OUR SERVICE AREA
Active Plumbing is Las Vegas-based and available Open 24/7 for residential and commercial plumber across Las Vegas Valley. We handle Emergency Plumbing, Drain & Sewer Services, Water Heater Services, Water Treatment, Gas Line Services, Pipe & Fixture Services and Sewage & Waste Services - fast, professional, and backed by strong warranties.
Our expert plumber technicians serve Enterprise, Henderson, Las Vegas, North Las Vegas, Paradise, Spring Valley, Summerlin, Sunrise Manor, Whitney, Winchester, and the surrounding neighborhoods.
Book Your Free Consultation Call Now
Contact us:
Hours: Open 24/7
3580 Polaris Ave #17, Las Vegas, Nevada 89103

It is 2 a.m. in Summerlin, and a homeowner wakes up to the sound of running water. They walk into the kitchen and step into an inch of cold water spreading across the tile. A supply line under the sink has burst, and the water is not stopping. In that moment, the first question after "where is the shutoff?" is usually "how much is this going to cost me at this hour?"
Emergency plumbing is one of those services nobody plans for, yet most homeowners in the valley face it eventually. Whether it is a slab leak in an older Huntridge bungalow or a sewage backup in a Green Valley two-story, the price can swing widely based on the time, the job, and where the home sits.
Not every plumbing problem deserves an after-hours call. Some issues will flood a home in minutes, while others can sit quietly until the sun comes up without doing real harm. Knowing the difference can save a homeowner hundreds of dollars in premium charges.
A true plumbing emergency in Las Vegas usually means active water damage, a health hazard, or a total loss of a basic utility like water or gas. Anything that threatens the structure of the home or the safety of the people inside should not wait. Use the table below as a fast reference.
| Situation | Emergency? | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Burst pipe flooding a room | Yes | Active water damage spreads fast |
| Sewage backing into a tub | Yes | Health hazard |
| No water in the whole house | Yes | Loss of a basic utility |
| Gas odor near a water heater | Yes | Safety risk |
| Single slow drain | No | Can wait for standard hours |
| Dripping faucet | No | Minor, no damage |
A burst pipe is the most common after-hours call we get, and it is also the one that does the most damage in the shortest time. A half-inch supply line can push out gallons per minute, soaking drywall, cabinets, and flooring before a homeowner even finds the shutoff. In older homes near Downtown and the Historic Westside, aging copper and galvanized lines crack under pressure changes more often than people expect.
A slab leak is the quieter cousin of the burst pipe. Instead of spraying across a room, water seeps under the concrete foundation, showing up as a warm spot on the floor, a spike in the water bill, or the sound of running water with every fixture off. These need fast attention because the longer they run, the more they undermine the slab and feed mold growth.
Major water leaks behind walls fall into the same urgent category. By the time a stain appears on the ceiling or wall, water has often been traveling for hours. Our team uses electronic and acoustic tools to pinpoint the source without tearing open every wall, which keeps both repair time and cost down.
When a pipe lets go in the middle of the night, the goal is to stop the flow first and repair second. Shutting the main valve buys time, but a fast professional response limits how much restoration work follows. That is why our burst pipe repair service runs around the clock.
Few problems are as alarming as raw sewage rising into a tub, shower, or floor drain. This is not just gross, it is a genuine health hazard that exposes a family to bacteria and contaminated water. When this happens, the call should go out right away rather than waiting until morning.
A sewage backup usually points to a main line clog deep in the sewer lateral. In the older parts of town, mature trees along streets like those around Huntridge and the John S. Park neighborhood send roots into clay and cast iron pipe joints. Those roots catch waste and grease until the whole line stops draining.
A drain overflow in one fixture might be local, but when several drains gurgle or back up at once, the problem is almost always the main line. That distinction matters because a main line clog calls for a sewer machine or hydro jetting rather than a simple snake. Our hydro jetting and rooter service clears these blockages at the source.
Cleanup is part of the job too. Sewage that touches flooring or baseboards needs proper sanitizing, and we handle that side with sewage backup cleanup so the home is safe to use again.
Total water loss across the entire home is an emergency, especially if a family has no way to flush toilets or wash hands. Sometimes the cause is a broken main line, a failed pressure regulator, or an issue on the utility side. Our team can diagnose whether the problem sits inside the home or whether it needs coordination with the Las Vegas Valley Water District.
