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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.
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A homeowner off Seven Hills Drive called us last spring because the hot water in their guest wing took almost two minutes to arrive. Their previous house, a standard three-bedroom across the valley, never did that. The difference was simple: their new estate home spanned three wings, two floors, and over 6,000 square feet, and that size changes everything about how plumbing behaves.
Estate-sized homes in Seven Hills are a different animal. Longer pipe runs, multiple water heaters, sprawling outdoor lines, and high-end fixtures all add complexity that a typical house never faces. The plumbing has to move water farther, heat it in more places, and keep pressure steady across a much bigger footprint.
Seven Hills sits on rolling terrain near the Rio Secco golf course, and the homes here are built to spread out. That generous layout looks beautiful, but it puts real demands on a plumbing system. Estate plumbing is not just a bigger version of a normal job - it is a different category of work.
The combination of long distances, multiple systems, and many fixtures means more things can go wrong and more places to check when they do. Large home plumbing rewards experience and the right equipment. Here is a quick look at how estate homes compare to standard houses in Seven Hills Henderson.
| Factor | Standard Home | Estate Home |
|---|---|---|
| Pipe run length | Short, direct | Long, multi-wing |
| Water heaters | One | Two or more |
| Bathrooms | 2 to 3 | 4 to 7+ |
| Outdoor lines | Basic irrigation | Pool, spa, large landscape |
| Access | Open street | Guard-gated, HOA rules |
In a multi-wing home near the Rio Secco golf course, water sometimes travels 100 feet or more from the main line to the farthest faucet. Every foot of pipe adds friction, and friction steals water pressure. By the time water reaches a back bathroom, the flow can feel weak compared to the rooms near the meter.
Long pipe runs also lose heat. Hot water cools as it sits in a long line, which is why that guest wing took two minutes to warm up. The bigger the home, the longer the wait and the more water wasted down the drain while someone stands there.
Pressure loss gets worse when scale builds up inside aging pipes and narrows the path. We often find that a home with weak far-room pressure has both long runs and mineral buildup working against it. Solving it usually means a pressure regulator, a recirculation loop, or in some cases a partial repipe.
Our team measures pressure at several points across the property before recommending anything. That tells us whether the issue is the main supply, the run length, or something inside the walls. Guessing on an estate home wastes time and money, so we test first.
Most Seven Hills estates run two or more water heaters because a single tank cannot keep up with a house this size. One heater might serve the master wing while another covers the kitchen and guest rooms. This zoned approach keeps hot water close to where it is used and cuts down on wait times.
Zoned plumbing is smart, but it means more equipment to maintain. Two tanks mean two units that can leak, two sets of valves, and double the sediment buildup from hard water. Owners sometimes forget the second heater exists until it fails in a rarely used wing.
Many owners ask us about switching to tankless units or adding a recirculation pump. Both can improve performance in a large home, but the right setup depends on the layout and gas supply. We look at how the wings are used before suggesting a change.
When we service these systems, we check every heater on the property, not just the one near the garage. Our water heater services cover multi-tank homes, so nothing gets missed during a visit.
An estate home might have six bathrooms, a wet bar, a butler's pantry sink, and an outdoor kitchen. Each fixture is one more connection that can leak, drip, or fail over time. More fixtures simply mean more leak points to track and maintain.
Many of these fixtures sit in rooms nobody uses every day. A slow drip under a guest bathroom vanity can run for weeks before anyone notices. By then, the cabinet base may be ruined and mold may have started.
Outdoor kitchens and wet bars add their own risk because their supply lines often run through exterior walls. Those lines face temperature swings that indoor plumbing never does. We pay close attention to these spots during inspections.
The fix is regular checking, not just reacting to problems. Walking every fixture once a year catches small leaks before they become expensive repairs. On a home with this many connections, that habit saves real money.
Seven Hills is a guard-gated community, and that affects how any plumber works there. The team has to clear the gate, follow HOA rules, and sometimes coordinate parking and work hours. A company unfamiliar with gated community access can waste an hour just getting in.
We handle gate clearance the right way by coordinating with the homeowner ahead of time so our crew and trucks are on the visitor list. That keeps the visit smooth and avoids delays at the guard station. Owners appreciate not having to babysit the entry process.
HOA rules can also limit when noisy work happens or where equipment sits. We respect those rules so the homeowner never gets a complaint from the association. Good neighbors matter in a community like this.
