How to Start a Plumbing Business
Starting a plumbing business comes down to a few fundamentals: get licensed and insured, price your work to profit, set up the tools to run jobs, and — the part that makes or breaks it — get customers. Here's how to approach each, with a focus on landing those first paying jobs.
Get licensed and insured
Requirements vary by state and trade, so check your local licensing board for what a plumber needs, then add liability insurance (and workers' comp if you hire). Homeowners increasingly screen for licensed, insured pros, so display it everywhere.
Price your work to make money
Know your costs — materials, labor, and overhead — and mark up to hit a target margin. A job like a $6,000 repipe should leave real profit after everything, not just cover costs. Use a clear price book so every quote is consistent.
Set up the tools to run jobs
You'll need a way to schedule, quote, invoice, and get paid. Start lean: a single system that captures leads, books jobs, and sends invoices from your phone beats a pile of disconnected apps.
Get your first customers
Tap your network, claim a Google Business Profile, and respond instantly to every inquiry — as a new plumber, being first to reply is your edge against established competitors. Ask every early customer for a review to build momentum.
Build a simple brand
A clean name, logo, truck signage, and a basic website make a new plumbing business look established. Consistency across them builds the trust that turns a lead into a booked job.
Frequently Asked
How much does it cost to start a plumbing business?
It depends on tools, vehicle, and licensing, but the biggest variable is customer acquisition — which is why capturing every early lead matters so much.
How do I get my first plumbing customers?
Work your network, claim your Google Business Profile, respond to every inquiry instantly, and collect reviews from your first jobs.