The smell of gas is a different and more serious matter. A rotten-egg odor near a water heater, furnace, or stove means a possible gas line leak, and that calls for immediate action. Homeowners should leave the home, avoid switches and flames, and call Southwest Gas along with a licensed plumber.
Once the area is safe, our licensed technicians locate and repair the leak. Gas work is not a job for guesswork, so we use proper detection equipment and pressure testing before restoring service. The gas leak detection and repair team handles these calls carefully.
Coordination with Southwest Gas keeps everyone safe and the work to code. We document the repair and verify the system holds pressure before anyone uses an appliance again. When in doubt about a gas smell, treat it as urgent every single time.
Not everything needs a midnight visit, and pretending it does only costs money. A slow drip from a faucet or a single slow-draining sink is annoying but harmless overnight. These are non-emergency issues that fit standard pricing during regular hours.
A running toilet is another one that can wait. It wastes water and may bump the bill a little, but shutting the supply valve behind the toilet stops the flow until a plumber arrives the next day. Doing that one simple thing lets a homeowner skip the after-hours premium entirely.
A small puddle under a P-trap, a loose handle, or a showerhead that sprays sideways all fall into the wait-until-morning bucket. None of these threaten the structure or the safety of the home. Scheduling them during business hours is the easy way to save money.
The rule of thumb is simple. If water is actively spreading, sewage is present, or a utility is fully out, call right away. If it is a slow leak that a bucket and a shutoff valve can manage, it can wait for standard rates.
Homeowners always want a number before the truck pulls up, and that is fair. While every job is different, after-hours work in the valley falls into predictable ranges. Knowing them ahead of time keeps a stressful night from feeling like a blank check.
The emergency plumber cost in Las Vegas depends on the time of the call, the type of repair, and the parts involved. Las Vegas pricing for after-hours rates carries a premium over daytime work, but the totals below give a realistic picture of what most homeowners pay.
A basic after-hours service call in the valley usually runs between $150 and $350 just to get a licensed plumber to the door at night. That service call cost covers the trip, the on-call labor, and an initial diagnosis of the problem. It is the starting point, not the full repair bill.
This after-hours range reflects the reality of staffing a team overnight. A plumber who answers a 2 a.m. call is giving up sleep, driving across town, and bringing a stocked truck. The base figure pays for that readiness even before any wrench turns.
In many cases, that initial fee applies toward the repair if the homeowner moves forward with the work. We explain that clearly before starting so there is no confusion. The point is to diagnose fast and give a real quote, not to nickel and dime.
Homeowners should expect the service call figure to climb for holidays or extreme distances. A call to a far edge of Enterprise or North Las Vegas may sit at the higher end simply due to drive time. We are upfront about that before dispatching anyone.
Once the plumber diagnoses the problem, the repair cost takes over. A main line clog cleared at night typically runs $300 to $700 depending on the method and how far the blockage sits. Hydro jetting a heavily rooted line costs more than a simple snake.
A burst pipe repair usually lands between $400 and $1,200, with the spread driven by location and how much wall or slab access the job requires. A copper line behind drywall is quicker than a slab leak that needs the concrete opened. Water heater failures often run $200 for a minor repair up to $2,500 or more for a full water heater repair or replacement.
A toilet overflow tied to a clog might cost $150 to $400 to clear, while one tied to a main line failure costs more. The variation comes from the root cause, not the symptom. Two homes with the same overflowing toilet can pay very different totals.
These ranges are guidelines, not promises. The only way to get an accurate figure is an on-site look, which is exactly why we diagnose before quoting. That way the price reflects the real job and not a guess.
The same repair almost always costs more at night than during business hours. As a general guide, emergency markup adds 1.5 to 2 times the daytime rates for labor. A clog that costs $200 to clear at noon might run $350 to $400 at midnight.
That price comparison surprises some homeowners, but the overtime math is straightforward. Night, weekend, and holiday labor carries overtime pay, and on-call staffing has real costs. The premium reflects those expenses, not a markup for the sake of it.
The flip side is that waiting can cost more than the premium saves. A burst pipe left running until morning can add thousands in water damage and restoration. In those cases, paying the after-hours rate is the cheaper choice overall.
