Pipe Repair in Apex, NC
Free plumbing inspection ($89 value). Emergency pipe repair available 24/7. No surprise fees.
What Causes Pipes to Burst in North Carolina?
Pipes burst in North Carolina for three main reasons: freezing temperatures, soil movement, and material failure. Each one shows up differently, damages your home differently, and requires a different repair approach. Understanding which one you're dealing with helps you make better decisions when a plumber is standing in your living room giving you options.
Freezing: The January and February Problem
When overnight temperatures drop into the 20s, water inside your pipes expands as it freezes. That expansion generates enormous pressure, enough to split copper, crack PEX, and blow apart old galvanized joints. The pipes most at risk are in exterior walls, uninsulated crawl spaces, and garages. Irrigation lines and hose bibs are almost guaranteed to freeze if not winterized.
Triangle homeowners get hit hardest during those January and February cold snaps when temperatures plummet quickly. Pipes that survive a gradual cool-down can fail when temps drop 30 degrees in a few hours. The pipe doesn't always burst at the frozen section either. The pressure buildup can cause a failure anywhere in the line between the freeze point and a closed faucet.
If you suspect a frozen pipe (no water from a faucet during freezing temps), call before it bursts. Our techs can often locate and thaw the freeze point, saving you the cost and damage of a full rupture. Element Service Group provides emergency pipe repair around the clock, with a free plumbing inspection ($89 value) on every call.
Soil Movement: Wake County Clay at Work
The clay soil across Apex, Holly Springs, Fuquay-Varina, and much of Wake County creates a slow-motion problem underground. When it rains, clay swells. During dry spells, it shrinks and cracks. That constant expansion and contraction shifts the ground around your underground water and sewer lines, stressing joints and creating small cracks that grow over time.
You might not notice underground pipe damage for months or even years. Signs include unexplained wet spots in the yard, a sudden spike in your water bill, reduced water pressure, or sewage smells near foundation vents. By the time these symptoms appear, the pipe has usually been leaking for a while.
Our approach to underground pipe problems starts with a camera inspection. We feed a small camera into the line to see exactly where the damage is, what caused it, and how extensive it is. This avoids guesswork and unnecessary digging. Depending on what we find, we may recommend a spot repair, a section replacement, or in some cases, trenchless pipe lining that rehabilitates the pipe without excavating your yard.
Material Failure: The Pipes Themselves
Some pipe materials have a track record of premature failure in North Carolina homes.
Polybutylene pipes are the biggest concern. This gray plastic piping was installed in homes built from the early 1980s through the mid-1990s across the Triangle. It was marketed as the pipe of the future. It wasn't. Polybutylene reacts with chlorine and other oxidants in municipal water, becoming brittle from the inside out. Failures can be sudden and catastrophic with no warning signs. If your home has polybutylene (check in the crawl space, at the water heater, or under sinks for gray flexible tubing), a full repipe is the safest path forward.
Galvanized steel pipes were standard in homes built before the 1970s. Older Raleigh neighborhoods still have plenty of them. Galvanized pipes corrode from the inside, building up rust and mineral deposits that gradually restrict water flow. The first sign is often low water pressure. Eventually, the corrosion eats through the pipe wall and you get leaks. If your galvanized pipes are showing reduced pressure or rust-colored water, replacement is a matter of when, not if.
Copper pipes are more durable but not immune to problems. Pinhole leaks develop from the inside due to water chemistry, and copper joints can fail if they were poorly soldered during installation. Many homes in Raleigh and Cary from the 1970s-1990s have copper throughout, and pinhole leaks in these systems are increasingly common as they age past 30-40 years.
What Pipe Repair Costs
Pipe repair costs vary widely based on location, material, and scope:
A single pipe repair where the break is accessible (under a sink, in a crawl space, in an exposed wall) typically runs $200-$600.
A pipe repair that requires opening a wall or ceiling adds drywall work and runs $500-$1,200.
Slab leak repairs, where the pipe runs under your concrete foundation, range from $1,500-$4,000+ depending on whether we repair in place or reroute the line overhead.
A full or partial repipe for a home with failing polybutylene or galvanized lines ranges from $4,000-$15,000+ depending on the size of the home and accessibility.
We provide exact pricing before starting work. No ranges, no estimates that balloon once we're into the job. You get a number and that's the number.
