Whole Home Pipe Replacement in Keller

What's included:
- Expert Mapping, Limited Disruption
- Quality PEX and Copper Pipe Materials
- 20-Year Parts and Labor Warranty
- Get Same Day Service!
- Family Owned and Operated
- Fix Your Issue 100% Guaranteed

Rust-colored water hits the bathroom sink. A damp spot spreads behind the laundry room drywall. Your third pinhole leak this year just showed up in the guest bath.
Mother's whole home repipe service replaces failing polybutylene and CPVC water lines with modern PEX, installed by licensed plumbers who minimize wall damage and restore your system in days. One project. One solution. No more chasing leaks while juggling tournament schedules and work deadlines.
Pipe damage doesn’t wait. Whether it’s noon or 3 am, we’re here to answer the phone.
Call Mother 24/7 for a full-home assessment.
Warning Signs Your Keller Home Needs Repiping
Your home's plumbing doesn't fail all at once. It sends signals first.
- Discolored water from multiple faucets. When rust-colored water shows up at more than one fixture, the pipe walls themselves are corroding. That's your galvanized supply lines dissolving into your family's water.
- Pressure drops throughout the house. Mineral scale and corrosion build up inside pipe walls over decades, choking flow. Your 1998 Hidden Lakes home didn't always take this long to fill the bathtub.
- Pinhole leaks in different locations. One pinhole leak is a repair. When copper or CPVC develops pinholes in the master bath and the kitchen within the same year, you're not dealing with bad luck. You're dealing with system-wide material failure.
- Metallic taste in your drinking water. This is your pipe material making it into your water supply.
- Green or white buildup on exposed pipes under sinks. Mineral deposits forming on the outside of supply lines signal corrosion activity inside them.
- Water temperature swings during showers. Pressure imbalance from degraded supply lines causes hot and cold fluctuations mid-shower.
- Banging sounds in walls when fixtures run. Water hammer in aging lines indicates pressure irregularities in your supply system.
One leak is a repair. Multiple leaks across different fixtures means the system itself is telling you something.
Why Keller Homes Built Before 2000 Are Hitting the Same Wall
Keller's building boom created a shared timeline that thousands of homeowners are living through right now.
Between 1985 and 2000, Keller grew from a small town into a full suburb. Hidden Lakes, Brentwood Estates, Marshall Ridge, and dozens of other neighborhoods went up fast. Builders used the materials standard to the era - polybutylene supply lines from the late 1970s through 1995, and early-generation CPVC. Those materials are now 25 to 40 years old, and they're failing across the city at the same time.
The timeline most Keller homes follow looks like this: the first 15 years, pipes perform normally. Years 15 through 25, Keller's water chemistry begins degrading pipe walls from the inside. Past 25 years, brittleness, pinhole leaks, and sudden failures become routine.
If your home was built during Keller's growth years, your neighbors in Heatherwood Estates and Brentwood Estates are dealing with the exact same pipe problems. This isn't coincidence. It's chemistry and time catching up at the same pace across an entire generation of homes.
What Keller's Water Does to Aging Pipes
The City of Keller purchases water from Fort Worth. That water is treated with chloramine - a combination of chlorine and ammonia used for disinfection. Chloramine is safe to drink. It is not safe for certain pipe materials that were standard in homes built before 2000.
Polybutylene - the gray plastic supply lines installed through most of the 1980s and into the mid-90s - is the most vulnerable. Chloramine attacks polybutylene from the inside out. Micro-fractures develop invisibly until the pipe fails without warning. There is no repair for polybutylene. Full replacement is the only solution.
CPVC, the cream-colored rigid plastic common in late 1990s construction, has a different failure pattern. It becomes brittle over time, especially in attic installations where Keller's summer heat and temperature swings stress the material repeatedly. A CPVC line that looks fine from the outside can crack under normal water pressure once it reaches a certain age.
Keller's water also tests moderately hard - 5 to 10 grains - with a slightly scale-forming pH. That combination of chloramine, heat cycling, and mineral content is why your pipes are where they are.
The Mother Whole Home Repipe Process
Mother approaches repiping the same way you approach a complex project at work: mapped out in advance, executed on schedule, with no surprises mid-job.
- Assessment and line mapping. We start with a full evaluation of your existing water supply lines - material types, routing through walls and ceilings, and current condition. You know exactly what's inside your walls before any work begins.
- Strategic access point planning. We plan every wall opening before cutting starts, targeting junction points that minimize total penetrations. For Keller's slab-on-grade foundations, we route new lines through attic space and interior walls wherever possible. This approach avoids the tunneling costs that come with under-slab access - savings that go directly back in your pocket.
- PEX installation with a home-run manifold. New PEX supply lines run from a central manifold to each fixture individually. Every fixture gets its own shutoff valve, which means a future leak can be isolated without killing water to the whole house. Fewer connections inside walls means fewer potential failure points where a problem can develop.