For non-urgent issues, the smart move is to use a shutoff valve and book standard-hours service. For active flooding or sewage, the night rate is money well spent. Knowing which category a problem falls into is the difference between smart spending and panic spending.
Active Plumbing serves Las Vegas and all of Las Vegas Valley.
A plumbing bill is rarely one flat number, and understanding the parts removes the mystery. Most emergency invoices combine a service fee, hourly labor or a flat job price, and the cost of parts. Once a homeowner sees the pieces, the total makes a lot more sense.
Different companies handle the hourly rate and service fee differently, so it pays to ask up front. The table below shows the common building blocks of an after-hours invoice in the valley.
| Fee Type | Typical Range | What It Covers |
|---|---|---|
| Trip or diagnostic fee | $50 - $150 | Travel and problem assessment |
| After-hours labor | $150 - $300/hr | Overtime work time |
| Minimum charge | $150 - $300 | Short jobs floor price |
| Parts and materials | Varies | Fittings, valves, fixtures |
The trip fee, sometimes called a diagnostic charge, covers the cost of sending a plumber to the home and figuring out what is wrong. At night this fee tends to sit between $50 and $150 depending on distance and timing. It is the price of getting expert eyes on the problem.
Many homeowners worry this fee is wasted money, but it usually is not. A good plumber spends real time tracing the source of a leak or testing a line, and that diagnosis shapes the whole repair plan. Skipping it would mean guessing, which costs more in the long run.
At Active Plumbing, the diagnostic fee typically applies toward the repair when the homeowner approves the work. That means the money is not lost, it rolls into the job. We confirm this on every call so the homeowner knows where the dollars go.
If a homeowner chooses not to proceed, the trip fee still covers the visit and the expert assessment they received. That is fair to both sides. Either way, there are no surprise charges tacked on after the fact.
Hourly labor is where after-hours pricing climbs the most. Daytime rates that sit around $100 to $150 an hour can jump to $150 to $300 an hour overnight. That increase reflects overtime pay for the technician answering the call.
Most companies also set a minimum charge for short jobs. Even a five-minute fix carries a floor price because the truck still rolled, the plumber still drove, and the on-call slot still got used. This minimum usually matches roughly one hour of labor plus the trip.
The minimum charge keeps small jobs worth dispatching at night. Without it, no company could afford to send a truck across the valley for a quick repair. Knowing the minimum ahead of time helps a homeowner decide whether to call now or wait.
Larger jobs often shift to a flat quote rather than running the clock. That protects the homeowner from a ballooning hourly bill if the work takes longer than expected. We talk through which method applies before any work starts.
Parts cost is added on top of labor, and it covers the fittings, valves, sections of pipe, or fixtures a repair needs. A simple supply line might be a few dollars, while a new water heater or a sewer fitting runs far more. The materials markup covers handling, stocking, and warranty on those parts.
At night the parts side can get pricier because supply houses are closed. If a job needs a part that is not on the truck, a plumber may have to source it from a 24-hour outlet at a higher cost. That emergency supply run shows up in the final number.
A well-stocked truck reduces this problem. Our vehicles carry the common fittings, valves, and parts that cover the majority of emergency repairs. That means most after-hours jobs finish in one visit without a costly late-night parts hunt.
Homeowners can ask for the parts breakdown on any invoice. We list materials separately from labor so it is clear what went into the repair. Transparency on parts is part of how we keep trust on every call.
There are two main ways to bill a plumbing job. Flat-rate pricing gives the homeowner one set price for the whole repair, agreed before work begins. Time and materials bills the hours worked plus the parts used as the job unfolds.
Flat-rate pricing gives more predictability, which matters most during a stressful emergency. The homeowner knows the number before saying yes, with no worry about the clock running long. That certainty is why we favor flat quotes whenever the job allows.
Time and materials can make sense for complex or unpredictable jobs where the full scope is unclear until work starts. In those cases we keep the homeowner updated as the picture clears. We never let an hourly job run silent.
The best protection is a clear quote in writing before anyone turns a wrench. Whether flat or hourly, a homeowner should know the basis for the charge. We put that in plain terms on every emergency call.
Several factors push an emergency bill higher, and most have nothing to do with the company padding numbers. Timing, severity, and access all play into the final price. Knowing these cost drivers helps a homeowner understand exactly what they are paying for.
Night plumbing carries built-in expenses that daytime work avoids. The deeper a homeowner understands these price factors, the easier it is to judge whether a quote is fair.
