Gas Line Repair services in Fort Worth
Our crew runs about half of its weekly volume on gas line repair calls in and around Fort Worth. The other half is everything else local-service. So yes, we know your area. Family-run, second-generation if you count my dad. We've watched fifteen national "plumbing chains" come and go in Fort Worth and we're still here.
What's typical for this job
Gas line work is regulated. We pull the permit, do the work, and coordinate the utility inspection before the line goes back into service.
Most-common calls: gas-leak detection after the homeowner smells gas, shut-off valve replacement on a 30+ year old appliance line, and new appliance hookups (range, dryer, water heater, fireplace).
If you smell gas, leave the building, call your gas utility's emergency line first (it's free), and call us second. Don't switch lights on or off, don't use phones inside the building. The utility shuts the meter and confirms the leak is on the customer side. Then we come in, find it, and repair.
Material: black iron is still the standard for hard pipe. Yellow CSST is the flexible alternative — easier to install, but needs proper bonding to prevent lightning strike issues. We do both.
Gas Line Repair in Fort Worth — what's typical here
Fort Worth's housing market has us seeing a lot of move-in inspections and "the previous owner did what?" calls. We sort them out.
On bigger jobs we'll bring two techs. On simpler ones, just one — fewer hands, faster billing.
Fair pricing for this work
Gas leak detection runs $165 – $330. Shut-off valve replacement runs $295 – $625. Appliance hookup (range, dryer, etc.) runs $165 – $385. Partial gas line replacement runs $735 – $2,210.
Other things we handle locally
- Water Heater Repair & Replacement in Fort Worth
- Emergency Plumbing in Fort Worth
- Toilet Repair & Installation in Fort Worth
- Drain Cleaning in Fort Worth
- Slab Leak Detection & Repair in Fort Worth
A recent gas line repair call
Last spring we got a call from a homeowner near the historic core Fort Worth. Intermittent gas smell near the basement furnace. Diagnosis: corroded fitting on a 35-year-old black iron line. We replaced the fitting and pressure-tested the line, ran the test, and were out the door in before lunch. Total: $262 including parts.