Whole House Repiping in Lakewood, CO — Fix Your Pipes for Good

Corroded pipes cause rust in your water, low pressure at every faucet, and leaks that hide inside

walls for months before anyone notices. Whole house repiping in Lakewood, CO addresses these

problems at the source — clean water flow restored to every fixture in the house. Read through

what the process looks like, then call us to get on the schedule

Call Now: (720) 303-5374

Lakewood homes built more than 30 years ago have a real chance of still running on original galvanized steel or polybutylene pipes. Both materials were standard in their day and both have well-documented failure patterns that show up in homes across Applewood, Eiber, Glennon

Heights, and Morse Park. This page covers whole house repiping — what it involves, which homes need it, and how the work gets done.

Common reasons Lakewood homeowners call us include aging pipe materials, repeated leaks at joints, discolored water, and pressure that's dropped noticeably across the house. Most jobs finish in one to three days. You stay in your home throughout. As a licensed local plumber, we handle permits, inspections, and every connection from the main line to the fixtures.

Water heater tank in a basement utility room, with pipes, labels, and a concrete floor.

What Your Pipes Are Trying to Tell You

Galvanized steel corrodes from the inside out. As the pipe walls rust, they shed flakes directly into the water supply — which is the source of the brownish tint that Lakewood homeowners sometimes notice when running the tap first thing in the morning. Polybutylene pipe, installed

widely during the 1980s in homes across Belmar, Westland, and older sections of Green Mountain, fails suddenly and without warning. There's no slow leak phase — it cracks and fails.

For homeowners in Lakewood's older neighborhoods, many of these pipe materials are still in service simply because nothing has visibly broken yet. A home inspection or a surprise wall leak is often what brings the issue to light. Catching pipe failure before it causes mold growth, structural water damage, or an emergency repair situation is significantly cheaper than

addressing it after the fact.

Lakewood's hard water accelerates the deterioration. Mineral scale builds up on the interior walls of already-aging galvanized pipe, narrowing the passage water flows through and adding stress to walls that are already corroding. The two problems compound each other.



PEX Is the Most Common Material Used for Whole House Repiping in Lakewood

For most Lakewood repipes, we use PEX — cross-linked polyethylene pipe. PEX is flexible, which means it routes around framing and through existing wall cavities with fewer cuts to drywall. That flexibility makes a real difference in older Lakewood homes where wall access is limited

and preserving finished surfaces matters. PEX is also freeze-resistant, which is relevant in Lakewood where the freeze/thaw cycle runs from late fall through early spring and puts stress on rigid pipe materials.

Copper is the other option. It's rigid, durable over the long term, and naturally resistant to bacterial growth. Both materials meet Colorado's residential plumbing code. Most licensed plumbers in the Lakewood area recommend PEX for whole house repipes because it installs

faster, requires fewer wall openings, and costs less in labor — without sacrificing longevity or performance. If your home is on well water or has specific water chemistry conditions, we'll walk through whether copper is the better fit for your situation.

Technician working under a sink, tightening plumbing with a wrench.

Repiping Fixes Low Water Pressure and Protects Your Home's Value

Scale and corrosion narrow the interior diameter of aging pipes over time. As the usable space inside the pipe shrinks, pressure drops at faucets and showerheads — often so gradually that homeowners don't realize how much they've lost until they experience a freshly repiped home.

In Lakewood's active Jefferson County resale market, pipe material is a line item that buyers and their inspectors pay attention to. Galvanized steel and polybutylene pipe both show up as red flags on inspection reports and can slow or derail a home sale. Homeowners preparing to list in often repipe as part of their pre-sale preparation specifically because it removes that flag before the home goes on the market. New plumbing shows up in the inspection and shapes how buyers perceive the home's overall condition.

A Permit Is Required Before Any Whole House Repipe Begins in Lakewood

Jefferson County requires a plumbing permit before whole house repiping work starts. We pull that permit for you as part of the job scope. Once the work is complete, a county inspector signs off that everything meets current code — and that documentation becomes part of your home's permanent record.

Unpermitted repiping creates title complications and insurance exposure that surface at the worst possible moment — usually when you're trying to sell or file a claim. Work done correctly and with a passed inspection gives future buyers, lenders, and insurance carriers a clear paper trail showing the plumbing was done right and approved by Jefferson County. That documentation is worth more than most homeowners expect when it's time to sell.