Because we serve Henderson regularly, our team knows how these gated neighborhoods operate. That local familiarity makes scheduling and access far easier than it would be for an out-of-area company.
After years of work in this part of Henderson, we see the same plumbing problems show up again and again in Seven Hills estate homes. The size of these properties and the local water supply create a predictable set of issues. Spotting them early is the difference between a small repair and a big one.
Here is a breakdown of the most common estate home repairs we handle and the warning signs that come with each.
| Problem | Common Cause | Early Warning Sign |
|---|---|---|
| Hard water buildup | Mineral-heavy supply | White scale on fixtures |
| Slab leak | Large footprint, pipe wear | Warm floor spots, high bills |
| Irrigation failure | Desert heat, UV damage | Wet patches, pooling water |
| Sewer backup | Sloped lot, line clogs | Slow drains, gurgling |
Water in Seven Hills comes from the Las Vegas Valley Water District, and it carries a heavy load of calcium and magnesium. That hard water leaves white crusty scale on faucets, showerheads, and glass doors. Over time it builds up inside pipes and appliances too.
The damage goes beyond looks. Scale coats the inside of water heaters and shortens their life by years. It also clogs the small passages in faucets and valves, which weakens flow and forces early replacement.
In an estate home with many fixtures and multiple heaters, hard water multiplies the cost of doing nothing. A whole-house water softener or conditioner protects every fixture at once. We size these systems for high-demand homes so they keep up with heavy use.
According to the U.S. Geological Survey, the Las Vegas area ranks among the hardest water regions in the country. That makes treatment worth serious consideration for any large home here.
Many Seven Hills homes are big single-story or split-level designs built on concrete slabs. Water lines run through or under that slab, and when one springs a leak, it hides below the floor. A slab leak can run for a long time before anyone notices.
The warning signs are subtle. A warm spot on the floor, a sudden jump in the water bill, or the faint sound of running water when everything is off all point to a possible slab leak. Some owners notice the foundation feels damp or a crack appears.
The larger the footprint, the more pipe runs under the slab and the more places a leak can start. Finding it without tearing up the whole floor takes electronic equipment. Our electronic leak detection pinpoints the exact spot before any concrete gets opened.
Catching a slab leak early protects the foundation and limits the repair area. Left alone, it can erode soil under the home and cause structural damage. That is why we treat any sign of one as urgent.
Estate lots in Seven Hills come with sprawling landscapes, pools, and long irrigation lines. Those outdoor plumbing systems take a beating from the desert sun and the dry soil. Plastic fittings get brittle, glue joints fail, and buried lines crack.
Irrigation lines often fail quietly underground. The first sign is a wet patch on otherwise dry desert landscaping or a spike in the water bill with no indoor cause. By the time it is obvious, gallons have already been lost.
Pool and spa lines add more exposure. The constant pressure and heat cycling wear on these systems faster than indoor plumbing. We check them along with the irrigation when we service a large property.
Replacing brittle outdoor lines before they burst saves water and prevents erosion around the home. A summer audit of every zone catches weak spots early. On a big lot, that small step avoids a flooded yard.
The hillside elevation near Seven Hills Drive means many lots sit on a slope. That grade affects how waste flows through the sewer and drain lines. A line with the wrong slope or a partial clog can back up faster on a hillside property.
Gravity helps drainage when the line runs downhill, but joints and bellies in the pipe can trap debris. Roots, grease, and hard-water scale collect at those low points. Over time the buildup narrows the line until water backs up into the lowest drain.
Slow drains, gurgling toilets, and bad smells are the early signs of a sewer backup. On an estate home, the line is longer and harder to clear by hand. A camera inspection shows exactly where the blockage sits.
Our sewer camera inspection finds the trouble spot without digging. Once we see it, we can clear or repair the right section instead of guessing. That precision matters on long hillside runs.
Active Plumbing serves Las Vegas and all of Las Vegas Valley.
Estate homes need a plumber who can handle the whole range of work, from a single faucet to a whole-home repipe. Our plumbing services cover the big jobs that large properties demand. Here is what Active Plumbing actually handles on these projects.
When old pipes corrode or scale up across a large home, repiping restores flow and pressure throughout. We replace the worn lines with modern materials that resist hard-water buildup. For a home with long runs and multiple floors, this can transform how the plumbing performs.
Repiping a large house is a multi-day job that takes planning. We map every run, stage the work wing by wing, and keep water available to the family where we can. That careful approach limits disruption during a big project.