- Pressure testing before walls close. We pressure test the entire new system before patching a single opening. Every connection verified. Every line confirmed leak-free. Water service restores the same day whenever possible - because you've got a 6 AM practice tomorrow and people coming over Friday.
- Wall restoration. Access points are patched and textured when we leave. Your home looks like your home, not a job site.
Why PEX Is the Right Material for North Texas
PEX is flexible enough to handle thermal expansion without stress fractures - important in a climate that swings from 105-degree August afternoons to hard freeze winters. It resists the chloramine degradation that destroys polybutylene. It carries a 25-plus year expected lifespan under normal conditions, and it requires fewer fittings than rigid pipe systems, which means fewer potential failure points inside your walls.
PEX costs less than copper, installs faster, and handles North Texas conditions better than the materials it replaces. It's the right pipe for this climate and this water chemistry.
Permits and Warranty
The City of Keller requires permits for whole home repiping. Mother pulls all permits, coordinates inspections, and ensures the work meets current code requirements. You don't visit City Hall or track down inspectors.
Our warranty covers labor, workmanship, fittings, connections, and material defects - in writing. When you sell your Hidden Lakes or Marshall Ridge home down the road, you'll have complete documentation showing the repipe was done right.
The Foresight That Keeps Your Home Running
You've built a household that runs on precision. Schedules get met. Problems get solved before they become emergencies. That's not luck - that's how you operate.
Repiping your home now is that same mindset applied to your aging water lines. It eliminates the emergency leak that pulls you off a work trip. It protects the floors, drywall, and belongings you've invested in. And it puts modern materials inside your walls that are built for the water chemistry and climate you actually live in - not the standards of 1992.
One project. Completed in a few days, not weeks. Decades of protection.
Call Mother for a full-home pipe assessment. We'll show you exactly what's inside your walls and give you a straight answer on what it takes to fix it.
Serving Every Keller Neighborhood with Expert Whole Home Pipe Replacement
Whole home pipe replacement in Keller is essential for homeowners in Cherry Grove Estates, a boutique community of approximately 45 custom homes located at the northwest corner of Keller-Smithfield Road and Shady Grove Road near Shady Grove Elementary. With homes built between 2002 and 2006 ranging from 3,500 to 5,000 square feet on half-acre wooded lots, these 20+ year-old executive properties are now reaching the age where original plumbing systems may require complete replacement to maintain their luxury standards.
### Cielo
Whole home pipe replacement in Keller serves the expansive, high-value homes in Cielo, a newer construction neighborhood featuring properties that often exceed 5,000 square feet. These large custom estates with multiple bathrooms and extensive plumbing networks benefit from proactive pipe assessment and replacement to protect their significant investment and ensure consistent water pressure throughout the home.
### Cobblestone Parks
Whole home pipe replacement in Keller is a smart consideration for Cobblestone Parks residents, an intimate 29-home enclave located east off Rufe Snow Drive just south of Keller Boulevard near Bear Creek Park and The Keller Pointe recreation center. Built by Drees Homes between 2010 and 2013, these 3,500 to 5,300 square foot homes on wooded lots are approaching the 15-year mark when plumbing inspections become advisable, especially given the extensive outdoor kitchens and living spaces common in this neighborhood.
Cherry Grove Estates
Mother serves homeowners in Cherry Grove Estates, a boutique community of approximately 45 custom homes located at the northwest corner of Keller-Smithfield Road and Shady Grove Road near Shady Grove Elementary. With homes built between 2002 and 2006 ranging from 3,500 to 5,000 square feet on half-acre wooded lots, these 20+ year-old executive properties are now reaching the age where original plumbing systems may require complete replacement to maintain their luxury standards.
Cielo
The high-value homes in Cielo comprise a newer construction neighborhood featuring properties that often exceed 5,000 square feet. These large custom estates with multiple bathrooms and extensive plumbing networks benefit from proactive pipe assessment and replacement to protect their significant investment and ensure consistent water pressure throughout the home.
Cobblestone Parks
Whole home pipe replacement is a growing consideration for Cobblestone Parks residents, an intimate 29-home enclave located east off Rufe Snow Drive just south of Keller Boulevard near Bear Creek Park and The Keller Pointe recreation center. Built by Drees Homes between 2010 and 2013, these 3,500 to 5,300 square foot homes on wooded lots are approaching the 15-year mark when plumbing inspections become advisable, especially given the extensive outdoor kitchens and living spaces common in this neighborhood.
What materials do you use for pipe replacement?
We trust Schedule 40 PVC as best-in-class for residential water line and sewer line replacement projects. Its 100-year lifespan, durability against shifting clay soil and tree roots, and resistance to chemicals in water and wastewater make it the top option for most homeowners.












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