Gloved worker lowering a corrugated hose into a round ground opening on a grassy lawn

Most Lakewood Homes Are Repiped in One to Three Days

Timeline depends on the square footage of the home and the complexity of the layout. A typical 2,000-square-foot Lakewood home runs one to two days. Larger homes or those with more complex two-story layouts — common throughout Applewood and Bear Creek — may take three days. We stage the work so water is off for a few hours at a time rather than for full days, which keeps your household functional throughout the job.

One thing to factor into your planning: Jefferson County permit scheduling typically adds one to two business days before work can begin. We'll give you that timeline upfront so you can plan around it. Summer is the busiest season for repiping across Lakewood — if you're thinking about scheduling, reaching out early gives you more flexibility on timing.

You Can Stay in Your Home During the Entire Job


We work section by section through the house, restoring water between phases so daily routines

aren't shut down completely. Lakewood families — including households with young kids and

pets — stay home throughout the repipe in almost every case. No hotel stay, no major disruption.

Clear communication makes this work. Before each workday starts, we'll tell you exactly when

the water will be off and for how long so you can schedule showers, meals, and anything else

around those windows. If the schedule shifts during the day, we let you know immediately rather

than leaving you guessing.

What Whole House Repiping Covers in Lakewood, CO


Whole house repiping replaces all the water supply lines in the home with new pipe material. In Lakewood, that typically means replacing original galvanized steel or polybutylene pipe with

PEX or copper. The work requires a licensed plumber and a Jefferson County permit.


Signs you may need repiping:


  • Rust-colored or discolored water coming from your faucets
  • Low pressure at multiple fixtures throughout the home
  • Pipes that are older than 40 years or made from galvanized steel or polybutylene


What to expect:


  • Most Castle Rock homes are repiped in one to three days
  • You do not need to move out — water is shut off in short windows, not all day


Why it matters:

  • New pipes protect your home from water damage inside walls
  • Updated plumbing supports your home's value and passes inspection

Frequently Asked Questions

  • How do I know if my Lakewood home needs to be repiped?

    Discolored water — brown or rust-

    tinted, particularly in the morning — is the clearest sign of galvanized steel corrosion. Pressure that's dropped noticeably across multiple fixtures, joints that have leaked repeatedly, or a plumber or inspector identifying galvanized or polybutylene pipe during service are all reliable

    indicators. Lakewood homes built before 1990 in neighborhoods like Applewood, Eiber, Glennon Heights, and Morse Park are the most likely candidates. If your home's plumbing hasn't been assessed recently, a pipe inspection gives you a clear picture without committing to any work

  • Is PEX or copper better for repiping a Lakewood home?

    PEX is the right choice for most Lakewood repipes. It's flexible enough to route through older wall cavities with fewer drywall cuts, freeze-resistant through the local winters, and less expensive in labor than copper. Copper is the better fit in specific situations — homes with well water, certain water chemistry profiles, or

    homeowners who prefer copper for its natural antimicrobial properties. We'll recommend based on your home's specific conditions rather than a blanket rule.

  • Can I live in my home while it's being repiped?

    Yes. We stage the work section by section and restore water between phases. Most Lakewood households — including those with young children — stay home throughout the entire job without meaningful disruption. We give you a

    daily schedule for when the water will be off so you can plan around those windows. A hotel stay isn't necessary for a standard repipe.

  • Will repiping fix low water pressure in my Lakewood home?

    In most cases, yes. When pressure

    has dropped due to mineral scale and corrosion narrowing the pipe interior, new supply lines restore full flow. If the pressure issue has a different cause — a failing pressure regulator valve, a

    municipal supply problem, or a specific fixture issue — we'll identify that during the assessment and let you know before starting work.

  • Do I need a permit to repipe my house in Lakewood, CO?

    Yes. Jefferson County requires a

    plumbing permit before whole house repiping begins. We pull the permit on your behalf, schedule the county inspection after the work is done, and provide you with documentation of

    the passed inspection. Unpermitted repiping creates real problems at resale and with insurance — it's not a step worth skipping.

  • Does repiping a house increase home value in Lakewood?

    It protects value more than it adds it

    — but that protection is significant. Galvanized or polybutylene pipe on an inspection report can reduce offers, trigger repair credits, or kill a sale entirely in Lakewood's Jefferson County market.

    Repiping removes that flag, gives buyers confidence in the plumbing, and provides a passed county inspection as documentation. For homeowners planning to sell within the next few years,

    the return on a repipe is often realized directly in the transaction.