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Tualatin’s Martinazzi and Byrom neighborhoods were built during the late 1980s and 1990s, placing their copper supply systems at the 25- to 35-year mark where the first signs of internal deterioration can appear. Copper pipes in these neighborhoods carry water that has been in contact with the metal for decades, and the chemistry of that interaction has been gradually thinning the pipe walls from the inside. Hot water lines are the first to show problems because elevated temperatures accelerate the corrosion chemistry — a hot water elbow in a Martinazzi home may fail years before the cold water line running parallel to it.
The first pinhole leak in a Tualatin home is a diagnostic signal, not just a plumbing repair. It tells us that the copper inside the pipe has thinned to the point of failure at that specific location, and that the same thinning process has been occurring throughout the system. Our assessment after a first pinhole leak includes pressure testing, visual inspection of accessible pipe runs, and a frank discussion about whether targeted repair or whole-house repiping makes more sense for the homeowner’s situation and budget. In many cases, the cost of proactive repiping is recovered within a few years through eliminated repair costs and avoided water damage.
Schedule a Tualatin pipe assessment
Some of Tualatin’s earliest suburban developments — built during the early 1980s in the Byrom area and along Martinazzi Avenue — coincided with the peak years of polybutylene pipe installation. Homeowners in these areas may have polybutylene supply lines without knowing it, particularly if the home has never had a full plumbing inspection. The pipe is gray or blue-gray, flexible, and stamped with PB2110 markings. It connects with copper or plastic crimp fittings rather than soldered joints.
Polybutylene’s failure mode is uniquely dangerous because it provides no warning. The pipe does not gradually restrict flow or produce discolored water like galvanized steel. It simply fractures — sometimes at a fitting, sometimes along the pipe body — and releases water at full supply pressure into the home. For Tualatin homeowners in 1980s-vintage homes, a five-minute crawl space inspection can determine whether polybutylene is present. If it is, planned replacement with PEX on your schedule is vastly preferable to emergency replacement after a flood. We complete most Tualatin poly-B replacements in one to two days.
Free polybutylene identification
Tualatin homeowners selecting a repiping material have a clear front-runner in PEX. Cross-linked polyethylene has become the default for residential plumbing throughout the Pacific Northwest because it addresses every weakness of the materials it replaces: it does not corrode internally like galvanized or copper, it does not fracture like polybutylene, it flexes through wall cavities without soldered joints at every turn, and it expands slightly under freeze pressure rather than cracking. For Tualatin’s water chemistry — supplied from the Willamette River through the city’s treatment plant — PEX provides decades of reliable service without the mineral interaction that gradually degrades metallic pipes.
The installation efficiency of PEX translates directly into lower costs and shorter timelines for Tualatin homeowners. A standard three-bedroom home with two bathrooms can be repiped in two days with PEX, compared to three or four days for copper. The material cost is 30 to 40 percent lower. And the long-term maintenance is essentially zero — PEX does not develop the pinhole leaks, fitting corrosion, or internal scaling that require future repair. For families in Tualatin Meadows and the Ibach area whose newer homes already have PEX, this durability is already proven. For homeowners in older neighborhoods upgrading from copper or galvanized, PEX brings their homes to the same modern standard.
Get a Tualatin PEX repiping quote
Tualatin’s real estate market is active and competitive, with families drawn to the city’s schools, parks, and convenient location along I-5. When these buyers commission home inspections, aging pipe systems are among the most commonly flagged concerns. A Tualatin home with 30-year-old copper showing green patina at fittings, or a home with unverified 1980s pipe material, generates inspection language that gives buyers leverage to negotiate price reductions or demand credits for future repiping.
Sellers who repipe before listing eliminate this negotiating point entirely and present a home with a documented, modern plumbing system that will not concern any buyer or inspector. The repiping investment typically returns its cost through faster time on market and a cleaner closing process. We provide complete documentation — the permit, inspection records, material warranties, and a detailed scope of work — that becomes part of the seller’s disclosure and gives buyers confidence in the home’s infrastructure.
Prepare your Tualatin home for sale
A standard Tualatin repipe takes two to three days for PEX installation. The project includes all supply lines from the main shutoff to every fixture, a new distribution manifold, pressure testing, and wall patching. Water is restored each evening. We pull permits through Washington County and schedule inspections as part of the project scope. Every step meets current Oregon Plumbing Code requirements.
Tualatin repiping costs range from $4,000 to $9,000 for PEX, depending on home size and fixture count. Copper repiping costs 20 to 40 percent more. Every project includes complete documentation: permit records, inspection results, PEX manufacturer warranty, detailed scope of work, and our workmanship guarantee. For Tualatin homeowners, the documentation confirms that the home’s supply system has been professionally upgraded to modern standards — a permanent record that supports insurance, resale, and future plumbing work on the property.
Get your Tualatin estimate
No hidden fees, no overtime charges. You get a clear, written price before any work begins. Same rate day or night.
Dual-state licensing (WA #SARKIPI946MF, OR #170052) means we serve the entire Portland-Vancouver metro.
We answer the phone day and night. A licensed plumber is dispatched immediately — at your door within 60-90 minutes.
Every repair backed by our workmanship guarantee. Background-checked, drug-tested plumbers who treat your home with care.
Repiping costs in Tualatin depend on the home’s size, number of fixtures, and material chosen. A typical two- to three-bathroom home costs between $4,000 and $9,000 for PEX repiping. Copper repiping costs 20 to 40 percent more. We provide a detailed estimate after an in-home assessment.
Some Tualatin homes built during the early 1980s contain polybutylene supply pipes. These pipes are identifiable by their gray or blue-gray color and flexibility. If your home was built between 1978 and 1990, checking for polybutylene is recommended. Our technicians can identify the material during a quick inspection.
Yes. Most Tualatin homeowners stay in their homes during the repiping process. Water is turned off during work hours and restored each evening. The primary inconvenience is noise from accessing pipes through walls and some dust, which we control with barriers and cleanup.
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