The clock is the single biggest driver of an emergency price. A call at 8 p.m. costs less than the same call at 3 a.m., when overtime rates peak. The deeper into the night, the steeper the premium.
Weekend rates add another layer. Saturday and Sunday work carries overtime pay regardless of the hour, so a Sunday afternoon clog still costs more than a Tuesday afternoon one. Many homeowners forget that weekends count as premium time.
Holiday pricing tops the list. A burst pipe on the Fourth of July or Thanksgiving carries the highest premium because so few crews are working. Those who answer the phone on a holiday give up family time, and the rate reflects that.
None of this means a homeowner should suffer through a real emergency to dodge a fee. It means timing matters, and small problems should wait for standard hours when possible. The premium is real, so spending it wisely is the goal.
A repair that involves active flooding takes more time and more hands than a contained leak. When water is spreading toward drywall, cabinets, and flooring, the plumber must work fast and often coordinate cleanup. That urgency and added labor raise the bill.
The risk of water damage also shapes the scope. A leak caught early might be a simple fix, but one that has soaked a subfloor adds drying, sanitizing, and sometimes restoration. The more the water has traveled, the more the job grows.
Flooding severity ties directly to how quickly someone shut off the water. A home where the owner found the main valve fast usually faces a smaller repair than one where water ran for an hour. That single action can swing the total dramatically.
This is why we treat active flooding as the top priority on dispatch. Stopping the spread early keeps the repair contained and the cost lower. Every minute of running water adds to both the damage and the final number.
Older homes carry hidden challenges that add labor time. Near the Huntridge area and other central neighborhoods, decades-old cast iron and galvanized pipe is brittle and harder to work with. A repair that takes an hour in a new home can take two or three in an older one.
Access difficulty matters just as much. A tight crawl space, a buried cleanout, or a fixture wedged into a cramped cabinet all slow the work. The more time a plumber spends reaching the problem, the more the labor adds up.
Established neighborhoods often have mature landscaping and hardscape over sewer lines too. Getting to a clogged main might mean working around concrete, planters, or trees. That extra care protects the property but extends the job.
We come prepared for older valley homes because we work on them constantly. Knowing what to expect from a 1950s bungalow versus a 2015 build lets us plan the repair and quote it accurately the first time.
Las Vegas water is among the hardest in the country, and that takes a toll on plumbing. Hard water leaves mineral buildup inside pipes, water heaters, and fixtures across the metro. Over years, that scale narrows lines and corrodes connections.
This buildup turns small problems into bigger ones. A valve crusted with scale may not close fully, and a water heater packed with sediment fails sooner. When these parts give out at night, the repair scope is often larger than the homeowner expected.
Mineral buildup also clogs aerators, slows drains, and shortens the life of fixtures. A homeowner in any part of the valley deals with the same hard water, so the issue is metro-wide. It quietly adds to repair costs over time.
One way to fight back is treatment. A water softener installation protects pipes and appliances from scale, cutting down on the emergencies hard water creates. It is a long-term move that lowers the odds of a costly midnight failure.
Where a home sits affects the emergency price more than most people realize. The age of the housing stock, the pipe materials, and the distance from the truck all play a part. A repair in a 2018 Summerlin home rarely looks like the same repair in a 1955 central bungalow.
The table below shows how neighborhood plumbing differs across Las Vegas areas and what tends to drive local costs in each.
| Area | Common Pipe Type | Cost Factor |
|---|---|---|
| Summerlin / The Ridges | PEX, modern copper | Faster, cleaner repairs |
| Downtown / Huntridge | Cast iron, galvanized | Higher labor time |
| Henderson / Green Valley | Copper, PEX | Distance, HOA access |
| Strip condos / Spring Valley | Shared building lines | Access and entry delays |
Homes in Summerlin and The Ridges tend to have modern plumbing, often PEX or newer copper. PEX plumbing flexes, resists scale better, and is faster to work with than old rigid pipe. That usually means cleaner, quicker emergency repairs.
Newer homes also have accessible shutoffs, labeled valves, and logical layouts. A plumber can isolate a problem fast instead of hunting for a buried connection. That efficiency keeps labor time and the final bill lower.
