Plumbing Cost · New Jersey
Plumbing Cost in New Jersey (2026)
Plumbing in New Jersey typically runs $8,600–$18,400 for a complete rough-in on a 2,000 sq ft single-family home (2.5 baths, kitchen, laundry, water heater).
New Jersey context that moves plumbing rough-in cost
Climate: Mid-Atlantic with four seasons. Shore areas face hurricane and flood risk. Northern NJ has cold winters. Flat coastal plain in the south, hilly terrain in the north.
Labor market: Well above national average.
Permits & codes: New Jersey follows the Uniform Construction Code (UCC) based on the IRC. The state has one of the strictest code enforcement systems in the nation — all construction requires permits and inspections. CAFRA (Coastal Area Facility Review Act) imposes additional requirements near the shore. Wetlands regulations can delay or prevent building on some lots.
About plumbing rough-in in New Jersey
Plumbing rough-in covers all the supply, drain, waste, vent, and gas piping installed inside the framing before drywall. Fixtures (toilets, sinks, faucets, tubs) are the finish phase and not included in rough-in pricing. The rough-in for a typical 2.5-bath home is a 3–5 day job for an experienced crew of 2–3 plumbers.
PEX is now the dominant residential supply material in most of the country — flexible, freeze-tolerant, fewer connections, and significantly faster to install than copper. Drain-waste-vent is typically PVC or ABS. Gas lines are still mostly black iron or CSST. Each material choice changes labor time and parts cost in ways that compound across a job.
What moves the price
Fixture count
The baseline assumes a 2.5-bath home with kitchen, laundry, and water heater. Each additional full bath adds $1,800–$3,200 in rough-in plus another $1,200–$2,500 in finish plumbing. Half-baths cost about half. Adding a wet bar, second laundry, or pot filler each adds $400–$900.
Supply material (PEX vs copper)
PEX is cheapest and fastest to install. Copper runs 20–35% more in materials and 15–25% more in labor for soldering. Copper is still required for gas lines in many jurisdictions and preferred by some buyers for branding/durability reasons. For 90% of residential supply lines, PEX is the correct choice.
Slab vs crawlspace vs basement
Slab-on-grade is most expensive for plumbing because every fixture drain has to be set before the concrete pour and any mistake means cutting concrete to fix. Basements with overhead service are cheapest. The same fixture count can vary 15–25% on this factor alone.
Water heater type
Tank water heater (40–50 gal gas or electric): $800–$1,800 installed. Tankless gas: $2,500–$4,500. Heat pump water heater (eligible for IRA tax credit and many state rebates): $2,800–$5,000. Tankless saves significant space and gives endless hot water; heat pump is the cheapest to operate but needs a 50+ gallon equivalent installation space and warm ambient temperature.
Code-driven additions
Backflow preventers on irrigation, expansion tanks at the water heater, sealed-combustion venting on gas appliances, and AAV (air admittance valves) where vent stacks would be impractical — each adds $200–$800 to a typical job. Newer code adoption cycles require more of these.
Permit and inspection
Plumbing permits in most jurisdictions are $200–$700. Rough-in inspection happens before drywall (verifies pressure test, slope, venting, materials). Final inspection happens after fixture installation. Skipping a required permit is the biggest cause of issues at home sale time.
Plumbing cost across New Jersey metros
Within New Jersey the spread between metros is usually 25–40% of the state midpoint. Major metros pay more than rural areas because of labor demand, permit complexity, and material delivery overhead.
- Northern NJ (Bergen, Essex) — typical home build $220–$500/sq ft range
- Princeton / Central NJ — typical home build $200–$460/sq ft range
- Jersey Shore — typical home build $200–$480/sq ft range
- South Jersey (Cherry Hill area) — typical home build $170–$380/sq ft range
Frequently asked questions
How much does plumbing rough-in cost in New Jersey?
Why is plumbing labor priced differently in New Jersey than its neighbors?
Should I use PEX or copper in New Jersey?
Does a New Jersey plumber need a license?
How much does it add to move a kitchen sink or bathroom fixture?
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See the full 50-state plumbing rough-in cost comparison to see how New Jersey stacks up nationally.
For broader benchmarks across New Jersey, see the cost to build a house in New Jersey.
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