London Leak Specialist

When it cannot wait

Emergency Plumber London

Plumbing emergencies do not book appointments. A burst pipe at midnight, a blocked toilet in a one-bathroom flat, a stop tap that snaps off in your hand — these need a competent plumber moving towards you now, and a straight answer about what it will cost.

Emergency Plumber London

Quick answer

Most emergency plumbers in London charge a call-out fee of £60–£150, then an hourly rate that rises for evenings, weekends and overnight work. Expect a realistic arrival window of one to three hours, not instant. A fair plumber confirms the price before travelling, so you know the cost up front.

Emergency plumber costs in London (2026)

JobTypical costTime
Call-out fee£60–£150Any time
Hourly rate£60–£100 per hourWeekday daytime
Hourly rate£80–£130 per hourEvenings
Hourly rate£90–£150 per hourWeekends
Hourly rate£120–£200 per hourOvernight / bank holiday
Burst pipe or blocked toilet (typical job total)£150–£400Varies by time

Typical UK trade cost-guide ranges, not a quote. Our detection fee is fixed and agreed at booking.

London Leak Specialist handles urgent plumbing across every London borough. Because our engineers are leak-detection specialists as well as plumbers, we are unusually good at the emergencies where the problem is invisible: water appearing somewhere it should not, with no obvious source.

You get clear pricing agreed when you book, an honest arrival window, and a proper repair — not a patch that fails again next weekend.

Call-out and first-hour pricing quoted when you book — the price you hear is the price you pay.

What you get

  • Urgent response across all 33 London boroughs
  • Bursts, leaks, blockages, stop taps, overflows, no hot water
  • Leak detection expertise on every emergency visit
  • Pricing agreed before travel, confirmed before work
  • Tidy work and photographic record of the fix
  • Follow-up detection and reports when damage needs investigating

How it works

A method, not a guess

01

Describe the emergency

Photos and a quick description let us bring the right parts first time.

02

Make it safe

Isolation first: the water stops before the diagnosis starts.

03

Fix it properly

A real repair, priced and agreed before the work begins.

04

Prevent the repeat

We tell you plainly if the failure points to a wider problem worth addressing.

Before you book anyone

6 things to know before you book an emergency plumber in London

01

The clock often starts before the van does

The most common complaint in emergency plumbing disputes is timer-based billing. In one UK legal-advice case a homeowner was invoiced £1,437 after a firm started a £279-per-hour timer before the plumber had even arrived. Ask three questions before anyone is dispatched: when does billing start, is there a minimum charge (one hour is standard, but some firms bill two), and is travel time chargeable? If the answer is vague, hang up. A written fixed price agreed at booking removes the incentive to stretch the job — it is the single biggest protection you have.

02

Know the real London rates so you can spot a padded invoice

Checkatrade puts the average UK emergency call-out fee at £100–£120. In London, expect £80–£150 for the first daytime hour, rising to £150–£250 evenings and weekends, with hourly rates of roughly £75–£110 on weekdays, £110–£160 on Saturdays and £140–£220 overnight, Sundays and bank holidays. Typical job costs: burst pipe repair £150–£400, blocked drain £100–£250. If a quote lands far above these bands — or the firm refuses to give any figure until they are standing in your hallway at 2am — that is your cue to call someone else.

03

"Plus VAT" quietly adds 20% to the quote

A recurring gripe on UK trade forums: firms quote "£150 call-out" and the invoice arrives at £180 because the price was ex-VAT. Quoting plus-VAT is legal for business customers, but consumer protection rules expect prices shown to householders to include VAT. Always ask "is that the total I will pay, including VAT?" and get it in writing — a text or email is enough. The same applies to parts: some firms add a mark-up of 25–50% on materials, so ask whether parts are charged at cost or listed separately on the invoice.

04

Find your stopcock now — it downgrades most emergencies

The advice UK homeowners repeat most often: know where your internal stop valve is before you need it (usually under the kitchen sink, in a downstairs cupboard or under floorboards by the front door). Turning the water off converts a 2am burst pipe billed at £140–£220 an hour into a next-morning job at £75–£110 — often a saving of several hundred pounds. Flats frequently have a separate valve on the landing or in a utility cupboard. Test yours twice a year; seized stopcocks are common in older London properties and a plumber will charge to free one.

05

Check who is actually turning up

Many "local" emergency plumbers advertising at the top of Google are national call centres that sell your job to whichever subcontractor accepts it — you have no idea who arrives or what they charge until the invoice lands. Search the company name at Companies House: firms trading under a year with no reviews are a documented red flag in consumer disputes. If any gas work is possible, ask for the engineer's Gas Safe registration number and check it at gassaferegister.co.uk or on 0800 408 5500 — every legitimate engineer carries a photo ID card with an expiry date and will show it without fuss.

