An independent research database
Trade 25 of 33 Updated May 2026

A research dossier · 41 NSW + 32 QLD + 31 VIC homeowner posts · 2,037 quotes total

Hiring a Plumber
shouldn't cost your panic premium.

Plumbing is the trade where the panic does the negotiating. Tap leaks at 9pm, hot water dies on a Tuesday, drain backs up Sunday morning — and the first plumber you call has 100% of the leverage. This page is what you read before that night, not after. Written from real homeowner posts and grounded in the state compliance rules.

$1.5k

The "blocked drain quote" homeowners flag verbatim.

After-hours callout multiplier the cowboys don't disclose.

CoC

The paper you should hold before you pay.

How this page was built

A research dossier, not a referral page.

Sources

Reddit (r/sydney · r/melbourne · r/AusFinance · r/AusRenovation), Whirlpool, ProductReview, the NSW Fair Trading register, QBCC, and the VBA. Cross-read with the published consumer complaint archives.

Verification

Every dollar range here was cross-checked against three sources in three states. The compliance certificate rules were verified against each state's plumbing regulator. Mistakes get corrected with a date-stamped note.

Funding

No plumber pays for placement here. No referral fees from the operators we recommend. Funded by the supply-side flyer service that runs separately at flyers.needatrade.com.au.

Before we start

The panic does the negotiating.
Until you have a plumber on file.

There are two ways to hire a plumber. One is in the cold light of Tuesday morning, when nothing's leaking and you've got an afternoon to verify three quotes. The other is when there's water on the laundry floor and your kids' school photos are 5 minutes from being ruined. Same question, different chair.

The ten questions below work for both. Read them now, save the verification phrases, and the next time the laundry floor is wet, you've already done the hard bit.

A working plumber answers all ten without breaking stride. A cowboy stalls on three of them. That's the whole test.

01

How much should it really cost?

Plumbing has two quote-shock jobs: blocked drains and hot water systems. The honest range for each is wider than you'd guess and narrower than the cowboy will admit.

Felt a bit shitty after realising I just paid $958.
Reddit r/melbourne · 2024 · post-job realisation

The honest answer depends on which of three things the plumber is doing: a callout + diagnosis, a simple task, or a significant install. Most quote disputes happen because the homeowner thought they were buying one of those, and got billed for another.

The four lines you should see, written down

  • 1Callout fee. Disclosed before the truck moves. Folded into the job price if the work goes ahead — never charged twice.
  • 2Hourly rate × time on site. Itemised, plus any after-hours / weekend / public-holiday multiplier (disclosed up front).
  • 3Materials. Itemised — fittings, parts, the actual unit if it's a hot water replacement.
  • 4Diagnostic add-ons. Drain camera, jet, leak detection — quoted separately with a reason, not bundled silently into a "drain investigation".

Indicative ranges · residential

AU 2026

Callout + diagnosis (in hours)$140 – $280
Leaking tap or single fitting$180 – $420
Blocked drain (snake)$250 – $650
Blocked drain (jet + camera)$650 – $1,800
Hot water unit replacement$1,800 – $4,500
After-hours / weekend multiplier1.5 – 3×
Indicative only. Tree-root invasion, gas certification, two-storey access, or strata = different ballpark.

Ask this, exactly

Save · share · screenshot

"What's the callout fee, what's the hourly rate, and what's the after-hours multiplier — before I confirm? And does the callout fold into the job if I book the work?"

A working plumber says yes within a sentence. A cowboy says "we'll work it out on the day." That phrase is the trap.

02

How to tell a real one from a cowboy.

The plumbing scams are quieter than the roofing ones. No door-knockers. Just the panic, the late-night phone call, and the price you find out about at 11pm with water on the floor.

Red flags — in order of how often you'll meet them

  • !

    No callout fee disclosed before the truck moves

    A working plumber tells you the callout fee on the phone, before they leave the depot. Anyone who shows up before quoting the callout is about to invoice you whatever they like.

  • !