That said, even new homes face burst supply lines, water heater failures, and slab leaks. A failed connector under a sink floods a Summerlin kitchen just as fast as anywhere else. Modern materials reduce the odds but do not erase them.
Our team serves these communities daily, including emergency plumbing in Summerlin North and the surrounding villages. Knowing the builds out here helps us quote accurately and finish fast.
The older central neighborhoods are full of character and full of aging pipe. Cast iron drains and galvanized supply lines from the 1940s through the 1960s are common near Downtown and Huntridge. These materials corrode, scale, and crack with age.
That older pipe drives up emergency repair time. Cast iron is heavy and brittle, and cutting into it cleanly takes care. Galvanized lines clog from the inside as the coating breaks down, so a clog there often needs more than a simple snake.
Root intrusion is another factor in these tree-lined streets. Decades-old sewer laterals invite roots that block the main line. Clearing them and assessing whether the pipe needs repair adds to the scope of a night call.
We know these homes well and serve areas like emergency plumbing in the Scotch 80s. When older pipe finally fails, a sewer line repair or replacement may be the lasting fix rather than a temporary patch.
Henderson and Green Valley sit a bit farther from central dispatch, so drive time can affect both response and cost. A late-night call to the far side of Henderson takes longer to reach than one in the core of Las Vegas. That distance shows up in the trip portion of the bill.
Many Green Valley communities also sit under HOA rules. Some require specific entry procedures or limit work hours, which can complicate an after-hours visit. Knowing these rules ahead of time keeps the job moving instead of stalling at a gate.
The homes themselves are mostly newer, with copper and PEX, so the repairs are often straightforward once the plumber arrives. The main variable is getting there and getting in. We plan routes to keep response times tight across the region.
Our crews cover this side of the valley regularly, including emergency plumbing in Green Valley. Local familiarity with these communities cuts the guesswork out of after-hours dispatch.
Condos and rentals near the Strip and Spring Valley bring their own challenges. Shared walls mean a leak can affect a neighbor, and the plumbing often ties into building systems rather than a single home shutoff. That shared setup complicates a fast fix.
Building access is the bigger hurdle at night. Many high-rises and complexes require management approval, key fobs, or a building engineer to reach shutoffs and risers. After-hours entry delays can stretch the timeline before any repair even starts.
Rental properties add a layer too, since a tenant may need landlord approval before work proceeds. Sorting out who authorizes the repair takes time during an emergency. We help coordinate those calls so the water gets stopped fast.
We handle these situations across emergency plumbing in Spring Valley Sovana and the condo corridors near the Strip. Knowing how these buildings work helps us cut through the access maze quickly.
Active Plumbing serves Las Vegas and all of Las Vegas Valley.
A homeowner has more control over an emergency bill than they might think. A few smart habits before and during a problem can shave real money off the total. The best savings come from prevention and quick action.
These steps help lower cost and save on plumbing without cutting corners on the repair itself. Prevention is always cheaper than a midnight crisis.
The fastest way to limit damage in an emergency is to shut off the water. Every homeowner should know where the main shutoff valve sits before they ever need it. In valley homes it is often near the water heater, in the garage, or at the meter box near the street.
Shutting the water main the moment a pipe bursts stops the flood at the source. Less water means less damage, which means a smaller and cheaper repair. That single move can turn a five-figure restoration into a simple fix.
It helps to test the valve once a year so it turns freely when needed. A stuck valve in a panic is worthless. A quick check now means a working valve later.
Teaching everyone in the household where the valve is matters too. The person home at 2 a.m. may not be the one who usually handles repairs. A whole-home leak detection system can shut water off automatically and add another layer of protection.
Always ask for an upfront quote before a plumber starts working. A written estimate spells out the labor, parts, and any fees so there are no shocks on the final bill. A reputable company will gladly provide one.
The quote should state whether it is flat-rate or hourly and what the price includes. It should also note whether the trip fee applies toward the repair. Clear terms protect both the homeowner and the plumber.
If a quote feels vague or a plumber refuses to commit to a number, that is a warning sign. Honest pricing can be explained in plain language. Homeowners should never feel pressured to approve work they do not understand.
Our team gives a clear quote on every emergency call, even after hours. The homeowner approves the price before any work starts. That way the only surprise is how fast the problem gets solved.
The cheapest emergency is the one that never happens. Routine maintenance catches small issues before they explode into midnight disasters. A little upkeep now prevents the steep after-hours rates later.
