply lines are the second most common call we get. A faucet dripping once per second wastes more than 3,000 gallons of water per year. Running toilets waste even more, sometimes 200 gallons per day, and homeowners frequently don't notice until the water bill arrives. Water heater failures, failing shut-off valves, and deteriorating supply lines round out the list. Most of these problems give early warning signs before they escalate, like discoloration around a fitting, water pooling under a cabinet, or a toilet that runs briefly after flushing.
Residential and commercial properties both deal with these issues, but commercial spaces tend to see faster wear because of higher usage volume. A business running multiple restrooms and a commercial kitchen puts more demand on its plumbing than a single-family home. Intervals between plumbing repair in Collegedale are shorter in those settings, and the fixtures have to match the load. Ignoring a slow drain or a dripping supply line in a commercial space can shut down operations fast.