In this guide, I’ll break down the most common schemes showing up right now, teach you exactly how to spot them, and give you the steps I use to hire right, hold contractors accountable, and keep work safe and code‑compliant. Whether you’re a homeowner, a property manager, or you run a restaurant with a grease trap that gives you fits, this is a practical playbook to keep you out of trouble.
Why plumbing scams thrive in 2025
Three big forces are colliding:
- Labor pressure. Good licensed tradespeople are in demand. Some outfits fill the gap with undertrained techs or unsupervised apprentices and hope you won’t notice.
- Inflation and financing. Higher prices plus “easy” financing can mask inflated scopes and unnecessary add‑ons.
- Speed culture. Everyone wants it done now. That urgency can lead to high‑pressure sales tactics and shortcuts that put your safety and property at risk.
None of this is an excuse. It’s a reminder to slow the process down, ask smart questions, and insist on documentation.
Scam #1: “Upsell” that isn’t really an option
There’s nothing wrong with offering options. In fact, a good plumber should present good/better/best choices and explain the trade‑offs. The scam happens when “options” are used to railroad you into gear or services you don’t need.
Red flags:
- One solution pushed hard before a thorough inspection.
- Scare language: “This will definitely flood your house by next week.”
- No written scope with part numbers and model information.
- A refusal to explain code requirements in plain English.
What ethical options look like:
- You get three clearly written choices with line‑item pricing.
- The tech explains why an upgrade may help (efficiency, longevity, safety), not that the basic fix is “illegal” or “impossible” without proof.
- If you’re replacing a water heater, you’ll see code items (pan, expansion tank, venting, drain) noted separately so you can understand the cost drivers.
Your move: Ask, “What’s the minimum code‑compliant repair? What would you do in your own home? Please put both in writing.”
Scam #2: The license mirage
Many states require license numbers on trucks, invoices, and websites—but not all display rules are the same. The scam shows up when companies hide behind vague claims like “licensed and insured,” while sending unlicensed workers or unsupervised apprentices to perform work that requires a licensed journeyman or master.
How to verify, fast:
- Find your state’s licensing board. Search “[your state] plumbing license lookup.”
- Confirm the company and the person. You want to see status (active), classification, and expiration date.
- Ask who’s coming to your door. “What’s the license class and number of the person performing the work? Will a master be supervising, and how?”
- Check insurance. Request a certificate of insurance (COI) from the agent listing you as the certificate holder.
Pro tip: Apprentices are the lifeblood of the trade—nothing wrong with them being on site—as long as they’re properly registered and supervised to the level your state requires.
Scam #3: Shoddy installation that creates safety risks
Bad plumbing isn’t just inconvenient. It can be dangerous.
- Gas water heater venting that’s undersized, back‑pitched, or orphaned after HVAC changes can cause carbon monoxide backdrafting.
- Relief valves (T&P) piped incorrectly can turn a tank into a rocket.
- No expansion control can stress your system and shorten appliance life.
- Improper materials (wrong glue, wrong pipe) can fail under heat or chemical exposure.
What to demand:
- Photos of the existing conditions and photos of completed work.
- A permit when required and the final inspection sign‑off.
- A checklist of code items addressed (T&P discharge, pan, drain, vent, combustion air, dielectric unions, seismic strapping where required).
Self‑defense: Keep a carbon monoxide detector near sleeping areas and on every level with fuel‑burning appliances. Safety first, always.
Scam #4: Preying on seniors with high‑pressure tactics
One of the ugliest patterns I’ve seen is targeting seniors with fear, urgency, and confusing financing: huge checks for small jobs, double billing, or “club memberships” pushed as the only way to avoid catastrophe.
Protective steps for families:
- Set up a trusted‑contact rule for major repairs: no one signs a contract over $1,000 without a quick call to a family member or caregiver.
- Use two‑signature checks or a credit card with alerts enabled.
- Require written estimates and a cooling‑off period (even 24 hours helps).
- Keep a shortlist of vetted tradespeople taped inside a cabinet.
If a contractor pressures an elder to sign “right now or else,” that’s your cue to end the visit.
Scam #5: Environmental shortcuts (illegal dumping)
Restaurants and commercial properties produce FOG (fats, oils, grease). Proper disposal is tightly regulated for a reason: illegal dumping can contaminate waterways and cost a fortune to remediate. The scam is simple—haul the waste away and dump it where no one is looking.
How to keep your business safe:
- Ask for disposal manifests/receipts every time traps or interceptors are pumped.
- Keep a logbook: date, volume, hauler, destination.
- Schedule regular maintenance based on flow, not just emergencies.
- Install monitoring (simple dipstick or digital sensors) so you can verify service intervals.
A reputable company has no problem showing you their chain of custody for waste.
Scam #6: “Reclogging” or holding drains hostage
If a dispute over a bill happens, the legal route is small‑claims court or a mechanics lien—not sabotaging the system. The “reclog” scam is when someone undoes work or plugs a line to force payment. It’s unethical and can threaten health and business operations.
For homeowners and business owners:
- Document everything (texts, emails, videos).
- If threatened with sabotage, don’t escalate. Call non‑emergency law enforcement to document the situation and protect your property.
- If you pay to end an immediate hazard, mark the receipt “Paid Under Protest” and follow up through proper legal channels.
- After any drain service, ask for verification: a flow test you can observe, and—when appropriate—camera footage saved to a file or link so you know the line is actually cleaned, not just punched through.
The truth about drain cleaning warranties
Let’s talk about realistic expectations. Drains fail for three main reasons: grease, roots, and structure (breaks, bellies, offsets). A simple cable snake might get water moving temporarily, but it’s not a cure‑all.
