A Kitec flag can stall a closing. We tell you fast whether to repipe, credit, or push back, so the deal stays alive.
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.
You are under contract. Inspection came back. Buried in the buyer’s report is the word “Kitec,” and now your agent is calling to say the buyer’s people are asking questions. The clock on your closing is still running while everyone waits.
This is the most common way Vegas homeowners meet Kitec: not from a leak, but from a deal that suddenly has a problem in it. The good news is this is a solvable, fast-moving situation if you get ahead of it.
Three things tend to happen once Kitec is named in a report.
They Google it. They find the recall and the class action, and they read the word “failure.” Whether or not your fittings are actually degraded, the buyer now perceives risk. Perceived risk becomes a renegotiation.
This is the part sellers underestimate. Insurers increasingly refuse to write new policies on Kitec homes, or they cancel and decline renewal. If the buyer cannot get homeowner’s insurance, the buyer cannot close, no matter how much they want the house.
No insurance, no loan. A lender will not fund a house the buyer cannot insure. So a plumbing flag quietly becomes a financing problem, which is what actually kills deals.
You have real options. The wrong move is doing nothing and letting the buyer’s imagination set the price.
The cleanest fix. A completed, permitted repipe removes the objection entirely. The insurer’s issue goes away, the lender’s issue goes away, and you can market the home as repiped, which is a selling point, not a defect. On a single-story Vegas home this can often be done inside a normal escrow window – see how a whole-house repipe works.
If timing is tight, a closing credit toward a repipe lets the buyer handle it after they own the home. This works when the buyer can still secure insurance in the interim. Price it off a real quote, not a guess, so you are not overpaying to keep the deal.
Sometimes the flag is overblown. If the fittings are still sound and it is genuinely a wait situation, a written evaluation from a licensed plumber gives your agent something concrete to hand the buyer instead of conceding to a worst-case number. We explain the urgent-versus-wait call in our Kitec evaluation.
Every day Kitec sits unaddressed in an open escrow, the buyer’s leverage grows. The fastest path to protecting your price is a straight answer on condition and a real repipe number, early. We turn evaluations and quotes around for homes under contract because we know what a stalled closing costs you.
A 2002 Woodside home in the southwest valley went under contract, and the buyer’s inspector flagged Kitec. The buyer’s lender got cold feet over insurability. The sellers repiped to copper in two days inside the escrow window, handed over the permit and inspection paperwork, and the loan cleared. The deal that looked dead closed on time.
We confirm whether it is actually Kitec, tell you honestly if it is urgent or negotiable, and give you a real repipe number you can build a strategy around – repipe, credit, or documented pushback. Kitec Out is licensed and insured in Nevada. We are not here to scare your buyer or upsell you. We are here to keep your closing alive.
Under contract with a Kitec flag? Send us the report today. Get a fast answer.
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.