It's 2 a.m. and you wake up to water running where it shouldn't be. Maybe a pipe let go under the slab, maybe the water heater is dumping onto the garage floor, maybe a toilet won't stop overflowing. Whatever it is, it can't wait until Monday.
That's what a 24-hour plumber is for. We answer the phone any hour, any day — weekends, holidays, the middle of the night. You're not leaving a message and hoping someone calls back.
We're local to Colton, so when you call from Cooley Ranch, South Colton, or out toward Reche Canyon, you get someone who knows the homes here and can actually get to you.
A plumbing emergency doesn't keep business hours
Water damage starts the second a line breaks. Within minutes it's into the drywall and the subfloor; within an hour it's spreading under flooring and into walls you can't see. Every hour you wait for a plumber to open in the morning is an hour that flood is doing damage — and adding to your repair bill.
A lot of the older homes around Colton, the ones built between the 1940s and 70s, still run galvanized steel pipe that's been rusting from the inside for decades. Those lines don't fail politely. They blow a pinhole or split a joint with no warning, often at night when the pressure shifts. Same goes for the clay sewer lines under the older streets — a root finally cracks through and you've got sewage backing up at the worst possible time.
When you call, we come now. We find the water, shut it down, and stop the damage first. Then we tell you straight what broke and what it takes to fix it — a real repair, not a patch that fails again next week. If it's something that can hold safely until morning, we'll tell you that too instead of running up an after-hours charge you don't need.
Call us right now if you've got
- Water actively spraying, pooling, or running where you can't shut it off
- Sewage backing up into a tub, shower, or floor drain
- A water heater leaking, hissing, or no hot water at all
- No water at any tap, or pressure that suddenly dropped across the whole house
- The smell of gas near a water heater or gas line — get out and call
- A burst or split pipe after a cold snap, a quake, or out of nowhere



