Plumber in Holladay, Utah
Licensed master plumber serving Holladay and surrounding Salt Lake County — 24/7 emergency response.
Trusted Plumbing in Holladay
Serving Holladay · Salt Lake County, Utah
Holladay is an established community with a strong concentration of 1940s through 1970s homes along the Holladay Boulevard corridor and the side streets branching off. The older neighborhoods near Holladay City Park and the blocks east of Highland Drive include classic Salt Lake valley mid-century ramblers with cast iron drains, partially updated galvanized supply, and clay sewer laterals battling mature trees. The more recent infill and the higher-end homes up against the east bench toward Mount Olympus area bring modern PEX construction with larger-home plumbing demands — dual water heaters, larger softener systems, outdoor kitchens, and pool equipment. City water is hard and the east-bench homes sit at higher elevation with the familiar high-static-pressure issues. Holladay homeowners tend to invest in their properties and call us for preventive work as often as for emergencies — sewer camera inspections, annual water heater service, softener maintenance, and planned replacements rather than failure-driven panic calls.
Common Plumbing Calls in Holladay
- Cast iron drain narrowing in 1940s-1970s ramblers
- Clay sewer lateral root intrusion from mature boulevard trees
- Dual water heater system maintenance in larger east-side homes
- High static pressure on Mount Olympus-area bench homes
Holladay Plumbing FAQ
Questions we actually hear from Holladay homeowners.
Do you do sewer camera inspections on Holladay homes?
Yes, and we strongly recommend them before buying any Holladay home more than 30 years old. We run a self-leveling camera from the house cleanout to the city main, record the full video, and send you a written report. If we find root intrusion, cracks, or clay lateral failure, you have leverage to negotiate repairs or price before closing. The inspection takes about an hour and typically costs less than 1/50th of a surprise sewer replacement discovered after move-in.
My Holladay home has two water heaters. Should I keep both or convert to tankless?
Depends on usage. If you have a large household with multiple simultaneous hot water draws — morning showers, dishwasher, laundry — two 50-gallon tanks often work well and give you redundancy if one fails. If the two tanks are both old, a single high-capacity tankless can replace them and free up space, but only if your gas line supports the BTU load. We evaluate your actual usage pattern, measure gas line sizing, and give you an honest comparison with real costs, not just a sales pitch for whichever option makes us more money.
Why does my east-bench Holladay home have high water pressure?
Elevation. The city main pressure is calibrated to serve higher homes adequately, which means homes lower on the gravity line get higher static pressure. In parts of east Holladay near the bench, we regularly measure 90 plus PSI at the meter. Every home in that range needs a working PRV at the main regulated to 65 to 70 PSI. Without it, fixtures and appliances burn out 2 to 3 times faster than they should. PRV replacement is a few-hundred-dollar job that pays for itself quickly.
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