    After-hours multiplier hidden until invoice

    After-hours work IS more expensive — that's fair. The cowboy move is not telling you it's 2× or 3× until the bill arrives.

  • !

    "You need a camera and a jet" before the snake

    For most one-off blockages, a snake clears the line. The CCTV + jet treatment is genuine for recurring blocks or tree-root invasions — but selling it on the first visit, before a snake is even tried, is upsell theatre.

  • !

    No compliance certificate offered

    For notifiable work (hot water, gas, sanitary), the plumber is legally required to issue a Compliance Certificate. If they don't bring it up, you're dealing with either a non-compliant plumber or a non-compliant scope.

  • !

    "I'll text you a price"

    A text isn't a quote. A working plumber sends a quote on letterhead with the licence number printed. Anything else is a number you can't hold them to.

The verification routine — 5 minutes, free

  1. Plumber's licence on the state register. Check the name matches the licence. The trade is licensed in every state — no exceptions.
  2. Gas-fitting endorsement if there's any gas work in scope. Plumbing licence ≠ gas licence in any state.
  3. ABN on abr.business.gov.au. At least 12 months old. Legal entity name matches the licence.
  4. Callout fee + after-hours rate stated on the phone before the truck moves. In writing in the follow-up text.
  5. Certificate of compliance promised at sign-off for any notifiable work — hot water, gas, sanitary, drainage.

Ask this, exactly

"Can you send me your licence number, your after-hours multiplier, and confirm you'll issue a Compliance Certificate for the work — all before the truck moves?"

03

What certificate should you receive?

The Compliance Certificate is the single most important piece of paper in the trade. It's legally required for most plumbing work. It's also the cleanest test of whether you're dealing with a cowboy or a working operator.

Got the work done. No certificate, no receipt. Now I'm chasing him for the paperwork because I'm selling.
Whirlpool VIC homeowner · selling the house
NSW New South Wales

NSW Fair Trading + Sydney Water

  • Certificate of Compliance required for sanitary plumbing, drainage and water supply work.
  • Notice of Work lodged before notifiable jobs.
  • Gas requires a separate gas-fitting licence.
  • Check the Service NSW register.
QLD Queensland

QBCC

  • Form 4 (Notifiable Work) and Form 5 (Inspection Certificate) for plumbing under QBCC.
  • Gas requires a separate Gas Work Authority.
  • Check qbcc.qld.gov.au.
  • If the plumber can't name the Form numbers, that's the test.
VIC Victoria

VBA

  • Compliance Certificate is a legal duty. Plumber lodges it via the VBA portal.
  • Most clearly regulated state — VBA buyer-voice is the loudest.
  • Check the VBA register.
  • VIC buyers are most likely to call you on missing paperwork at handover.

"Plumber" vs "roof plumber" vs "gas-fitter" — three trades, one truck.

A licensed plumber doesn't automatically have the endorsement for gas work or roof plumbing (gutters, flashings, downpipes, metal roofing). They're separate authorisations. If the scope includes gas appliances, hot water unit conversion, or any sheet-metal roof work, ask which licence class they're holding for that part — or you'll have a non-compliant install you can't insure.

Ask this, exactly

"What licence class are you holding for this work — and what compliance paperwork will I receive when it's signed off? Will the certificate be lodged with the state?"

Half-time

The first three sort the leaks from the levers.

Quote anatomy. The cowboy test. The compliance paper. If those three are clean, you're 80% sorted before the truck even leaves the depot. The next seven are how you separate the working plumbers from each other — and how you stop the panic from doing the negotiating in the next emergency.

04

When you need them now.

Plumbing is the loudest urgency cluster of any trade. The right operator answers in minutes, not vibes.

Some plumbing emergencies are real — burst pipe, gas leak, hot water failure with a vulnerable occupant. Others are urgent without being emergencies — blocked drain, leaking tap, hot water dead but you've got a shower at the neighbour's. The plumber on the other end of the phone needs to triage that with you, not just race over.

An honest ETA.

