A dripping faucet at 10 PM is annoying. A burst pipe flooding your kitchen is an emergency. Knowing the difference saves Denton homeowners hundreds of dollars in after-hours fees — and knowing what to do while you wait can prevent thousands in water damage.
True Plumbing Emergencies: Call Now
These situations require immediate professional help:
- Burst or broken pipe — Water is actively flowing and you can’t stop it with a shutoff valve
- Sewage backup into the home — Raw sewage coming up through drains, toilets, or floor drains. This is a health hazard
- Gas line leak — If you smell rotten eggs near a water heater or gas line, leave the house immediately and call 911 first, then a plumber
- No water to the entire house — If neighbors have water and you don’t, something is wrong with your main line or shutoff
- Flooding from a water heater failure — A ruptured tank can dump 40–80 gallons in minutes
- Frozen pipes about to burst — During Denton’s winter freezes, pipes that stop flowing may be frozen and at risk of bursting
Not an Emergency: Schedule a Regular Appointment
These problems need attention but can wait for normal business hours:
- Slow-draining sink or tub
- Running toilet
- Dripping faucet
- Low water pressure
- Minor toilet leak at the base
- Water heater producing lukewarm water (still producing some hot water)
- Garbage disposal not working
Scheduling a regular appointment instead of an emergency call saves $100–$200 on the service fee alone.
What to Do While You Wait for the Plumber
Taking quick action before the plumber arrives can dramatically reduce damage:
For Burst Pipes or Active Leaks
- Shut off the water — Turn the main shutoff valve clockwise. In most Denton homes, it’s near the curb at the water meter or where the main line enters the house
- Open a faucet — Open the lowest faucet in the house to drain remaining water from the pipes
- Turn off the water heater — If the leak is near the heater or you’ve shut off the main, turn off the heater to prevent damage to an empty tank
- Move valuables — Get electronics, documents, and furniture away from the water
For Sewage Backups
- Stop using water — Don’t flush toilets, run sinks, or use the washing machine
- Don’t touch the sewage — Raw sewage carries bacteria and pathogens
- Ventilate the area — Open windows if possible
- Keep kids and pets away — Block off the affected area
For Frozen Pipes
- Open the faucet — Leave the affected faucet open so water can flow once the pipe thaws
- Apply gentle heat — Use a hair dryer or space heater near the frozen section. Never use an open flame
- Check for cracks — If the pipe has already cracked, shut off the main and call immediately
Need a Plumber Right Now?
Denton Home Services connects you with licensed emergency plumbers in the Denton area — available 24/7, no trip fees through our network.
Get Connected to an Emergency Plumber →Emergency Plumbing Costs in Denton
| Service | Standard Hours | After-Hours / Emergency |
|---|---|---|
| Service call fee | $75 – $150 | $150 – $300 |
| Burst pipe repair | $300 – $1,000 | $500 – $2,000 |
| Sewer line clearing | $350 – $800 | $500 – $1,200 |
| Water heater emergency shutoff + repair | $150 – $500 | $300 – $800 |
| Main line shutoff valve replacement | $400 – $800 | $600 – $1,200 |
After-hours rates in Denton typically apply from 6 PM–8 AM weekdays, all day weekends, and holidays.
Know Your Shutoff Valves Before You Need Them
Every Denton homeowner should locate these before an emergency:
- Main water shutoff — At the curb (meter box) or where the main line enters the house. Test it annually to make sure it turns
- Toilet shutoff — Oval handle on the wall behind each toilet
- Sink shutoffs — Under each sink, usually two valves (hot and cold)
- Water heater shutoff — On the cold water inlet pipe above the heater
- Gas shutoff — At the meter on the side of the house (use a wrench, not pliers)
If your main shutoff valve is stuck or corroded — which is common in older Denton homes built in the 1970s–1990s — get it replaced during a routine plumbing visit. A $200 valve replacement now beats a flood you can’t stop later.
Bottom Line
Real plumbing emergencies involve uncontrolled water flow, sewage in the house, or gas leaks. Everything else can wait for a regular appointment and save you the after-hours premium. Know where your shutoff valves are, and take action to minimize damage while you wait for the plumber to arrive.