Hear from Our Customers
Your water pressure stays consistent. Your drains clear without that slow gurgle. Your water heater doesn’t leak onto the garage floor at 6 AM.
That’s what reliable plumbing looks like. Not dramatic—just functional. The kind of work that doesn’t need a follow-up call three weeks later because the same pipe is leaking again.
Most plumbing problems in East Mims come from aging infrastructure. Homes built in the 70s and 80s are dealing with corroded cast iron pipes, mineral buildup from hard water, and shifting soil that stresses connections. These aren’t quick fixes. They need someone who knows how Florida’s climate and water conditions affect your system—and how to address the root cause, not just the symptom.
When the work is done right, you’re not calling another plumber in six months. You’re not dealing with water damage spreading through your walls. You’re just going about your day, because your plumbing is doing what it’s supposed to do.
We’ve been serving Brevard County since 2007. We’re based in Cocoa, and we’ve worked in East Mims long enough to know what breaks, why it breaks, and how to fix it for the long haul.
Carl started learning plumbing at 16. After 20 years in the military, he earned his state plumbing license and built this business on the same values that kept him going through two decades of service—honesty, reliability, and doing the job right. Every project gets his personal oversight. Not a project manager. Not a subcontractor. Carl.
You’re working with a small team that’s fully licensed and insured. We’re not trying to scale into a franchise. We’re trying to keep East Mims homes running without the runaround.
First, we show up when we say we will. That’s not a selling point—it’s baseline. But if you’ve dealt with contractors who ghost you or show up three hours late, it’s worth mentioning.
We start with a free estimate. Carl walks through the issue with you, explains what’s happening and why, and gives you options. If it’s a clogged drain, we’ll use a camera to see what’s actually blocking it—roots, grease buildup, a collapsed section of pipe. If it’s a leak, we’ll trace it to the source instead of guessing.
Once you approve the work, we handle it start to finish. That might mean clearing a drain with a rooter, replacing a section of PVC, or swapping out a failing water heater before it floods your laundry room. We clean up when we’re done. We test everything before we leave. And if something doesn’t work the way it should, we come back and make it right.
No surprise charges. No upselling you on services you don’t need. Just transparent work that solves the problem you called about.
Ready to get started?
We handle the full range of residential plumbing work. Drain cleaning and rooter services for clogs that won’t clear with a plunger. Drain replacement when your cast iron lines are too corroded to salvage. PVC replacement for sections that have cracked or shifted. Water heater installations before your old unit gives out and floods the floor.
In East Mims, a lot of homes are dealing with older plumbing systems that weren’t built to handle Florida’s water conditions. Hard water accelerates mineral buildup inside pipes. High water tables increase pressure on sewer lines. Shifting soil can crack rigid connections. We’ve seen it all, and we know how to address it without ripping out more than necessary.
Emergency plumbing services are available when something breaks at the worst possible time—because it always does. A burst pipe doesn’t wait for business hours. Neither do we.
Every job starts with diagnostics. We use cameras and pressure tests to figure out what’s actually wrong, not what we think might be wrong. Then we walk through your options, explain what each one costs, and let you decide. No pressure. No runaround. Just clear information so you can make the call that makes sense for your home and your budget.
It depends on where we are when you call and what else is in the queue, but we prioritize emergencies. If you’ve got water pouring into your walls or sewage backing up into your home, that moves to the front of the line.
Most emergency calls in East Mims get a same-day response. We’re based in Cocoa, so we’re close enough to get there fast. When you call, we’ll give you a realistic timeframe—not a vague “we’ll be there soon” that turns into four hours.
In the meantime, we’ll walk you through what to do to minimize damage. Shut off the main water line if it’s a burst pipe. Turn off the water heater if that’s where the leak is coming from. Clear the area around the problem so we can get to work as soon as we arrive. Small steps, but they make a difference when you’re dealing with water damage.
Most drain backups come from one of three things: tree roots, grease buildup, or deteriorating pipes. In East Mims, tree roots are a big one. Older sewer lines made of cast iron or clay develop small cracks over time, and roots work their way in looking for water. Once they’re inside, they grow and block the line.
Grease buildup happens when cooking oils get poured down the drain. They solidify as they cool and coat the inside of your pipes. Over time, that coating gets thick enough to slow or stop drainage completely. It’s worse in homes with older plumbing because the pipes already have rough interior surfaces that catch debris.
Deteriorating pipes are common in homes built before 1980. Cast iron corrodes from the inside out, especially in Florida’s humid, mineral-heavy environment. Eventually, sections collapse or develop holes. When that happens, you’re not just dealing with a clog—you’re dealing with a structural failure that needs replacement, not just cleaning.
If it’s your first clog in that drain, cleaning usually handles it. If the same drain keeps backing up every few months, that’s a sign something deeper is wrong—either recurring root intrusion or a pipe that’s deteriorating.
We use a camera to look inside the line and see what’s actually happening. If we see roots, we’ll clear them and talk through your options. You can keep clearing them as they grow back, or you can replace that section of pipe with PVC that roots can’t penetrate. If we see corrosion or cracks, cleaning won’t fix it. The pipe needs to be replaced.
Drain replacement sounds more expensive than it is, especially if you’re only replacing a problem section instead of the whole line. And it’s cheaper than dealing with repeated backups, water damage, or a full collapse that floods your yard. We’ll show you what we’re seeing on the camera, explain what each option costs, and let you make the call. No pressure either way.
Yes. We install both traditional tank water heaters and tankless systems. If your current water heater is over 10 years old, it’s worth having us take a look before it fails. Most water heaters don’t give much warning—they just start leaking one day, and by the time you notice, there’s water damage.
Traditional tank heaters are less expensive upfront and work well for most homes. Tankless systems cost more to install but last longer and save on energy costs over time. Which one makes sense depends on your household size, your budget, and how long you plan to stay in the home.
We’ll measure your space, check your existing connections, and walk through what’s involved. If your current setup needs updates to meet code—like adding a drain pan or upgrading venting—we’ll handle that too. The goal is a water heater that works reliably and doesn’t flood your house when it eventually reaches the end of its lifespan.
First, shut off your main water line. It’s usually located near your water meter or where the main line enters your house. Turn the valve clockwise until it stops. That cuts off water flow and prevents more damage while you’re waiting for help.
Next, turn off your water heater. If it’s gas, turn the gas valve to “off.” If it’s electric, flip the breaker. Running a water heater without water flowing through it can damage the unit. Once that’s done, open your faucets to drain any remaining water in the lines and relieve pressure.
Then call us. We’ll get there as fast as we can, assess the damage, and either repair the burst section or replace it depending on what caused the failure. Burst pipes usually happen because of corrosion, freezing (rare in Florida but it happens), or sudden pressure spikes. We’ll figure out which one it was and make sure it doesn’t happen again in the same spot.
Yes. Carl holds a state plumbing license, and we’re fully insured. That means if something goes wrong during the job—which is rare, but it happens—you’re covered. It also means the work meets Florida building codes and will pass inspection if you’re selling your home or refinancing.
A lot of homeowners don’t think to ask about licensing until something goes wrong. Then they find out the person who did their plumbing work wasn’t licensed, and now they’re on the hook for repairs and code violations. It’s not worth the risk, especially for major work like drain replacement or water heater installations.
We’ve been doing this since 2007. We’re not cutting corners, and we’re not disappearing after the job is done. If you have a question three months from now, you can call us. If something needs adjustment, we’ll come back. That’s what working with a licensed, local plumber actually gets you—accountability.
Other Services we provide in East Mims