Build year and builder tell you most of what you need to know. Twenty minutes in your garage tells you the rest.
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.
Was your home built between 1995 and 2007? If so, and it sits in one of the Valley’s master-planned communities, there is a real chance it has Kitec. This page helps you narrow it down before you pay anyone to look.
Two things predict Kitec better than anything else: when the house was built, and who built it. Start there, then confirm with your own eyes.
Kitec was installed roughly 1995 through 2007, with the heaviest use from 2001 to 2004. If your home was framed in that stretch, it belongs to the era. Homes built after about 2008 almost never have it – by then the recall had landed and builders had moved on.
These are the production builders most associated with Kitec in Clark County during that window:
If your home came from one of these builders in the build window above, move straight to the physical check below. That combination is the strongest signal there is.
Kitec is spread across the Valley, but it clusters in the master-planned areas that were going up fast in the early 2000s. Use this as a starting map, not a guarantee – a single community was built in phases over years, and not every street got the same plumbing.
If your address is in one of these and your build year fits, do not assume you are clear because a neighbor was told they were fine. Phasing and plumbing subcontractors varied street to street.
You do not need a plumber to get a strong answer. You need a flashlight and twenty minutes. Here is where to look.
This is the easiest tell. Look at the pipes coming off the top of the water heater. Kitec shows up as flexible orange (hot) and blue (cold) pipe, not rigid copper and not white or clear PEX. If you see orange and blue plastic-feeling pipe here, that is your answer most of the time.
Many Kitec homes have a central manifold – a box, often in a garage wall or a laundry closet, where a bundle of lines branches out to the house. If you see a manifold feeding orange and blue lines, that is Kitec’s signature layout.
Where you can see a brass fitting, look closely for stamped text. Kitec brass was branded under several names. Any of these means Kitec:
The pipe itself sometimes carries a printed line too. Orange and blue plus any of those stamped names is a confirmed identification.
Look under sinks, in the attic near the water heater, and anywhere plumbing is visible. You are looking for that same flexible orange-and-blue pipe rather than copper.
Consider a typical Aliante single-story from 2005. Garage water heater, orange and blue lines off the top, a small manifold on the garage wall, and a fitting stamped IPEX visible right at the heater. That is a five-minute confirmation, and it is a scene we see constantly in that neighborhood.
Finding it is not an emergency by itself. It is information. The next question is whether yours is urgent or can be watched, and that depends on your situation, not just the pipe. If a leak, a sale, or an insurer notice is in the picture, the timeline tightens fast.
Here is the honest part. If you found Kitec, you will eventually repipe. The only real question is when, and on whose terms.
Send us your inspection report – we’ll tell you if that Kitec flag is urgent. Start here.
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.