06

If the leak is hidden, involve your insurer before you pay for exploratory work

According to Defaqto data, around 97% of UK buildings policies include trace and access cover — it pays for locating a hidden leak and making good the access, typically up to £5,000 or more. But insurers expect a proper report: cause, origin, detection method, moisture readings and photographs. A plumber who finds a leak by ripping out tiles "on the clock" often leaves you with an invoice the loss adjuster rejects. A fixed-fee, multi-method detection survey (acoustic, thermal, tracer gas, moisture mapping) with an insurer-structured report — the model we work to, backed by no find, no fee — usually costs less than open-ended exploratory labour and is far more likely to be reimbursed.

Compare like for like

Choosing an Emergency Plumber in London

When water is spreading and the clock is running, it is hard to tell a careful plumber from a rushed one. This table sets out how we handle an emergency call-out against two common shortcuts, so you know what to expect on arrival times, pricing, and the repair itself before anyone is dispatched.

What to checkA rushed call-out firmA patch-and-go firmLondon Leak Specialist
Arrival windowPromises to be there within the hour, then leaves you waiting with no update while another job overruns across the city.Gives a vague time and turns up when a van happens to be free, which may be hours after the water started.We give an honest arrival window based on where the nearest engineer actually is, and we tell you if it slips.
Price before travelQuotes nothing until they are standing over the leak, when the pressure is on and declining feels impossible.Names a low headline figure on the phone, then adds parts, labour and access charges once the work is underway.We agree the call-out and expected work as a typical UK trade cost-guide range before an engineer sets off to you.
Out-of-hours upliftHides the night and weekend premium until the invoice lands, so the emergency rate is a nasty surprise.Charges the same inflated rate around the clock and does not explain what the uplift actually covers.Any out-of-hours uplift is stated upfront in plain terms, so you can decide whether to act now or wait.
Isolate-first guidanceTells you to sit tight and wait, letting water keep flowing and damage keep spreading until they arrive.Offers no advice on the phone, treating your call as a booking rather than a chance to limit the harm.We talk you through finding the stopcock and isolating supply on the call, so damage is limited before we get there.
Make-safe then repairSlaps on a temporary fix, collects payment and leaves, so the same fault returns within days or weeks.Stops the immediate leak but never looks at the cause, so you are calling someone out again before long.We make the situation safe first, then diagnose the cause and carry out a proper repair or advise honest next steps.
Leak detectionHas no way to trace a hidden leak, so guesses at the source and lifts floors or opens walls on a hunch.Only fixes what is visibly dripping and misses leaks tracking under floors or behind tiled walls.We can trace invisible leaks with detection equipment, pinpointing the source before any flooring or wall is disturbed.
Final invoicePresents a bill padded with charges you never agreed, betting you will pay rather than argue after a stressful day.Adds extras line by line so the total drifts well past the figure you were quoted at the door.The final invoice reflects the range we agreed, with any genuine change explained and okayed by you beforehand.

From the forums

What Londoners say on Reddit & forums

London homeowners are blunt about emergency plumbers on Reddit and UK trade forums: the horror stories cluster around timers, small print and anonymous subcontractors, while the practical advice is remarkably consistent.

On UK legal-advice and consumer forums, homeowners disputing emergency call-out invoices

The recurring pattern is a reasonable-sounding call-out fee that mutates into a four-figure invoice because the hourly timer started at dispatch, not arrival, and no ceiling was ever agreed. Posters advise paying by credit card so Section 75 or chargeback protection applies, and reporting persistent offenders to Trading Standards. Our take: any firm that cannot state in writing when billing starts and stops is telling you how the invoice will end — insist on a fixed figure before anyone is sent.

In UK DIY and homeowner threads about burst pipes and floods

The near-universal first reply is "turn off the stopcock, then decide if it is still an emergency." Experienced posters point out that once the water is off, most jobs can safely wait until morning, when the same repair costs half the out-of-hours rate. Many admit they only located their stop valve during a flood. Our take: this is genuinely the best free advice on the internet — find and test your stopcock this weekend, before you need it at 2am.

On trade forums such as the Screwfix community, discussion of plus-VAT quoting

Tradespeople themselves acknowledge that quoting ex-VAT makes prices look more attractive, and forum threads show householders regularly caught out when 20% appears on the final bill. The consensus, even among plumbers, is that consumer quotes should state the VAT-inclusive total as a separate line. Our take: treat any verbal price as incomplete until you have a written figure marked "total including VAT" — it takes the firm thirty seconds to send and removes the most common invoice dispute entirely.