Pressure problems often get solved at the same time. A new pressure regulator balances flow so the far rooms get the same strength as the ones near the meter. We set it to the right level for the home's layout.
For homes with steady pressure issues, we also look at pipe sizing. A larger main or branch line can carry more water to distant fixtures. Our pipe and fixture services cover these upgrades from start to finish.
Servicing two or more heaters is routine for us on estate jobs. We replace failing tanks, fix leaks, and flush sediment so the system keeps up with heavy demand. Each heater gets checked, not just the obvious one.
Many owners want to switch to a tankless water heater for endless hot water and lower standby loss. Tankless units work well in large homes when the gas supply and venting can handle them. We size and install them to match the home's real usage.
A recirculation pump is another upgrade we install often in big homes. It keeps hot water close to far fixtures so nobody waits two minutes for warm water. Our recirculation pump installation cuts the wait and saves water.
We talk through the trade-offs before recommending tankless versus tank. The right answer depends on how the wings are used and how much hot water the family needs at once. There is no one-size answer for an estate home.
Given the hard water in the valley, a softener protects every fixture and appliance in a large home. It removes the minerals that cause scale before they reach the pipes. That keeps faucets clear and extends the life of water heaters.
High-demand homes need a softener sized for the flow. An undersized unit cannot keep up when several bathrooms run at once. We pick a system that matches the home's peak use so soft water reaches every tap.
Some owners prefer a salt-free conditioner to avoid adding sodium and to skip the salt refills. These systems change how minerals behave instead of removing them. Our water softener installation options cover both approaches.
Filtration can be added for taste and to remove other contaminants. For families who want the cleanest water, a whole-house filter pairs well with the softener. We design the combination around the home's needs.
On a big lot, a hidden leak can hide for a long time. Electronic leak detection finds water escaping inside walls, under slabs, or in buried lines without tearing anything apart. We use sound and pressure tools to narrow it down to inches.
For drain and sewer trouble, a camera tells the real story. We send a small camera through the line and watch on a screen for clogs, roots, cracks, or bellies. That removes the guesswork from a long hillside run.
Combining both tools gives a full picture of a large property's plumbing health. We can spot a slab leak in one wing and a sewer belly in another during the same visit. For owners who travel, a whole-home approach catches problems early.
A whole-home leak detection system adds ongoing protection. It watches for unusual flow and can shut off water before a small leak floods a wing. That kind of safeguard makes sense for a high-value home.
The desert climate around Seven Hills shapes how plumbing wears out. Heat, dry air, and the occasional cold snap all stress the system in ways that wetter regions never see. A little seasonal plumbing awareness goes a long way here. The main pressures the desert puts on Henderson plumbing include:
Summers near the McCullough Hills foothills push past 110 degrees for weeks at a time. That heat bakes any exposed or shallow pipe in the yard. Plastic gets brittle and the constant expansion and contraction works joints loose.
Pipes that run along walls or just under the surface take the worst of it. UV light degrades the material until a small crack opens under pressure. The first sign is often a sudden wet spot or a jump in the water bill.
We see heat damage most on irrigation manifolds, hose bibs, and pool equipment lines. These sit in full sun and rarely get checked. A pre-summer inspection catches the weak spots before they fail in July.
Insulating or relocating exposed lines helps them survive the heat. Where a line cannot be moved, we shield it from direct sun. Small steps before summer prevent a burst line during the hottest stretch.
Henderson winters are mild, but a few nights each year dip below freezing. Those cold snaps catch outdoor faucets and pool equipment off guard. A hose bib left connected can freeze and crack the line behind the wall.
Hillside lots in Seven Hills can run colder than the valley floor on those nights. Wind across the slope pulls heat away from exposed plumbing. Pool pumps and backflow devices are the most common freeze casualties.
Simple freeze protection prevents most of this damage. Disconnecting hoses, covering hose bibs, and running pool equipment during the coldest hours all help. We walk owners through the steps before the first cold night.
If a freeze does crack a line, fast repair limits the damage. Our burst pipe repair service handles those calls quickly. Acting fast keeps a small crack from flooding a yard or wall.
Dry desert air pulls moisture out of everything, and that speeds up mineral scaling. When hard water sits in a fixture and the water evaporates, it leaves the minerals behind. Over time those deposits cake up inside faucets and showerheads.
