Check pilot light and breaker first. Could save you $200.
One fixture or whole house? Each has different causes and fixes.
Small drip vs. pooling water. When to replace vs. repair.
Complete troubleshooting for gas and electric water heaters.
Usually a $5 flapper. Here's how to check and replace it.
Kitchen, bathroom, or main line — different fixes for each.
Try this before calling. If it doesn't work, then call.
Humming, leaking, or jammed? Each needs different approach.
High water bill? Wet spots? How to locate the source.
Common causes and when you can DIY vs. call plumber.
Step 1: Shut off water. Step 2: Call plumber. Step 3: Document damage.
Serious issue common in San Diego. Early signs to watch for.
Tree roots are common in older SD neighborhoods. What to know.
City pressure varies by neighborhood. When it's your problem vs. the city's.
Required annually in San Diego. What it is and what it costs.
Hard water is common in SD. When softeners make sense.
Text us. We'll help you figure out if you need to call now or if it can wait.
Text 773-544-1231What common plumbing repairs should cost in San Diego (2026 pricing).
Decision framework for San Diego homeowners.
Save money by knowing what's truly urgent vs. what can be scheduled.
Safe to try yourself: Unclogging drains with plunger/snake, replacing faucet washers, tightening connections, changing toilet flapper, resetting garbage disposal.
Call a plumber: No hot water after checking basics, multiple clogged drains, leak you can't find source of, water heater replacement, sewer line issues.
Emergency (call immediately): Burst pipes/flooding, sewage backup, gas smell from water heater, major leak you can't stop, water damage spreading.
→ Plumbing Project Quote Review
Plumbing quotes vary wildly in San Diego. Our checklist helps you verify scope, check permit requirements, and identify bids that are missing work or padding margins.
AI automation for small businesses is genuinely useful in 2026 — but only when you start with a problem, not a solution. The businesses getting real value picked one painful manual task and automated just that. Not their whole operation. One thing.
['Starting with the most complex use case instead of the simplest.', 'Buying a platform before running a 30-day single-use-case pilot.', 'Not involving the staff who will actually use it in the selection process.']
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