In homeowner threads about Google-ad "local" emergency plumbers

Posters repeatedly warn that the firms dominating paid search results are often national lead-generation operations that auction your job to subcontractors, with no accountability when the work or the bill goes wrong. WRAS research into Trading Standards complaint hotspots reinforces how common plumber disputes are. The advice given is to check Companies House, read reviews tied to a real trading name, and prefer firms with a verifiable local footprint. Our take: ask directly "is the person attending employed by you?" — the hesitation is the answer.

On UK housing and insurance threads about hidden leaks and trace-and-access claims

Homeowners report insurers rejecting claims where the plumber found the leak destructively and produced nothing but a scribbled invoice, while claims supported by a proper detection report — cause, method, moisture map, photos — sail through. Posters also note insurers generally want visible damage before trace-and-access cover engages. Our take: if you suspect a hidden leak, photograph the damage, notify your insurer early, and use a specialist whose report is written for loss adjusters rather than a plumber improvising with a crowbar.

Questions

Asked before every booking

What counts as a plumbing emergency?

Anything where waiting multiplies the damage or leaves the property unusable: active leaks and bursts, a home with no water or no working toilet, sewage backing up, or water reaching electrics. If in doubt, describe it — we will tell you honestly whether it needs an emergency slot or a cheaper scheduled visit.

Do you charge more at night and weekends?

Out-of-hours slots carry an uplift, and we tell you the exact figure when you book — never on arrival. No hidden multipliers, no invented “parts surcharges”.

Water is coming through my ceiling but I cannot see from where — can you help?

This is our home ground. An emergency plumber who is also a leak-detection engineer will isolate the source, trace it with proper equipment, and repair it — instead of cutting exploratory holes and hoping.

How much does an emergency plumber cost in London?

Expect £80–£150 for the first daytime hour and £150–£250 for evenings and weekends, with hourly rates from around £75–£110 on weekdays to £140–£220 overnight, on Sundays and bank holidays. Checkatrade puts the average UK emergency call-out fee at £100–£120. Typical jobs: burst pipe repair £150–£400, blocked drain £100–£250. Always confirm the total including VAT, when billing starts, and any minimum charge before the plumber is dispatched.

What counts as a genuine plumbing emergency?

Anything you cannot make safe by turning off the water: an uncontrollable burst pipe, water reaching electrics, sewage backing up into the home, or no water supply at all. A dripping tap, a slow leak under the sink or one blocked toilet in a multi-bathroom home can usually wait until morning — and will cost roughly half the out-of-hours rate. Turn off the stopcock first; if the problem stops, it is probably not an emergency.

Does home insurance cover finding a hidden water leak?

Usually, yes. Around 97% of UK buildings insurance policies include trace and access cover (Defaqto data), which pays for locating a hidden leak and repairing the access damage — commonly up to £5,000 or more. It typically does not pay to fix the pipe itself. Insurers expect evidence of water damage and a proper detection report showing cause, method and moisture readings, so notify your insurer early and keep photographs.

Who is responsible for a water leak in a rented property?

Under Section 11 of the Landlord and Tenant Act 1985, landlords must repair the structure, drains, external pipes and water installations, so most leaks are the landlord's responsibility to fix. Tenants are liable where their own actions caused the damage — an overflowing bath, for example — and must report leaks promptly; failing to do so can shift liability. In flats, damage to a neighbour below is usually claimed through the respective insurers.

How do I check an emergency plumber is legitimate before they arrive?

For any gas work, verify the engineer on the Gas Safe Register at gassaferegister.co.uk or on 0800 408 5500, and ask to see their photo ID card, checking the expiry date and qualifications on the reverse. For all plumbers, search the trading name at Companies House — firms under a year old with no traceable reviews feature heavily in disputes — and get the price, VAT treatment and billing start time in writing before dispatch.

Should I turn off my water before calling an emergency plumber?

Yes, immediately. Close the internal stopcock — usually under the kitchen sink or in a downstairs cupboard — and open the cold taps to drain the pipework. This limits damage and often downgrades a 2am emergency billed at £140–£220 an hour into a next-morning job at standard rates. If water is near electrics, switch off the affected circuit at the consumer unit. Locate and test your stopcock now; seized valves are common in older London homes.

Water going somewhere it shouldn’t?

Tell us the symptoms and your postcode. We’ll confirm the visit, the fixed detection fee and the arrival window before you commit to anything.

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020 7123 8560