Chandler's 1980s and 1990s homes are in the prime window for hard water copper pipe failures. Two or more pinhole leaks in recent years means the pipe is in a failure progression — not a series of unlucky spots.
Chandler grew substantially through the 1980s and 1990s — and those homes are now hitting the 30–40 year mark on their copper supply lines. At 10–15 grains per gallon, Chandler's hard water has been working on that copper since the day it was installed. The pattern of pinhole failures we see across Chandler's older neighborhoods is predictable and consistent with the pipe age and water chemistry.
Large master-planned community where copper supply lines are now 30–40 years old. Hard water has been working on these pipes since installation. Pinhole leaks at fitting joints are the most common early signal in Ocotillo — fittings are where stress concentrates and where corrosion breaks through first. Two or more pinhole leaks in an Ocotillo home in recent years is a clear indicator of a system-wide failure progression, not isolated incidents.
A fixed-income community where the cost-per-patch approach to pinhole leaks often ends up more expensive than repiping over time. Sun Lakes homeowners dealing with recurring pinhole leaks should get a repiping assessment with the full economic comparison — the cumulative cost of repeated spot repairs, water damage incidents, and drywall repairs often exceeds the repiping cost within a few years. First-time buyers purchasing in Sun Lakes should also have pipe condition assessed before closing.
Older core properties may have galvanized pipe — particularly in the oldest downtown Chandler sections. Newer tech corridor construction along Williams Field Road is predominantly PEX. Mixed systems from partial upgrades are common in homes that had kitchen or bathroom remodels without full pipe assessment — these create situations where a section of new pipe connects to aging material, which can make diagnosis more complex.
PEX or newer copper. Some 1990s-to-2000s tract homes in Chandler were built with polybutylene pipe — identifiable by its gray color and the distinctive gray or copper-colored plastic fittings at connections. If your Chandler home was built between 1978 and 1995, the supply lines are worth checking. PB pipe degrades from inside when exposed to chlorinated water and can fail without visible external warning.
Chandler ZIP Codes We Serve: 85224, 85225, 85226, 85244, 85248, 85249 — all of Chandler.
Both PEX and copper are proven, durable choices for whole-home repiping. Here is an honest comparison — we install both and don't steer homeowners toward the more expensive option.
These signals — individually or combined — indicate pipe condition that warrants a repiping assessment rather than continued spot repair.
Timeline: Most Chandler homes take 2–5 days depending on size and layout. We document access requirements before starting so there are no surprises.
Do you need to move out? Usually not. Water is restored each evening. The home is livable throughout the project.
Drywall repair: Access holes are required and are patched as a separate step after the plumbing is complete.
Permits: We pull all required permits — critical for insurance, code compliance, and resale.
Cost: $4,000–$15,000+ depending on home size, material chosen, and access difficulty. Written estimate provided after assessment.
What repiping involves, when it makes more sense than continued spot repair, and how to compare quotes fairly.
We assess Chandler homes throughout the city — from Ocotillo copper pinhole failures to Sun Lakes recurring leaks and polybutylene concerns in mixed-vintage properties. Call us and describe what you're seeing. We'll give you an honest read on whether repiping is the right call or whether a targeted repair makes more sense.
(480) 675-7861 Call Now — Assessments AvailableThe questions Chandler homeowners ask us most about whole-home repiping — answered directly.
We assess your pipe condition honestly — and tell you whether repiping makes sense or whether a targeted repair is the better call.
Call (480) 675-7861 (480) 675-7861