Know the terms:
- Clear: Restores flow by creating an opening.
- Clean: Removes deposits along the walls (usually requires hydro‑jetting).
- Restore: Repairs structural defects (lining or replacement).
Reasonable warranty practices:
- Grease lines: Often no warranty—because new grease can re‑clog a clean line in hours. The right answer is jetting + enzyme program + behavior changes.
- Main lines with roots: A short warranty may apply after jetting and root‑cutting, but the real fix is root‑intrusion repair (lining, spot repair, or replacement).
- Structural defects: No cleaning warranty covers a broken pipe.
Your move: Always ask which service you’re buying—clear, clean, or restore—and insist on evidence appropriate to the service (flow test, jetting footage, or post‑repair inspection).
Deposits, pricing, and payment timing (without getting burned)
A fair deposit policy protects both sides.
- Service/repair same day: Typically no large deposit; you pay on completion.
- Special‑order equipment (e.g., commercial heater, custom fixtures): A reasonable deposit covers materials ordered in your name. You should receive order confirmations with model numbers.
- Big projects: Use progress draws tied to milestones (demo complete, rough‑in inspected, finish complete).
Never pay the entire amount upfront. If someone demands it, that’s a red flag.
How to choose the right plumber (step‑by‑step)
- Gather three names from people you trust—neighbors, facility managers, or other trades you’ve worked with successfully.
- Check licenses & insurance using your state’s lookup and request a COI.
- Read reviews for patterns, not perfection. Look at how the company responds to complaints.
- Ask for a diagnosis first. “Before we talk about solutions, what do you believe is happening and why?”
- Request good/better/best written options with part numbers and scope—even for smaller jobs.
- Compare apples to apples. If one bid includes a pan, expansion tank, and permit—and the other doesn’t—those aren’t equal.
- Insist on documentation: before/after photos, permit number, inspection results, and warranty terms in writing.
- Pay smart: credit card or check with a clear paper trail. Write job address and scope on the memo line.
Quick checklists you can use today
Homeowner Red Flags
- Can’t or won’t provide a license number.
- Price only by “room” or “fixture” with no details.
- Pressure tactics: “Today only,” “I can’t hold this.”
- Refusal to pull permits when they’re required.
- No physical address or local references.
Homeowner Green Flags
- Clean truck, clear identification, and a license you can verify.
- Shoe covers, drop cloths, and a walkthrough before and after the job.
- Clear line‑item estimate and multiple options.
- Willingness to explain code items and show photos.
- A real warranty with what’s covered and what isn’t.
Restaurant/Commercial Grease Management
- Set service frequency (not just emergencies).
- Keep a FOG logbook and disposal manifests.
- Train staff on what not to pour down drains.
- Consider jetting + enzyme dosing; verify with periodic camera checks.
- Inspect interceptors after service—before the contractor leaves.
For honest plumbers and shop owners reading this
If you’re doing it right, you’re my kind of person. Here’s how to stand out in a market where scams are making customers skeptical:
- Lead with education. Show the code sections and why they matter.
- Photograph everything. Before, during, and after. Archive it. It saves jobs and reputations.
- Document supervision. If apprentices are on site, note who is supervising and how.
- Offer options without pressure. Put the minimum code repair first, then upgrades—let the customer choose.
- Respond to complaints. A quick, professional reply turns negatives into proof you care.
- Train relentlessly. Jetting technique, camera use, venting rules, gas code—make it weekly.
- Never shortcut disposal. Keep manifests organized and available on request.
When we raise the bar, the bad actors get squeezed out.
Sample scripts to protect yourself
On the first call:
“Before we schedule, could you text or email your license number and insurance certificate? Also, when your tech arrives, I’ll be asking for a diagnosis and at least two written options.”
At the door:
“Thanks for coming. Before you start, can we walk the problem together and agree on the diagnostic fee and what you’ll do during the visit?”
When pressured to sign immediately:
“I don’t make the same‑day decisions over $1,000. Please leave the written options. I’ll follow up tomorrow.”
If a drain re‑clogs quickly:
“The line failed within 48 hours. Please return for a verification test. If you believe the problem is grease/roots/structure beyond the original scope, document it with photos or camera footage and a quote to clean or repair.”
Case‑study lessons you can apply
- Licensing matters. A company can have dozens of employees, but only a handful may be licensed—and sometimes none at the journeyman level. Ask who is actually doing your work and verify their credentials.
- Billing should make sense. Double charging for the same scope without new diagnosis is a signal to pause and request evidence.
- Waste disposal is traceable. If a contractor won’t show where the grease went, find a new contractor.
- Disputes go to court, not your pipes. No one has the right to sabotage your system over a billing conflict. Document, pay under protest if you must, then pursue proper remedies.
The homeowner’s “evidence pack”
Build a simple folder (digital is fine) with:
- Photos of mechanical areas, water heater labels, and shutoff locations.
- Copies of permits, inspection stickers, and warranties.
- Business cards and license numbers of trusted contractors.
- A running log of service visits with what was done and by whom.
When you’re organized, you’re harder to hustle.
Conclusion
The Worst Plumbing Scams of 2025 have the same old roots—pressure, secrecy, and shortcuts—but they’re dressed up with modern financing, slick marketing, and speed. You can beat them by slowing the process down, asking for proof, and insisting on options in writing. Verify licenses. Demand photos and permits where required. Understand the difference between clearing, cleaning, and restoring a drain. For restaurants and commercial sites, track your FOG disposal like your business depends on it—because it does. And remember: great plumbers love informed customers. When you hold a professional standard, the real pros will meet you there.