
The Smallest Parts Cause the Biggest Floods
Burst supply lines and failed shut-off valves are the leading cause of residential water damage claims in the United States. These components sit behind appliances and inside walls for years, under constant pressure, slowly deteriorating until they give out. Here’s what to watch for:
- An angle stop valve that’s stiff, won’t turn, or drips when you operate it — it’s corroded and will fail when you need it most.
- A rubber or chrome supply line that’s original to the house — these become brittle and can burst without warning.
- Water behind or under the refrigerator — the ice maker supply line or saddle valve is leaking.
- Moisture or water stains behind the washing machine — the laundry supply hoses or box connections are failing.
- A hose bib (outdoor faucet) that drips, won’t shut off, or sprays from the handle.
- No accessible shut-off for your washing machine or refrigerator — a code violation that becomes a crisis during a leak.
- Your main shut-off valve is a gate valve that’s never been turned — it’s likely seized and won’t work in an emergency.
Most of these components cost under $50 to replace. The water damage they prevent can cost $5,000 to $20,000. This is the definition of a job that’s cheaper to do now than later.
Every Connection, Every Valve — Installed to Code
These are the jobs that most homeowners don’t think about until something goes wrong. We handle all of them — as standalone service calls or bundled into a larger project.

Ice Maker Box Installation & Replacement

Angle Stop Valve Replacement

Supply Line Replacement

Main Shut-Off Valve Replacement

Laundry Box Installation & Replacement

Hose Bib Replacement

The Math Is Simple: $150 Now or $15,000 Later
Insurance companies report that water damage from burst supply lines and failed valves is the most common — and most expensive — homeowner claim in the country. The average payout exceeds $10,000, and that’s before factoring in deductibles, temporary housing, and lost personal property.
The components that cause these floods — a $12 supply line, a $25 angle stop, a $40 laundry box valve — are inexpensive to replace. The labor to install them properly takes minutes when we’re already on-site for another job. The cost of ignoring them is measured in thousands.
When we’re in your home for any service call, we check every visible valve and supply line and flag anything that’s due for replacement. You decide what to address — but you’ll know where your risks are.
What to Expect — Fast and Straightforward
Assessment & Quote
Installation
Test & Walkthrough
Why Sacramento Homeowners Trust Us With the Details
No Job Too Small
Upfront Flat-Rate Pricing
Code-Compliant Materials
Bundle and Save
Financing & Referral Program
Flexible Payment Options



Our Referral Program
Flexible Payment Options
Valve & Appliance Connection Questions — Straight Answers
- How do I know if my angle stops need replacing?
Try turning them. If the handle is stiff, won’t budge, or drips when you move it, the valve is corroded and needs replacement. If it’s a multi-turn gate valve (you have to spin it many times), it’s the old style that’s most prone to seizure. We replace them with quarter-turn ball valves that shut off instantly.
- What’s wrong with the saddle valve on my ice maker line?
Saddle valves (the self-piercing type that clamps onto a pipe) are no longer code-compliant in California. They pierce a tiny hole in the pipe, which corrodes over time and leaks. The flow is also restricted, causing weak ice production. A proper ice maker box with a dedicated shut-off valve and supply line is the correct installation.
- How often should supply lines be replaced?
Braided stainless steel supply lines last 8–10 years or more. Rubber washing machine hoses should be replaced every 3–5 years. Chrome and plastic supply lines original to the house should be replaced immediately regardless of age — they’re the highest-risk component in your plumbing system.
- Do I really need a laundry box?
If your washing machine connects to exposed pipe stubs with no shut-off valves and no proper drain connection, a laundry box is the single best upgrade you can make. It gives you accessible shut-offs (so you can turn off water to the washer without running to the main), prevents hose kinks, and brings the connection up to code.
- Can you replace my main shut-off valve without shutting off water to the whole house?
We coordinate with the water utility or use the meter shut-off to temporarily stop flow while we swap the valve. The water is typically off for 30–60 minutes. We schedule the work to minimize disruption and restore service as quickly as possible.
- Can these jobs be done during another service call?
Yes, and that’s the most cost-effective way to handle them. When we’re already in your home for a water heater, faucet, or toilet job, adding angle stop and supply line replacements takes minutes and avoids a separate trip charge. We check and recommend proactively on every visit.
- What’s a frost-proof hose bib?
A frost-proof (or freeze-proof) hose bib has a long stem that places the actual shut-off point inside the heated wall of your home, not at the exterior surface. This prevents the water inside from freezing during cold Sacramento winter nights. If your current hose bib has frozen or burst before, a frost-proof replacement solves the problem permanently.