The effect is worse in rooms used less often. Water sitting in a guest bathroom line evaporates slowly and leaves scale. The next time the faucet runs, flow may be weak from the buildup.
Inside water heaters, scale settles to the bottom and forms a hard layer. That layer makes the heater work harder and wear out faster. In a multi-tank home, the cost of ignoring it adds up across every unit.
A softener slows scaling dramatically by removing the minerals first. Regular flushing clears what does build up. Together they keep fixtures and heaters running longer in this dry climate.
Estate yards in this part of Henderson almost always include a pool, and many add a spa. That pool plumbing carries heavy loads through pumps, heaters, and long circulation lines. The system runs hard in summer and faces freeze risk in winter.
Pool and spa lines wear faster than indoor plumbing because of constant pressure and heat cycling. Equipment pads in full sun take extra stress. A leak in a buried pool line can waste hundreds of gallons before anyone notices.
Spa systems add their own heaters and jets that need supply and return lines. Hard water scales these up just like household fixtures. Keeping them clean protects the equipment and the water quality.
We check pool and spa plumbing as part of a full property service. Catching a small leak or a worn fitting early avoids a costly repair later. For a big yard, that attention keeps the whole outdoor system reliable.
Choosing a plumber for a large home is different from picking one for a quick faucet fix. A high-value Seven Hills property deserves a company with the right license, experience, and crew. Here is what to weigh before hiring for estate properties.
Any plumber working on a high-value home should hold a current Nevada license. That license shows the company has met state standards for training and conduct. On an estate job, cutting corners with an unlicensed worker is a real risk.
Insurance matters just as much. A properly insured plumber protects the homeowner if something goes wrong during the work. Without it, a mistake on a big property could leave the owner holding the cost.
Homeowners can verify a contractor through the Nevada State Contractors Board. Checking takes a minute and confirms the license is active. We encourage every owner to look us up.
A licensed and insured plumber also pulls proper permits and follows code. That keeps the work legal and protects the home's value at resale. On an estate home, those records matter to future buyers.
Estate homes often feature imported and designer fixtures that cost far more than standard ones. These luxury fixtures sometimes use unusual fittings, metric parts, or special cartridges. A plumber unfamiliar with them can do damage trying to force a standard repair.
We have worked on high-end plumbing throughout Seven Hills and nearby gated communities. That experience means we know how European faucets, custom showers, and pot fillers come apart. We order the right parts instead of improvising.
Designer fixtures also need careful handling during install. A scratch on a polished finish is expensive to fix. Our crew treats these pieces like the investments they are.
Asking a plumber about their experience with high-end fixtures is fair. The answer reveals whether they understand estate-level work. For a home full of custom pieces, that knowledge protects the owner.
A whole-home repipe or a multi-heater replacement is not a one-person job. It takes a crew, the right equipment, and the ability to work several days in a row. Crew capacity is what separates a company that can take on estate work from one that cannot.
We staff and equip our team for large projects. That means enough hands to keep the job moving and the tools to handle long runs and big systems. A bigger crew finishes a major job faster and with less disruption.
Estate work also needs coordination. Someone has to manage the schedule, the parts, and the access so the project runs smoothly. We assign a point person so the owner always knows the status.
Before hiring, an owner should ask how the company handles multi-day jobs. The answer shows whether they have done estate work before. A company stretched thin will struggle on a property this size.
The City of Henderson has its own permit process and building codes. A plumber who knows them moves through approvals faster and avoids costly rework. Local knowledge saves time on any estate project.
We pull Henderson permits regularly and know what inspectors look for. That familiarity keeps a job on schedule and passing inspection the first time. An out-of-area company often learns these rules the hard way.
Code compliance also protects the home's value. Work done to code holds up at resale and keeps insurance valid. On a high-value property, that paper trail is worth having.
Because we work across Henderson neighborhoods every week, the permit office and inspectors are familiar ground. That relationship smooths the process. For an estate owner, it means fewer delays and surprises.
Active Plumbing serves Las Vegas and all of Las Vegas Valley.
A large home has more to lose when plumbing fails, which makes preventive care a smart investment. Regular plumbing maintenance catches small problems before they grow into expensive ones. Here is the preventive routine that keeps estate home systems running.
A yearly inspection covers every fixture, heater, and outdoor line on the property. On an estate home, that walkthrough catches the slow leaks and worn parts that hide in unused rooms. One visit a year prevents most major surprises.
