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Renovations & Big Projects

Plumbing for a Home Renovation in South Florida: What to Know Before You Start

A renovation is the best time — and sometimes the only time — to fix underlying plumbing issues, add modern fixtures, and upgrade to code. Here's a South Florida homeowner's guide to planning the plumbing side of your remodel properly, and what separates a $3,000 surprise from a smooth finish.

April 16, 20268 min readBy South FL Emergency Plumber Team
Plumbing for a Home Renovation in South Florida: What to Know Before You Start

Key Takeaways

  • Renovations are the cheapest time to upgrade aging plumbing — do it now, not later.
  • Florida requires licensed plumbers for any work touching the permitted system.
  • Kitchen and bathroom remodels almost always require a Miami-Dade, Broward, or Palm Beach permit.
  • Rough-in inspection must pass before drywall goes back up — coordinate with your GC early.
  • For licensed plumbing on residential renovations across South Florida: 754-707-1774.

The best time to fix plumbing in a South Florida home isn't when something breaks. It's during a planned renovation — when walls are already open, budgets account for finish work, and the permit process covers the plumbing scope. We take on residential renovation projects across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach, and the homes that turn out best are the ones where the plumbing was planned before the demo started.

Here's what every homeowner should know before starting a kitchen, bathroom, or whole-home remodel in South Florida.

Why renovations are the right time to upgrade plumbing

Five times out of ten, when we open a wall in a South Florida home built before 2000, we find something worth replacing: corroded galvanized steel, a deteriorating cast-iron drain, an old PVC joint that's leaking imperceptibly, a shutoff valve that would fail if ever turned. The marginal cost to replace these during a remodel is small. The cost to replace them later — after the new tile, the new drywall, and the new cabinets are installed — is often five to ten times as much.

What requires a plumbing permit in South Florida

Most Florida municipalities — and all three South Florida counties — require a permit for any plumbing work that:

  • Moves or adds a fixture (toilet, sink, tub, shower, washer, dishwasher, ice maker line)
  • Extends or alters drain or vent lines
  • Replaces water supply lines in walls or floors
  • Installs or replaces a water heater (gas or electric)
  • Adds a tankless water heater or on-demand system
  • Changes the main water service or sewer lateral

What typically doesn't require a permit: replacing a faucet, toilet, or dishwasher in the same location with no changes to the supply or drain.

Kitchen renovation: plumbing scope

A typical South Florida kitchen renovation plumbing scope includes:

  • Rough-in for sink location (supply + drain + dishwasher tie-in + disposal)
  • Ice maker line to refrigerator position
  • Pot filler over range (if specified)
  • Instant-hot water dispenser tap (optional)
  • Gas line for range or cooktop (if going from electric to gas)
  • New shutoffs for all fixtures (always replace during remodel)
  • Any changes to drain stack or vent required by new layout

For kitchens, we typically do two site visits: a rough-in (after demo, before drywall) and a finish install (after cabinets and countertops are set).

Bathroom renovation: plumbing scope

Bathroom renovations are the most plumbing-heavy rooms in a home. Typical scope:

  • Toilet rough-in (may need to re-flange if floor height changes)
  • Vanity sink rough-in (often moved during remodel)
  • Shower/tub valve, drain, and optional body sprays or rain head
  • Tub drain (may need to replace with brass if old lead/iron)
  • New shutoffs throughout
  • Venting updates for any fixture that's moved
  • Pressure balancing valve (required by Florida code — most older bathrooms don't have one)

Whole-home and gut renovation

For whole-home remodels, we approach plumbing in three phases coordinated with the general contractor:

  1. Phase 1 — Tear-out and assessment. After demo, we walk the house and document existing pipe types, condition, and any code issues. You get a written scope with options (minimum code replacement vs. full rework).
  2. Phase 2 — Rough-in. New supply lines (PEX or copper), new drain/vent rework if needed, new shutoffs, water heater upgrade, gas lines if applicable. Inspection required before drywall.
  3. Phase 3 — Finish. Install all fixtures after tile, flooring, and cabinets are in. Pressure test, final inspection, and turnover to owner.

Working with an insured, licensed plumber on a renovation

Florida requires a state-certified plumbing contractor license for anyone performing plumbing work beyond a homeowner permit. On renovation projects, we provide:

  • State plumbing license and liability/workers' comp insurance certificates for your GC's records
  • Permit pulls (we can pull plumbing permits directly or coordinate under the GC's master permit)
  • Written rough-in and finish scope with fixture counts and line-item pricing
  • Coordination with the GC schedule to prevent delays between trades
  • Inspection scheduling and corrections
  • Warranty on all installed work

Budget reality check for plumbing in a South Florida renovation

Plumbing typically represents 5–15% of a renovation budget, depending on scope:

  • Simple bathroom refresh (same layout, new fixtures): $1,500–$4,000
  • Bathroom gut renovation (new layout, moved fixtures): $4,000–$10,000
  • Kitchen renovation (standard scope): $3,000–$8,000
  • Whole-home gut renovation (3BR/2BA): $15,000–$35,000
  • Pre-1985 home with galvanized or cast-iron replacement: add $8,000–$20,000

These are South Florida averages for licensed, permitted work. Very low bids on renovation plumbing almost always mean cut corners, unpermitted work, or unlicensed labor — all of which cost more to fix later.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, if the renovation involves moving fixtures, altering drain or vent lines, replacing supply lines, or installing a new water heater. A cosmetic refresh with no plumbing changes (new paint, new toilet in the same spot, new mirror) does not require a permit. Always verify with your local building department — rules differ slightly between Miami-Dade municipalities.

As a homeowner, you can pull an owner-builder permit for work on your own primary residence, but Florida still requires any plumbing beyond minor fixture replacement to be performed to code and inspected. Most renovation lenders, insurance carriers, and future buyers prefer work performed by a licensed plumber. If you plan to sell within 7 years, hire a licensed contractor.

Rough-in plumbing is all the work that happens behind the walls and under the slab — supply lines, drain pipes, shower valves, toilet flanges. It must pass inspection before drywall goes back up. Finish plumbing is what you see — faucets, toilets, sinks, shower heads — installed after tile, cabinets, and countertops are in place. A renovation typically has 1–2 weeks between the two stages.

Yes. We regularly partner with GCs and designers across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach on renovation projects. We provide license and insurance documentation, permit coordination, itemized proposals, and schedule-aware communication so your project stays on track.

For a single bathroom, typically 1–2 days of rough-in work plus 1 inspection day. For a full kitchen, 2–3 days. For a whole-home gut, 1–2 weeks depending on the size of the home. Rough-in always has to happen before drywall, so it drives the middle of the project schedule.

Need a Plumber Now? Call (754) 707-1774

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