
Shenandoah Valley · Virginia
Plumbing Companies in Harrisonburg, VA
License-checked pros, shown in a neutral order. You do the hiring.
Find plumbing companies serving Harrisonburg and nearby Winchester and Staunton. The License Verified mark means we confirmed an active Virginia contractor license on the date shown, nothing more and nothing less.
From a running toilet to a water heater that quit on a January morning, plumbing is the trade you call when water is going where it should not. A licensed plumber handles the pipes, fixtures, and the emergencies.

The work
What it covers
- Leak detection and pipe repair
- Water heater repair and replacement, tank and tankless
- Repiping and fixing old galvanized or polybutylene lines
- Drain cleaning and clearing clogs
- Toilet, faucet, and fixture installation
- Sump pump and water line work, and emergency calls
The register
Plumbing Companies in Harrisonburg
Ballpark
What it costs in Virginia
| Leak or pipe repair | $150 to $1,500 |
| Drain cleaning, snaked | $150 to $400 |
| Water heater repair | $200 to $1,000 |
| Water heater replaced, tank | $1,200 to $3,500 |
| Tankless water heater installed | $2,500 to $5,500 |
| Whole-house repipe | $4,000 to $15,000 |
Harrisonburg prices track these statewide ranges. These are rough ballparks, not quotes. What you actually pay swings with how the plumber has to reach the pipe, whether it is buried behind a finished wall or run under a slab, what the old pipe is made of, and whether a gas line or a permit gets pulled into the job. Get two or three written quotes before you sign anything.
Signs you might need to hire a pro
- No hot water, or it runs warm and then goes cold partway through a shower
- Rusty or brown water out of the tap, or a rotten-egg sulfur smell
- A drain that gurgles, backs up, or empties slow no matter what you pour down it
- A wet stain on a ceiling or wall, or the sound of water running when every fixture is off
- A water bill that jumped and you cannot point to why
Before you sign
Licensing in Virginia
Any contracting job of 1,000 dollars or more has to go to a business licensed with the Virginia DPOR Board for Contractors, and under that none is required. The class on that license is a dollar ceiling, not a grade of quality. Class C covers single jobs under about 10,000 dollars, Class B under about 120,000, and Class A has no ceiling, so a small Class C outfit is not worse than a Class A, it just takes smaller work.
Most plumbing work in Virginia falls under the Plumbing (PLB) specialty licensed through DPOR. Depending on the job a legitimate pro may also hold HVAC (HVA), Gas Fitting (GFC), or a Residential or Commercial Building Contractor (RBC or CBC) classification, and in Virginia any job of $1,000 or more has to be handled by a licensed contractor.
Verify it yourself. Look up any license at the Virginia DPOR lookup and ask for proof of insurance before you hire.
Facts on the table. You do the hiring. -M.H.
Good to know
Common questions about plumbing companies in Harrisonburg
What does it cost just to get a plumber to show up?
A lot of them charge a trip or diagnostic fee, roughly $75 to $150, and roll it into the repair if you hire them. Hourly rates land somewhere around $45 to $150. A small fix runs a couple hundred, and a big job runs into the thousands, so get the number in writing before they start.
How do I pick a plumber?
Ask if they are licensed, ask whether the person giving you the price is the one actually doing the work, and get that price in writing up front. A plumber who pulls a permit on a water heater or a repipe is doing it by the book, not padding your bill.
Does a plumber need a license in Virginia?
For any job of $1,000 or more, yes. Virginia licenses contractors through DPOR, and a plumber usually carries the Plumbing (PLB) specialty. Ask for the license number and check it yourself on the DPOR website.
Should I repair my water heater or replace it?
If the tank is leaking from the bottom, it is done and no repair fixes that, so you replace it. A bad heating element, thermostat, or valve is worth fixing on a unit under about ten years old. Once it is older than that, a replacement usually makes more sense than throwing money at it.
A pipe burst and water is going everywhere. What do I do first?
Shut off the main valve, which is usually where the water line comes into the house, near the meter or down in the crawl space. Then call. Up in the mountains a pipe that froze and split will keep dumping until that valve is closed, so knowing where it is ahead of a cold snap saves you a mess.
