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Phoenix Area Service

Piping and Plumbing Repairs

CTS handles piping and plumbing repair in the Phoenix area, including pipe leaks, shutoff valves, supply lines, fittings, water heater piping, hose bib concerns, and exposed plumbing leaks.

Piping repair in Phoenix

Pipe leaks, leaking valves, failed supply lines, corroded fittings, hose bib concerns, and water heater connection problems should be checked before water spreads into cabinets, walls, flooring, or nearby equipment. If you suspect a slab leak, hidden leak, or larger repipe, mention that when you call so we can explain the right next step.

  • Piping repair Phoenix for pipe leaks and exposed plumbing leaks
  • Plumbing repair Phoenix for shutoff valves, angle stops, supply lines, and fittings
  • Water heater piping, flex connectors, expansion tanks, and nearby connection details
  • Hose bib repair, exterior piping concerns, and exposed piping work
  • Tell us the pipe material, leak location, access, and urgency when you call
  • Piping repair is part of Phoenix plumbing service

Local service

CTS handles urgent AC repair, AC replacement, commercial HVAC, maintenance, water heaters, and related service across the Phoenix area.

480-696-5033

Pipe leaks need a clear source

A leaking fitting under a sink is different from a hidden wall leak, underground leak, slab leak, or whole-home repipe. When you call, tell us where the water is showing up and whether you can shut it off.

Phoenix-area HVAC service

CTS works on residential equipment, rooftops, installs, and troubleshooting calls in Arizona conditions.

Serving Phoenix, Mesa, Chandler, Gilbert, Scottsdale, Tempe, Glendale, Surprise, Cave Creek, Queen Creek, Maricopa, and nearby communities.

Pipe Leaks

Pipe leaks should be handled before they spread

A pipe leak can cause damage faster than it looks. Water under a sink, near a water heater, at a shutoff valve, on a supply line, or around an exposed fitting can soak cabinets, drywall, flooring, insulation, and baseboards. If the water is active, the first step is to shut the water off if you can do it safely.

We commonly repair leaks at valves, supply lines, fittings, water heater connections, hose bibs, and exposed pipe. If the water seems hidden behind a wall, under a slab, or underground, say that when you call so we can point you in the right direction.

Visible plumbing connections checked for piping repair in Phoenix
Accessible plumbing supply lines used to explain piping repair

Piping Repair

Piping repairs versus larger plumbing projects

An exposed piping repair is different from a whole-home repipe, slab leak, concealed leak, or major piping replacement. We can help with many common piping problems and explain what kind of work makes sense once we understand where the leak is coming from.

If the issue involves a hidden wall leak, underground leak, slab leak, major corrosion, demolition, or a larger repipe, mention that when you call. That helps us decide whether this is a repair visit, leak-location issue, or larger project.

Under-Sink Leaks

Leaks under sinks and at exposed fittings

Leaks under sinks can come from supply lines, shutoff valves, faucet connections, drain connections, P-traps, disposal connections, or exposed fittings. The leak location matters because pressurized supply leaks and drain leaks are repaired differently.

CTS checks where the water is coming from before deciding on the repair. Water from a supply line or shutoff valve may continue leaking even when the fixture is off. Water from a drain connection may only appear when the sink is used. The repair depends on the source. Related pages include plumbing fixtures, garbage disposals, and drains.

Plumbing fittings and exposed connections checked to identify leak source
Visible shutoff and supply line area checked before plumbing repair

Shutoff Valves

Shutoff valves and angle stops

A shutoff valve should stop water to a fixture or section of piping. If the valve is frozen, corroded, leaking, stripped, or will not close all the way, a small repair can become a larger problem. Old angle stops are common trouble points under sinks, behind toilets, and near fixtures.

CTS checks whether the shutoff valve works before plumbing repairs begins. If the valve is leaking or will not shut off, the repair may need to include the valve and supply line. That detail matters before replacing a faucet, toilet supply, water heater connection, or other fixture connection.

Supply Lines

Supply lines and flexible connectors

Supply lines carry pressurized water to fixtures and equipment. A leaking supply line can damage cabinets, floors, drywall, or nearby equipment because the water can leak even when the fixture is off.

CTS can inspect visible supply lines, flexible connectors, shutoff valves, fixture connections, and water heater connections. In many cases, replacing an old supply line while repairing a valve or fixture is a practical choice, especially if the existing line is kinked, corroded, leaking, or hard to trust. Related fixture pages include fixtures, toilet repair, and water heaters.

Water heater and fixture supply connections checked for leaks
Water heater piping expansion tank and connection details

Water Heater Piping

Water heater piping and connection details

Water heater piping problems can involve hot and cold water connections, shutoff valves, flex connectors, copper piping, expansion tanks, T&P discharge piping, recirculation connections, or nearby fittings. A leak near a water heater does not always mean the tank itself has failed.

CTS checks where the water is coming from before recommending repair or replacement. A leaking connector, valve, or fitting may be repairable. A leaking tank, badly corroded tank bottom, or unsafe setup is a different problem. See water heater repair and replacement for the main water heater service page.

