Phoenix gas line repair
About a third of gas line repair calls in Phoenix turn out to be something the homeowner could fix in 10 minutes with a $12 part. We'll tell you which third. We work clean, leave the area better than we found it, and stick around to test the repair before we drive off.
Scope of work
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.
How Phoenix jobs differ
Most jobs are residential, but we handle small commercial too — restaurants, multi-unit rentals, retail strips along the main corridors.
Most of our Phoenix gas line repair jobs come from older neighborhoods, where the housing stock just has more failure points.
A recent gas line repair call
A Phoenix customer in their 1960s home had been chasing intermittent gas smell near the basement furnace for weeks before calling. Corroded fitting on a 35-year-old black iron line was the actual cause. We replaced the fitting and pressure-tested the line; everything stable since. About $420 all in.
Typical investment
For gas line repair jobs in the Phoenix area:
- Gas leak detection: $180 – $360
- Shut-off valve replacement: $320 – $680
- Appliance hookup (range, dryer, etc.): $180 – $420
- Partial gas line replacement: $800 – $2,400