Regular drain cleaning keeps lines flowing and prevents the slow clogs that become full backups. Flushing a water heater clears the sediment that hard water leaves behind, extending its life. These visits cost far less than emergency repairs.
Pipe inspections catch corrosion and weak spots early. A sewer camera inspection shows exactly what is happening inside a line, including root intrusion in older neighborhoods. Spotting trouble early means fixing it on a schedule instead of in a panic.
For homes with hard water, descaling and treatment cut down on buildup that triggers failures. Pairing maintenance with smart upgrades keeps the whole system healthier. Prevention is the most reliable way to dodge night rates.
Many homeowners do not realize a service plan can soften emergency costs. A membership often includes annual maintenance, priority scheduling, and reduced or waived emergency fees. Over time that adds up to real savings.
These plans reward repeat customers with discounts on repairs and parts. For a household that wants to stay ahead of problems, the math usually favors signing up. The plan pays for itself the first time it waives a midnight fee.
A service plan also keeps a home on a maintenance rhythm. Scheduled visits mean fewer surprises and a plumber who already knows the property. Familiarity speeds up any future call.
Homeowners curious about options can reach out through our contact page to learn what fits their home. We are happy to explain the benefits without any pressure. A plan is one of the simplest ways to keep long-term costs down.
When something goes wrong at night, a homeowner wants a team that shows up fast and prices fairly. Active Plumbing has built its emergency response around the realities of valley homes. Here is what sets the team apart on a late-night call.
Speed matters most when water is spreading. Our team reaches Summerlin, Henderson, and central Las Vegas quickly by using the 215 Beltway and other main routes. Smart routing shaves precious minutes off the arrival time.
Knowing the valley well is part of the advantage. We know which surface streets beat the freeway at certain hours and how to reach gated communities without delay. That local knowledge keeps response times tight.
Our coverage area spans the whole metro, so a homeowner is rarely far from help. Whether the call comes from Henderson or the central core, a crew can roll fast. Distance is planned for, not an excuse.
Fast response is not just about comfort, it is about cost. The sooner a plumber arrives, the less damage the water does. Quick arrival keeps the repair smaller and the bill lower.
Nobody likes a surprise bill, least of all during a stressful night. Our team commits to clear quotes before work starts, even after hours. The homeowner sees and approves the price before any wrench turns.
Upfront pricing means the trip fee, labor, and parts are laid out plainly. There are no hidden fees waiting at the bottom of the invoice. What we quote is what the homeowner pays.
This transparency builds trust on every call. A homeowner under pressure should not have to worry about being taken advantage of. Clear numbers remove that worry entirely.
If the scope changes mid-repair, we stop and explain before adding cost. The homeowner stays in control of the decision. That is how honest emergency pricing should work.
Every technician on our team is a licensed plumber with real local experience. They have worked on older cast iron systems near Downtown and modern PEX builds in the master-planned communities. That range matters when a problem appears at night.
Knowing valley homes means fewer surprises on a call. A plumber who has fixed a hundred slab leaks in central neighborhoods knows where to look first. That experience speeds up diagnosis and repair.
Licensing also means the work meets code and holds up over time. A cheap unlicensed fix often fails again, costing more in the end. Doing it right the first time protects the homeowner.
Our familiarity covers the whole region, from Summerlin to the older central streets. Wherever the home sits, the team has likely worked on one like it. That local depth shows in the quality of the repair.
True emergencies do not keep business hours, so neither do we. Our team offers 24/7 plumber service for burst pipes, sewage backups, and water heater failures any night of the year. Round-the-clock availability means help is always a call away.
Holidays included, the phone gets answered. A Thanksgiving sewage backup or a Fourth of July burst pipe gets the same fast response as any other day. Real emergencies cannot wait for the next business day.
Our 24/7 emergency plumbing service is built for exactly these moments. Stocked trucks and on-call crews stand ready through the night. That readiness is what makes a real difference at 2 a.m.
Homeowners can save our number before they ever need it. When a crisis hits, fast action limits the damage and the cost. Being prepared turns a disaster into a manageable repair.
Active Plumbing serves Las Vegas and all of Las Vegas Valley.
Emergency plumbing in Las Vegas costs more at night, but the premium buys speed when speed saves money. A burst pipe or sewage backup left waiting causes far more damage than the after-hours rate. Knowing what counts as a true emergency helps a homeowner spend wisely.