Hose Bibs

Hose bibs and exterior piping

Exterior hose bibs and exposed outdoor piping can leak, drip, corrode, loosen, or fail from age and use. A leaking hose bib can waste water and may damage stucco, exterior walls, landscaping, or nearby surfaces if it is ignored.

For hose bibs and exterior piping, tell us where the leak is, what material is visible, and whether the pipe is exposed. Buried piping, irrigation systems, slab leaks, and large exterior pipe replacement should be mentioned when you call.

Phoenix plumbing service photo used for exterior piping and hose bib details
Mixed plumbing connections used to explain why pipe material matters

Pipe Materials

Pipe material matters

The pipe material affects the repair. Copper, PEX, CPVC, galvanized pipe, flex connectors, and mixed-material connections need different repair methods. Older or corroded piping may also be harder to repair cleanly because one weak connection can lead to another problem nearby.

When you call, tell us what pipe material is visible if you can tell. Photos are useful. Pipe material, access, condition, and leak location all affect the repair.

Corrosion

Corrosion, mineral buildup, and old connections

Phoenix-area water conditions can be hard on valves, fittings, supply lines, and fixture connections. Corrosion and mineral buildup can make parts harder to remove and can turn a small repair into a larger plumbing concern.

If a valve is badly corroded, a fitting is crusted over, or the pipe looks weak, CTS may recommend replacing the affected parts instead of forcing old connections apart. The repair should stop the leak without creating another leak next to it.

Visible plumbing supply lines checked for corrosion and mineral buildup
Water stain photo used to explain hidden leak concerns

Larger Projects

Concealed leaks, slab leaks, and larger repipes

A leak at a valve or exposed fitting is different from a concealed leak inside a wall, under a slab, or somewhere that cannot be reached without opening material. Slab leaks, large repipes, major pipe replacement, hidden water damage, and leaks that require demolition need a clear description when you call.

We can review what you are seeing and explain where to start. Hidden, recurring, widespread, or larger piping failures should be mentioned when you call.

Before You Call

What to check before calling about a pipe leak

Before calling, try to identify where the water is coming from. Look for a leak at a shutoff valve, supply line, fitting, water heater connection, hose bib, drain connection, or exposed pipe. If water is active, shut off the fixture valve or main water valve if you can do it safely.

Useful details include whether the water can be shut off, whether the leak is pressurized or only happens when a fixture drains, what pipe material is visible, whether walls or cabinets are wet, and whether photos can be sent when you call.

Shutoff and supply line area checked before calling about a pipe leak
Water heater and nearby piping showing CTS plumbing details

When You Call

What to tell CTS about piping repair calls

When you call, tell us where the leak is, whether the water can be shut off, what material is visible, whether the leak is exposed or hidden, and whether walls, cabinets, flooring, or drywall are wet.

The water heater page covers tank, tankless, leak, and no-hot-water calls. For piping work, tell us the leak location, whether the water can be shut off, what pipe material is visible, and how urgent it is.

During The Visit

How CTS handles piping repairs

A piping repair starts with confirming the source of the leak and whether the water can be controlled. CTS checks the piping, valve, fitting, supply line, connector, water heater connection, or hose bib involved in the problem.

Some repairs are straightforward once the source is found. Mention corroded piping, failed shutoff valves, brittle material, wall leaks, or slab leak concerns when you call.

Visible plumbing connection details checked during piping repair
Visible plumbing supply line area used to explain leaking pipe precautions

Avoid Damage

What not to do with a leaking pipe

Do not ignore active water. Do not keep tightening corroded fittings until they break. Do not force a stuck shutoff valve if it feels like it may snap. Do not assume a leak stopped just because water is no longer visible. Do not patch a pressurized water line with a temporary fix and forget about it.

If water is active, shut it off if you can do it safely. Protect cabinets, flooring, drywall, and nearby equipment from more water. Then call for service and explain where the leak is showing up.

Homes Rentals Businesses

Piping work for homes, rentals, and businesses

Piping problems happen in homes, rentals, offices, shops, restaurants, and business spaces. A leaking valve, bad supply line, failed fitting, hose bib issue, or water heater connection can create damage and downtime quickly.

If you own or manage a home, rental, business, or property, we can help with piping repairs. Mention hidden leaks, widespread corrosion, underground leaks, and larger repipe concerns when you call so we can point you to the right kind of help.

Phoenix plumbing service photo used for homes rentals and business piping details

Piping Work Examples

Piping repair examples

Representative CTS plumbing photos show the connections, supply lines, fittings, and water heater piping details that often determine what kind of repair is needed.

Visible plumbing connections checked for small pipe leak repair

Pipe leaks

Visible leaks are easier to evaluate than concealed leaks because the source can usually be inspected directly.

Visible plumbing supply lines and shutoff area checked before repair

Shutoff valves

Old shutoff valves can leak, seize, or fail to close. They may need to be repaired or replaced before other fixture work.

Supply line and connector details checked for pressurized water leaks

Supply lines and connectors

Supply lines carry pressurized water and should be addressed quickly when they leak or show signs of failure.