During the inspection we test pressure, check valves, and look under every sink. We also examine the water heaters and the outdoor lines. Nothing on a big property should go a full year without a look.
The report gives the owner a clear picture of the home's plumbing health. Small fixes get handled before they grow. Bigger items get planned instead of becoming emergencies.
For a high-value home, this annual check is preventive maintenance that pays for itself. One caught slab leak or failing heater covers the cost many times over. We recommend it for every estate property we serve.
Hard-water sediment settles in every water heater over time. Flushing the tanks clears that buildup so the heaters run efficiently and last longer. In a multiple-tank home, each unit needs the same care.
A flush removes the gritty layer that collects at the bottom of the tank. Left alone, that sediment makes the heater work harder and can cause noise and early failure. Yearly flushing keeps the units healthy.
Softeners need attention too. We check the salt, clean the brine tank, and confirm the system is removing minerals as it should. A softener that stops working lets scale return without warning.
For tankless units, descaling replaces the flush. Our tankless maintenance and descaling keeps those systems clear in the hard-water valley. Regular service protects the investment in either type of heater.
The main shutoff and any zone valves are the first defense against water damage. If a pipe bursts, a working shutoff stops the flood. We test these valves so they turn freely when it counts.
Valves that sit untouched for years can seize. In an emergency, a stuck valve means water keeps running while damage spreads. Testing them once a year keeps them ready.
We also check the home's water pressure during maintenance. Pressure that creeps too high stresses pipes, fixtures, and the water heater. A pressure regulator brought back into range protects the whole system.
Knowing where every shutoff is matters for a large home. We make sure the owner can find the main and the zone valves fast. In a flood, those seconds save thousands in damage.
Outdoor plumbing needs prep before summer heat and winter cold. Irrigation service in spring checks every zone for leaks and cracked lines before the season of heavy use. Catching a weak fitting early prevents a flooded yard in July.
Before summer, we inspect the irrigation manifold, hose bibs, and pool lines for sun damage. Replacing brittle parts now avoids a burst during the hottest weeks. A big lot has many zones to check.
Before winter, seasonal prep shifts to freeze protection. We help disconnect hoses, cover bibs, and prep pool equipment for cold nights. Hillside lots need this extra care.
Two seasonal visits keep outdoor plumbing reliable year-round. On an estate property with sprawling landscape and a pool, that routine prevents the most common outdoor failures. It is a small habit that protects a large yard.
Our team works across Seven Hills and the surrounding Henderson neighborhoods every week. We know the gates, the streets, and the routes that get us there fast. Here is how Active Plumbing covers the Seven Hills service area as your local Henderson plumber. Our reach and approach include:
We serve Seven Hills along with nearby estate areas like Anthem, Inspirada, and MacDonald Highlands. These communities share similar large-home plumbing needs and the same hard-water supply. Our familiarity with one helps us on all of them.
Each of these neighborhoods has its own gates and HOA quirks. Working them regularly means we already know the access process. That saves time on every visit.
We also cover the broader Henderson area, including Green Valley and other established neighborhoods. Estate homes are not the only properties we handle, but they are a big part of our work here. Our crew moves easily across the southern valley.
Owners moving between these communities often stay with us because we know the local conditions. The same hard water and desert climate apply across the area. That consistency makes service simpler.
When a pipe bursts or a heater floods a wing, fast response matters. We reach the Seven Hills area quickly using St. Rose Parkway and the 215 Beltway. Those routes connect us to most of southern Henderson in minutes.
An emergency plumber is only useful if they arrive in time to limit damage. Our trucks are stocked to handle most urgent repairs on the first visit. That means less time with the water off.
For true emergencies, our 24/7 emergency plumbing line is always open. A burst line at midnight gets the same fast response as one at noon. Large homes cannot wait until morning.
We aim to reach Seven Hills emergencies within a short window during normal traffic. Knowing the gates and routes shaves time off every call. On a flooding estate, every minute counts.
Getting into a guard-gated community takes coordination. We arrange gated access ahead of the visit so our crew clears the gate without delay. The homeowner adds us to the visitor list and we handle the rest.
Scheduling around HOA rules keeps the visit smooth. We plan noisy work for allowed hours and park where the association permits. That keeps owners in good standing with the community.
For larger jobs, we coordinate multiple days of access in advance. The guard station knows to expect us each day. That planning avoids wasted time at the gate.
Our experience in Seven Hills and similar communities makes this routine. Access is rarely a problem because we set it up correctly from the start. The owner does not have to manage it.
