Localized for 1,000+ U.S. cities — adjusted for local labor, climate & permits
City comparison

Whole House Repipe cost: Akron vs Columbus (2026)

In 2026, whole-house repipe is about 9% less expensive in Akron than in Columbus. Most homeowners pay around $5,800 in Akron versus $6,300 in Columbus — a gap of roughly $500.

Akron OH

Lower cost
$3,550 $8,050

Typically around $5,800

Columbus OH

$3,850 $8,750

Typically around $6,300

whole-house repipe runs about $500 (9%) more in Columbus than in Akron, driven mostly by local labor rates.
Side by side

Akron vs Columbus: full breakdown

FactorAkronColumbus
Typical 2026 cost$5,800$6,300
Estimated range$3,550–$8,050$3,850–$8,750
Labor index (vs US)×0.95×1.04
Climate zoneColdCold
Climate factor×1.03×1.03
Local permit$225$225
Labor share$3,500$3,800
Materials/equipment$2,300$2,500

Localized 2026 planning estimates — not quotes. Each city adjusts the national whole-house repipe range for local labor, climate and permits.

The verdict

Is the gap worth worrying about?

A 9% gap is meaningful on a project this size — about $500. That's real money, but it's often within reach of off-season timing and a tighter apples-to-apples bid in Columbus.

By type

Whole-house repipe by type: Akron vs Columbus

Each whole-house repipe option, priced separately for both metros — the same local labor, climate and permit adjustments applied per city, so you can compare like for like.

TypeAkronColumbus
PEX$3,550$7,100$3,850$7,700
CPVC$4,150$8,050$4,500$8,750
Copper$6,100$14,950$6,650$16,250

Localized 2026 planning ranges by type — not quotes.

By size

Whole-house repipe by home size: Akron vs Columbus

Repipe cost scales with how many bathrooms and fixtures the crew has to reach — more baths means more runs, more wall and ceiling access, and more labor. Pricing below assumes standard single-story access.

SizeAkronColumbus
1 bath / ~1,000 sq ft$3,150$5,600$3,450$6,100
2 bath / ~1,500 sq ft$3,950$7,100$4,300$7,700
3 bath / ~2,000 sq ft$4,950$9,050$5,350$9,850
4+ bath / 2,500+ sq ft$6,100$12,000$6,650$13,050

Localized 2026 ranges by home size — not quotes.

Local labor reality

What plumbing pros earn in each metro

Labor is about 60% of a whole-house repipe bill, so local wages drive most of the gap. These are real metro hourly wages for skilled installers (BLS OEWS), not estimates.

Akron, OH
Modeled from state data

No BLS metro wage series for Akron; we use Ohio regional price parity instead.

Columbus, OH
$33/hr

Columbus metro · about 6% above the US average installer wage.

Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, OEWS metro wages for HVAC installers (used as a trade-labor index).

Best time to buy

Cheapest time for whole-house repipe in either city

True emergencies pay full rate. But planned projects — a repipe or sewer-line replacement — can be scheduled in a slower month for slightly better pricing and more attentive crews.

Best window
Off-peak winter for planned work
Avoid
Anytime it becomes an emergency
Off-peak savings
Around 5%
Editors' roundtable

How do you budget a major plumbing job?

Repipes and sewer lines are scope-driven — the method and what's underground decide the price. Our editors on the trade-offs.

The diagnosis-first case

Never budget a sewer or repipe job from a guess. A camera inspection confirms the real scope and stops you paying for work you don't need — or being blindsided by work you do.

The method case

Trenchless repair costs more per foot but saves your driveway, landscaping and the restoration bill. Traditional dig is cheaper upfront only if there's little to tear up and rebuild.

The material case

PEX is cheaper, faster and freeze-tolerant; copper costs more but lasts longer and some buyers prefer it. Match the material to your climate and how long you'll own the home.

Our take

Get the camera inspection first, weigh trenchless against the full restoration cost — not just the dig — and pick pipe material for your climate. The scope, not the brand, sets the price.

FAQ

Akron vs Columbus

Is whole-house repipe cheaper in Akron or Columbus?

In 2026, whole-house repipe is cheaper in Akron at about $5,800, versus $6,300 in Columbus — a difference of about $500 (9%).

Why does whole-house repipe cost more in Columbus than Akron?

The main driver is local labor rates: Columbus's labor index is 1.04 versus 0.95 in Akron. Climate zone (cold vs cold) also shift the total.

How much is whole-house repipe in Akron, OH?

In Akron, whole-house repipe typically runs $3,550–$8,050 in 2026, with most homeowners paying around $5,800.

When is the cheapest time to buy whole-house repipe — and does it differ by city?

The best window is the same in both Akron and Columbus: Off-peak winter for planned work, when demand drops and installers discount to keep crews busy — typically Around 5% off peak pricing. The most expensive time anywhere is an emergency replacement during anytime it becomes an emergency.

Should I choose where to live based on whole-house repipe cost?

Rarely. The $500 difference is real but one-time, and you can often close most of it in Columbus by buying in the off-season and getting tighter, apples-to-apples bids. Ongoing factors — energy prices, climate and home condition — matter more over the life of the system.

Keep comparing

Compare whole-house repipe in other cities

Updated June 2026 · By Serhat Özçelik