Real ranges, what drives the price up or down, and why the settlement money is gone. Copper, PEX-A, and full-interior numbers laid out plain.
Inspectors mis-flag it. We verify the pipe and fittings before a word about repiping.
We read the fittings and your situation, then tell you straight. Sometimes the answer is wait.
Two real numbers on your home, quoted straight - not a single take-it-or-leave-it figure.
The number people fear is the reason they put this off. So let’s put it on the table. A whole-house Kitec repipe in the Las Vegas Valley usually lands between seven and fourteen thousand dollars once you count the plumbing and the restoration. Some come in lower, a few custom homes run higher. Here is what actually moves that number.
| Item | Typical range |
| Copper repipe | $4,500 – $8,000 |
| PEX-A repipe | $3,000 – $6,000 |
| Full interior repipe with restoration | $7,500 – $14,000 |
| Large or custom home | up to ~$18,000 |
| Clark County plumbing permit | ~$60 |
The copper and PEX numbers above are the plumbing itself. The full-interior range includes patching and finishing the walls we open. That gap is where most surprise costs live, so read the next part.
More fixtures means more pipe runs and more connections. A three-bath two-story has a lot more plumbing than a single-story two-bath, and the quote reflects that.
Copper costs more in material and labor. PEX-A (Uponor) installs faster with fewer connections. Both are solid. We quote both so you see the actual spread on your home rather than guessing. The PEX vs copper guide covers the tradeoffs beyond price.
In Vegas a lot of these homes let us run new lines through the attic and drop down walls, which keeps things clean. When the routing has to work around a slab or tight framing, labor goes up.
This is the part cheap quotes hide. We open walls to reach the pipe. Someone has to close them, match the knockdown texture Vegas builders love, and repaint. A plumber who quotes you the pipe and leaves you the drywall is not cheaper. You just pay the difference to a second contractor later, usually more.
Two stories means dropping lines between floors and more restoration points. It adds time and cost over a single-story job that a crew can knock out in a day or two.
The lowest number on paper is often the one that stops at the pipe. No restoration, no permit pulled, maybe standard PEX-B instead of PEX-A. You find out after the walls are open. We would rather give you one honest all-in number than win the job on a low quote and hand you a change order halfway through. When we quote, restoration and the permit are in it unless we tell you otherwise in writing.
There was a Kitec class-action settlement, and here in Las Vegas it was large, around ninety million dollars across roughly thirty-two thousand homes. Here’s the hard part. The claims deadlines have passed. If you’re buying or selling a Kitec home now, that fund does not pay for your repipe. You do, out of pocket. We’re not the ones who wrote that rule, but you should hear it straight from us instead of finding out after you file a claim that closed years ago. More on how this hits a sale is in our guide to Kitec and home sales.
One more real-world note. Insurers have gotten strict about Kitec. Some won’t write a new policy on a Kitec home, and some won’t renew. That alone pushes a lot of owners to repipe even when the fittings could technically wait.
Upload the report or a photo of the fittings. We confirm it is Kitec, tell you if that flag is urgent - and quote copper or PEX-A straight.