The final bill comes down to timing, severity, home age, and parts. Older central homes near Huntridge and Downtown often cost more than newer Summerlin builds, and access issues add to that. Prevention, a known shutoff valve, and routine maintenance are the best ways to keep costs down.
When a real emergency hits, our team is ready across the entire valley. Call Active Plumbing or reach out through our emergency plumbing page for fast, honest help any hour of the day or night. We give a clear quote before we start so there are never any surprises.
An after-hours visit in Las Vegas usually starts between $150 and $350 for the service call, which covers the trip and diagnosis. The full repair adds to that based on the job, with common emergencies running $300 to $1,200 or more. The total depends on the time of night, the severity of the problem, the home's age, and the parts needed.
After-hours rates run higher because the labor is paid at overtime, often 1.5 to 2 times the daytime rate. Companies also keep crews on call overnight, which carries staffing costs even when the phone is quiet. Late-night supply runs to 24-hour outlets cost more than regular supply houses too. Those expenses combine to raise the price of any night, weekend, or holiday repair.
Yes, most companies charge a trip or diagnostic fee, usually $50 to $150 at night, to cover travel and assessing the problem. At Active Plumbing this fee typically applies toward the repair when the homeowner approves the work. If the homeowner chooses not to proceed, the fee still covers the visit and the expert diagnosis. We confirm how it works before dispatching anyone.
True emergencies include burst pipes, major water leaks, sewage backing into the home, total water loss, and any suspected gas odor. These threaten the structure or the safety of the people inside and should not wait. Slow drips, a single slow drain, and a running toilet can wait until morning. Shutting off the supply to a minor problem lets a homeowner skip the premium.
Response times vary by location, but central Las Vegas calls often see arrival within 30 to 60 minutes. Outlying areas like far Henderson or North Las Vegas may take a bit longer due to drive distance. We use the 215 Beltway and main routes to keep times tight across the valley. Active flooding calls get top priority on dispatch.
Homeowners insurance often covers sudden, accidental damage, like the water damage from a burst pipe, though the repair of the pipe itself may not be included. Damage from long-term neglect or gradual leaks is usually not covered. Policies vary widely, so a homeowner should review their coverage and document the damage with photos. Our team can provide an itemized invoice to support a claim.
The best ways to avoid emergency cost are prevention and quick action. Schedule routine maintenance like drain cleaning, water heater flushes, and pipe inspections to catch problems early. Know where the main shutoff valve is so a small leak does not become a flood. For non-urgent issues, shut the supply and book standard-hours service instead of calling at night.
Older homes near Downtown and Huntridge often cost more because of aging cast iron and galvanized pipe. These materials are brittle, corroded, and harder to work with, which adds labor time to any repair. Root intrusion in older sewer lines along tree-lined streets is common too. A repair that takes an hour in a new home can take two or three in an older one.
Yes, shutting off the main valve is one of the smartest things a homeowner can do during a leak or burst pipe. Stopping the flow at the source limits water damage and keeps the repair smaller and cheaper. For a single fixture, the local shutoff valve behind it may be enough. Knowing where these valves are before an emergency saves both time and money.
Yes, our team provides a clear quote before any work begins, even on emergency calls in the middle of the night. The homeowner sees and approves the price, including the trip fee, labor, and parts, before a wrench turns. If the scope changes mid-repair, we stop and explain before adding cost. There are no hidden fees on the final bill.
Licensed plumber professionals serving Las Vegas and Las Vegas Valley.
Licensed in Nevada · License #0047021
Why trust Active Plumbing?
Founded in 1991, Active Plumbing is a licensed and insured plumber serving Las Vegas and Las Vegas Valley. All content is reviewed by our licensed technicians.
Active Plumbing serves Las Vegas and all of Las Vegas Valley.

Yes, emergency plumbing costs more in Las Vegas. Learn why, see real price ranges, and discover how to avoid costly after-hours calls across the valley.

Real plumbing service costs, response times, and local conditions for Sun City Anthem, Green Valley, and the wider Henderson area from Active Plumbing.

Slab leak repair in Lake Las Vegas costs $1,500-$15,000+ depending on method. Learn why granite, caliche, and post-tension slabs raise prices for hillside homes.