Many estate owners travel or use a property manager to handle the home. We communicate clearly with whoever is in charge so work gets approved and done without confusion. Absentee owners get the same attention as those at home.
For a property manager, we provide clear reports and photos so they can update the owner. That keeps everyone informed even when the owner is across the country. Trust comes from clear communication.
We can coordinate access and approvals remotely when needed. An owner traveling abroad can authorize a repair by phone or email. The work proceeds without the home sitting damaged.
Reach out through our contact page to set up service or arrange manager coordination. We handle the details so a large home stays protected whether the owner is there or not. That reliability matters for high-value properties.
Active Plumbing serves Las Vegas and all of Las Vegas Valley.
Estate homes in Seven Hills carry plumbing demands that standard houses never face. Long pipe runs, multiple water heaters, sprawling outdoor lines, and high-end fixtures all add complexity that rewards experience. Knowing the common problems and keeping up with maintenance protects a high-value home.
Our team brings the license, crew, and local knowledge that estate work requires. We know the gates, the codes, and the hard-water conditions across this part of Henderson. That familiarity keeps every job moving and every home protected.
If you own an estate-sized property in Seven Hills, reach out for an inspection or to discuss a larger project. Call Active Plumbing or visit our contact page to schedule a consultation. We are ready to keep your large home running the way it should.
Yes, we serve the guard-gated Seven Hills community regularly. We coordinate gate access ahead of each visit by having the homeowner add our crew and trucks to the visitor list. We also follow HOA rules on work hours and parking so owners stay in good standing with the association. Our familiarity with these gates keeps visits smooth and on schedule.
Whole-home repiping for an estate-sized house in Seven Hills varies widely based on size, the number of bathrooms, pipe material, and access. Large multi-wing homes generally land in the higher range because of the long runs and many fixtures. We provide a clear written estimate after inspecting the property. Factors like wall access and floor type affect the final price, so an in-person look matters.
Far rooms in a large home often lose pressure because water travels a long distance from the main line. Friction across long pipe runs drops the flow by the time it reaches a back wing. Mineral scaling inside aging pipes narrows the path and makes it worse. A pressure regulator, a recirculation loop, or a partial repipe usually solves it after we test pressure at several points.
Most Henderson homes benefit from a softener because the Las Vegas Valley Water District supply is very hard. The minerals leave scale on fixtures, clog faucets, and shorten the life of water heaters. In an estate home with many fixtures and multiple heaters, a softener protects every one at once. We size the system for high-demand homes so soft water reaches every tap.
Watch for warm spots on the floor, a sudden jump in your water bill, or the sound of running water when everything is off. Damp or cracked flooring and a drop in pressure can also point to a slab leak. Large single-story and split-level Seven Hills homes are more prone because of the pipe runs under the slab. Our electronic leak detection pinpoints the spot before any concrete is opened.
Yes, servicing two or more heaters is routine for us on estate jobs. We check, flush, and repair every unit on the property, not just the one near the garage. We also upgrade multi-heater homes to tankless systems or add recirculation pumps when it fits the layout. The right setup depends on how each wing is used and the available gas supply.
We recommend a whole-home plumbing inspection once a year for estate-sized properties. A large home has more fixtures, longer lines, and more places for slow leaks to hide in unused rooms. The annual check covers every fixture, water heater, and outdoor line, catching small problems before they grow. For a high-value home, that one visit a year prevents most major surprises.
Yes, we pull the proper permits with the City of Henderson and follow local building codes on every job that requires them. We know what inspectors look for, which keeps work passing the first time and on schedule. Code-compliant work protects your home's value at resale and keeps insurance valid. Our regular work across Henderson makes the permit process familiar ground.
Besides Seven Hills, we serve nearby estate communities like Anthem, Inspirada, and MacDonald Highlands. We also cover the broader Henderson area, including Green Valley, Whitney Ranch, and other established neighborhoods. These communities share the same hard-water supply and desert climate, so our local knowledge carries across all of them. Many owners moving between these areas stay with us for that consistency.
We reach the Seven Hills area quickly using St. Rose Parkway and the 215 Beltway, which connect us to most of southern Henderson in minutes. Our trucks are stocked to handle most urgent repairs on the first visit. For true emergencies, our 24/7 line is always open, so a burst pipe at midnight gets the same fast response as one at noon. Knowing the gates and routes shaves time off every call.
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.

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