More Piping Details

Water heater piping, hose bibs, and corrosion

Pipe material, corrosion, access, and leak location can change the repair plan.

Water heater piping and expansion tank connection details

Water heater piping

Water heater piping problems may involve valves, connectors, fittings, expansion tanks, or nearby piping rather than the tank itself.

Phoenix plumbing service photo used for hose bib and exterior piping details

Hose bib and exterior piping

Hose bib leaks and exterior piping repairs depend on leak location, access, pipe material, and condition.

Older plumbing connections checked for corrosion and repair details

Corroded fittings and old piping

Corrosion can make a piping repair more difficult and may change the repair plan.

Piping Service Links

Related plumbing pages

These pages help sort piping work from water heater, fixture, toilet, disposal, drain, and broader plumbing questions.

Water heaters

Water heater piping, valves, connectors, expansion tanks, and nearby fittings are common plumbing calls with clear equipment access.

Water heaters

Fixtures

Faucet, sink, shutoff, supply-line, and fixture leaks are handled separately.

Fixtures

Toilets

Toilet supply lines, shutoffs, loose toilets, wax rings, and tank parts have their own details.

Toilets

Disposals

Disposal drain, flange, dishwasher hose, and under-sink leaks each have their own repair.

Disposals

Before You Call

Before you call about a piping repair

A few details help us understand the pipe leak, valve, supply line, hose bib, or water heater piping issue.

Drains

Drain leaks, traps, and fixture drain issues are diagnosed differently from pressurized supply leaks.

Drains

Plumbing

The plumbing page explains common Phoenix plumbing problems.

Plumbing page

Service areas

Call to confirm service in your area.

Service areas

Contact CTS

Call with the leak source, shutoff status, pipe material, access details, and photos if available.

Contact CTS

Piping repair FAQs

Answers about repair, replacement, maintenance, and service.

Does CTS repair piping?

CTS handles many piping repairs, including leaks at valves, supply lines, fittings, water heater piping, hose bibs, and exposed pipe. When you call, mention the leak location, pipe material if you know it, access, urgency, and whether the water can be shut off.

Does CTS handle whole-home repipes?

Whole-home repipes, major pipe replacement, slab leaks, and concealed leaks should be mentioned when you call because they may need a different kind of plumbing service.

What types of piping problems can CTS help with?

CTS can help with pipe leaks, shutoff valves, supply lines, fittings, water heater piping, hose bib concerns, and exposed piping repairs.

What should I do if a pipe is leaking?

Shut off the fixture valve or main water valve if you can do it safely. Protect nearby cabinets, flooring, drywall, and equipment from water. Then call and describe where the leak is showing up.

Why does pipe material matter?

Copper, PEX, CPVC, galvanized pipe, and flex connectors require different repair approaches. Pipe condition and material help determine whether CTS handles that type of repair.

Can CTS repair shutoff valves?

Shutoff valves that leak, seize, corrode, or fail to close may need repair or replacement before fixture or piping work can be completed.

Can CTS fix supply line leaks?

Yes. Supply line leaks can happen under sinks, behind toilets, near fixtures, or near water heaters. Because they carry pressurized water, they should be checked quickly.

Can CTS help with water heater piping?

Yes. Water heater piping and connection issues can often be handled once the leak location and nearby piping are checked. A leak near a water heater may come from a valve, connector, fitting, expansion tank, or nearby piping instead of the tank itself.

Can CTS handle slab leaks?

Slab leaks and concealed leaks often require leak detection, demolition, rerouting, or a larger plumbing project.

What should I describe when calling CTS?

Describe where the leak is, whether the water can be shut off, what material is visible, whether the leak is exposed or hidden, whether walls or cabinets are wet, and whether you can send photos.

Licensed Local HVAC Service

Licensed, Bonded, and Insured

Certified Technical Services, known as CTS Air Conditioning, is a local, veteran-owned HVAC and plumbing contractor. The company is licensed, bonded, and insured and has served Phoenix area homes and businesses since 2001.

Licensed for HVAC

HVAC license: ROC 328467. Licensed residential and commercial HVAC service for repair, replacement, and installation work.

Licensed for plumbing

Plumbing license: ROC 341767. Licensed residential and commercial plumbing for water heaters, fixtures, piping, drains, and related work.

Experienced HVAC service

Hands-on HVAC repair and installation experience on homes, commercial rooftops, package units, and water heater calls.

Technical terms on this page

The links below explain common HVAC terms referenced on this page. Each definition is written to help identify the part, measurement, or system condition.

Angle Stop   |   CPVC   |   Expansion Tank   |   Fixture   |   Flex Connector   |   Garbage Disposal   |   Galvanized Pipe   |   Hose Bib   |   PEX   |   P-Trap   |   Repipe   |   Shutoff Valve   |   Slab Leak   |   Supply Line   |   T&P Discharge   |   Wax Ring   |   Water Heater

Call CTS Air Conditioning

CTS handles AC repair, HVAC service, replacement, maintenance, water heaters, and other plumbing across the Phoenix area.

480-696-5033