Don't Wait on Pipe Problems
Small leaks become big leaks. A pinhole drip inside a wall can run for weeks before you see the stain, and by then the framing, insulation, and subfloor may have mold and rot. A slow sewer line crack attracts tree roots that turn a small repair into a major excavation.
Element Service Group is veteran-owned and trusted by over 700 Triangle families with five-star reviews. If you see signs of a pipe problem, whether it's a visible leak, a mystery water bill spike, or reduced pressure, get it diagnosed before it escalates.
Problems We Fix
Our experts can diagnose and resolve any issue
Galvanized Pipe Corrosion
Homes built before the mid-1970s in the Apex area often have galvanized steel water supply pipes. Over 50+ years, these pipes corrode from the inside out, restricting flow, discoloring water, and eventually developing leaks at threaded joints.
Polybutylene Pipe Brittleness
Triangle-area homes built between 1978 and 1995 may contain polybutylene (poly-B) supply lines. Exposure to chlorine in municipal water causes this plastic to become brittle and crack, often with little warning. Whole-house repiping is the only reliable solution.
Tree Root Damage to Drain Pipes
Mature trees in established Apex neighborhoods send roots toward sewer and drain lines seeking moisture. Roots enter through joints and cracks, eventually crushing clay and Orangeburg pipe sections.
Pipe Settling from Clay Soil Movement
The expansive clay soils throughout Wake County swell when wet and shrink when dry. This seasonal movement puts stress on buried pipes, causing joints to separate and rigid pipes to crack over time.
Pinhole Leaks in Copper Pipes
Copper supply lines in some Triangle-area homes develop pinhole leaks due to aggressive water chemistry and electrical grounding issues. These leaks often appear in clusters, indicating a systemic problem rather than an isolated failure.
Why Choose Element Service Group for Pipe Repair
We're your trusted partner for all Pipe Repair needs

Material Expertise for Every Era of Home
From the clay sewer pipes in Apex's oldest neighborhoods to the PEX systems in new construction, we know the strengths and vulnerabilities of every pipe material used in Triangle-area homes over the past century.
Repair vs. Replace Honesty
We won't push a whole-house repipe when a spot repair will last. And we won't patch a failing galvanized system that needs replacement. We give you an honest assessment with options and let you decide.
Minimal Disruption to Your Home
We plan pipe repair access points carefully, use the smallest openings possible, and coordinate with drywall and flooring contractors when restoration is needed. Many repairs are completed in a single day.
Long-Term Solutions for Local Conditions
We select repair materials based on Triangle-area water chemistry and soil conditions. This means recommending PEX for its flexibility in shifting clay soil and corrosion resistance in our local water supply.
Frequently Asked Questions About Pipe Repair
Get answers to common questions about our pipe repair services
How do I know if my pipes are frozen?
Signs of frozen pipes include: no water or only a trickle when you turn on faucets, frost visible on exposed pipes, strange smells from drains (blockage), and bulging or cracked pipes. Pipes most at risk are in unheated areas like crawl spaces, attics, garages, and exterior walls. If you suspect frozen pipes, call us immediately—we can thaw them safely before they burst.
What should I do if a pipe bursts?
First, shut off your main water valve immediately—know where it is before an emergency. Then call us for emergency service. While waiting: turn off electricity in affected areas if there's standing water, move valuables away from the water, and start removing water with towels or a wet vac if safe. Don't wait—water damage compounds quickly.
How can I prevent frozen pipes?
Keep your home heated to at least 55°F, even when away. Open cabinet doors under sinks on exterior walls to let warm air circulate. Let faucets drip during extreme cold—moving water is less likely to freeze. Insulate exposed pipes in crawl spaces, attics, and garages. Seal gaps where cold air enters near pipes. Disconnect and drain outdoor hoses before winter.
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Related Articles & Tips
Learn more about Pipe Repair from our experts
Drain Keeps Backing Up: Tree Root and Older Pipe Problems
If your drains keep backing up no matter how many times you clear them, the problem may not be a clog — it may be tree roots exploiting aging pipes. Here's how to tell and what to do about it.
Low Water Pressure in Your New Construction Home
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Frozen Pipe Prevention: Why NC Crawl Spaces Are Vulnerable
North Carolina homes aren't built for hard freezes — and crawl space pipes are the first to go. Here's how to protect your plumbing when temps drop below 28°F.