"I'm 40 minutes out" or "I'm not available until tomorrow morning, here's who to call instead." Not "today, sometime."

Phone triage.

"Have you turned the mains off? Where's the leak coming from? Is anyone in danger?" If they can't talk you through that, they can't fix what's coming.

The multiplier, up front.

"After-hours callout is $X, hourly is 2× weekday. I'll send the breakdown by text now." That's the line that splits the working operators from the cowboys.

"Emergency 24/7" on a website means nothing. A working plumber gives you an answer in 10 minutes. A working plumber's voicemail tells you who else to call. A cowboy answers the phone, says yes to everything, and shows up four hours later with a $2k quote and no licence number.

Ask this, exactly

"What's your ETA, what's the after-hours multiplier, and can you talk me through what to turn off while you're on the way?"

05

What happens next, step by step.

  1. 1 Step

    Phone triage

    Symptom, location, urgency. Mains off? Anyone in danger? The plumber sets the right priority before the truck moves.

  2. 2 Step

    On-site diagnosis

    Eyes on the actual problem. Photos. Cause identified, not just symptom. Quote sent in writing after, not before.

  3. 3 Step

    Written quote

    Callout (if applicable), hourly × time, materials, any diagnostic add-ons. Variations capped in writing.

  4. 4 Step

    Authorisation + work

    You sign off in writing. They do the work. Notifiable work gets logged with the state regulator.

  5. 5 Step

    Test + clean up

    Pressure test, leak test, drain flow test where relevant. Site cleaner than they found it.

  6. 6 Step

    Compliance certificate + invoice

    Compliance Certificate (or state equivalent) issued. Invoice itemised. Photos of completed work where access was hard.

06

Snake, jet, or camera?

The blockage decision tree most quotes hide. There's a right tool for each kind of blockage — and an upsell where the wrong tool is sold first.

Tool A

Snake / electric eel

A flexible cable with a cutting head, pushed down the line to break the blockage and pull it back out.

Right when: first-time blockage, soft obstruction (paper, grease, food, hair).

Wrong when: recurring blockages — the cause is in the line, not the symptom.

$250 – $650

Indicative · AU 2026

Tool B · most upsold

Hydro-jet + camera

High-pressure water through the line, with CCTV inspection to see what's actually there.

Right when: recurring blockages, suspected tree roots, pre-purchase inspection.

Wrong when: a one-off blockage you've never had before. This is the upsell line.

$650 – $1,800

Indicative · AU 2026

Tool C

Excavation + repair

Dig up the line. Repair or replace the collapsed / root-invaded section.

Right when: camera has shown a structural fault — collapsed pipe, severe root invasion, pipe misalignment.

Wrong when: quoted before the camera. Never trust an excavation quote without footage.

$3k – $15k+

Indicative · AU 2026

The honest order is: snake first, camera second only if it blocks again, jet only if camera shows a build-up, excavation only if camera shows structural damage. Skipping straight to jet + camera on a first-time blockage is the most common upsell pattern in residential plumbing.

Ask this, exactly

"Have we tried a snake first? What would the camera show that the snake can't tell us — and how often have you needed excavation on a job like this?"

07

Warranty — what's actually written down?

Plumbing warranty splits into four layers. The hot water unit gets its own, and the leak repair gets its own — they're not the same animal.

  1. Layer 01

    Statutory workmanship

    Plumbing work is covered by state consumer law — defects are the plumber's responsibility for a reasonable period. Free, automatic.

  2. Layer 02

    Plumber's workmanship

    The plumber's own promise on labour. Typically 12 months to lifetime depending on scope. Must spell out what triggers a callback and who pays for it.

  3. Layer 03

    Hot water unit warranty

    From the manufacturer of the unit (Rheem · Rinnai · Bosch · Vulcan etc.). 5–12 years on the tank, 1–3 on parts and labour. Read the unit warranty PDF before you sign.

  4. Layer 04

    Compliance certificate

    The COC / Form 5 / Sydney Water cert IS the warranty paper-trail. If the plumber didn't lodge it, you can't claim against any of the above.

Ask this, exactly

"Could you list the workmanship warranty, the hot water unit warranty, and your compliance certificate process — in writing, with the year limits and the callback rules?"

08

Do they really service your suburb?

For routine plumbing, the suburb effect is small — most plumbers cover a 20–40km zone. For emergencies, it's huge: the plumber's actual depot relative to your house decides whether the ETA is 40 minutes or 4 hours, and the after-hours rate often includes a travel surcharge for jobs outside the zone.

  • Emergency zone

    "What's your no-surcharge emergency zone, and what's the surcharge beyond it?" Honest plumbers publish both.

  • Strata access

    For multi-unit buildings, the plumber needs body corporate approval before doing common-property work. Adds days, not dollars.

  • Old-pipe suburbs

    Pre-1970 inner-city houses have galvanised steel, copper, sometimes lead. The plumber needs to know what they're cutting into. Not every operator has the experience.

The premium-suburb anxiety here is quieter than for roofers or builders — but two-storey access, beachside corrosion, and heritage pipework genuinely change the price. Honest operators name them upfront on the phone.

Ask this, exactly

"Is my suburb inside your no-surcharge emergency zone? If not, what's the travel cost — and is it already in the quote?"

09

Edge cases — get a second opinion for…

If your job has any of these, the quote spread will widen further. Don't reward the cheapest plumber who shrugs at the complication — they're the one most likely to underbid and over-bill.

  • Gas appliances

    Plumber's licence ≠ gas-fitting authorisation. Wrong tradesperson + gas = legal liability, not just a bad install.

  • Tree-root invasion

    CCTV camera footage required before excavation is quoted. Without footage, you're paying for the plumber's guess.

  • Hot water unit replacement

    Fuel type (gas/electric/heat pump), location, size, and brand decide the price — not the quote on the phone. Insist on a written quote after inspection.

  • Leak detection (no visible water)

    Acoustic and thermal leak detection is a specialty. $1500+ per hour is a real rate. Get a fixed scope before they start.

  • Pre-1970 houses

    Galvanised steel, copper joins, sometimes lead pipework. Not every plumber has the experience. Photos of past similar jobs matter.

  • Strata / townhouse

    Body corporate approval, common-property rules. The plumber needs to have done this before, not learn on yours.

  • Insurance claim work

    Insurer has its own scope. Plumber's quote must match it line for line, or you're out of pocket.

  • Renovation rough-in

    New build / extension rough-in is a different licence class to maintenance. Different operator, different price.

  • Backflow / TMV testing

    Annual testing requires specific accreditation. Most commercial buildings; some residential. Different ticket again.

10

After they leave.

Plumbing aftercare splits in two: the immediate "did the fix actually fix it" window, and the long arc of the unit warranty on any equipment they installed. A working plumber sets both clocks at handover. A cowboy starts the clock on neither and stops answering the phone.

Defects window in writing.

90 days minimum on a leak repair. Callbacks for the same issue free of charge.

Unit warranty registration.

Hot water unit serial number, install date, your contact details — registered with the manufacturer at handover so the warranty starts the right day.

Compliance paperwork to your file.

COC / Form 5 / Sydney Water cert sent to you, lodged with the regulator. Required when you sell the house.

Annual service prompt.

Optional — but a working operator offers one for HWS, especially heat pumps. Saves the unit, doubles the warranty in practice.

Ask this, exactly

"What's your defects window in writing, will you register the unit warranty for me, and will I receive a copy of the compliance certificate?"

If you've read this far

A plumber who can answer all ten of these on the phone, before the truck moves, is not a unicorn. It's the bar.

We can introduce you to plumbers in your area who already work this way — licence, callout fee, after-hours multiplier, compliance certificate, all on the phone before the truck moves. No directory politics. No paid placement above proof.

We don't take referral fees from tradies Verified means answers all 10 No spam. No upsell. No commitment.
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Trade 25 of 33. Same 10-question template across the lot.