Choosing the Right Pipe Material for a Seattle Repipe: A Decision Framework
Most Seattle homeowners shopping a repipe ask the wrong opening question. They ask “how much does it cost?” before they’ve decided what they’re putting in the wall. Cost is downstream of material, material is downstream of building age, water chemistry, and what’s already in the slab. Until those three are sorted, every quote you collect is an apples-to-oranges spreadsheet.
This piece lays out the framework Seattle plumbers actually use when they walk into a basement, look at the line, and decide what to recommend. The specialists handling repiping Seattle homes at craftsman-plumbing.com run customers through this same set of decisions before pricing anything, because the decision tree drives the price, not the other way around.
There are four candidate materials in active use for Seattle residential supply lines: PEX, copper, CPVC, and (in rare retrofits) galvanized. Each has a place. None of them is universally right. The decision framework below moves through five gates in order. Skip a gate and the answer at the end is wrong.
Gate 1: What’s already in the wall?
This is the question most homeowners forget exists, and it’s the one that determines roughly half the project cost.
If your existing system is polybutylene (gray plastic, brass crimp rings, common in late-century Seattle housing stock), you’re committed to a full repipe. Insurance carriers have started excluding water damage tied to polybutylene failures, so the calculus stops being optional and starts being structural.
If your existing system is galvanized steel (silver-gray, threaded fittings, anything mid-century or earlier that wasn’t touched), the same answer applies. Galvanized rusts from the inside. By the time water pressure drops noticeably at the fixture, the line wall is paper-thin.
If your existing system is copper Type M (thin-wall copper, common in mid-to-late-century Seattle housing), you have time. Type M holds up for decades in clean water. Seattle water is generally clean. A repipe here is a planned project, not an emergency.
If your existing system is copper Type L or K (thicker copper, well-installed), repipe only if specific runs have failed. Whole-system replacement of healthy Type L is throwing money in a hole.
The first gate sorts emergency from optional. Skip it and you’re either paying to replace what didn’t need replacing, or you’re not paying enough attention to a system that’s about to fail.
Gate 2: What’s the layout — slab, crawlspace, or wall-fed?
Seattle housing stock splits roughly three ways here.
Slab-fed homes (concrete foundation, supply lines run under the slab) are the worst-case for copper. Slab leaks in copper require jackhammering. PEX in a slab can be re-routed overhead to avoid the slab entirely, which is why most slab repipes in Seattle now go PEX.
Crawlspace-fed homes (Pacific Northwest standard for older construction) are the best-case for copper. The runs are accessible. A copper repipe in a crawlspace home is the highest-quality, longest-lifespan option you can buy, assuming the budget supports it.
Wall-fed homes (more recent construction, supply lines run inside framed walls) sit in the middle. PEX is faster to install because it bends around obstacles. Copper requires more cuts. Either is fine. The decision shifts to gates 3 and 4.
The layout doesn’t pick the material by itself. It just rules out the worst options for each layout type.
Gate 3: What’s the local water chemistry?
Seattle Public Utilities serves most of the city from the Cedar River and Tolt watersheds. The water is soft, slightly acidic, and low in minerals. That chemistry has consequences.
Soft, acidic water and copper: The water can leach copper from the inside of pipes gradually. In neighborhoods with the oldest copper installations, blue-green staining at fixtures is the visible symptom. It’s not catastrophic, but it’s a knock against new copper unless paired with a whole-house pH neutralizer.
Soft water and PEX: PEX is chemically inert to soft, acidic water. No leaching. No corrosion. PEX wins this gate in most Seattle ZIP codes.
Well water (parts of unincorporated King County): Well water often has higher iron, manganese, or hardness than city water. Both copper and PEX handle this, but the choice tilts toward CPVC if the well water is also corrosive. CPVC isn’t common but it’s correct for this case.
If you don’t know your water source or chemistry, ask SPU for the most recent water quality report for your service area. It’s free and takes one phone call. Skipping this gate is how homeowners end up with copper that turns blue, or with the wrong fittings on a PEX run.
Gate 4: How long do you plan to own the home?
This gate is the financial one, and it’s the one most plumbers won’t bring up unless the homeowner asks.
Short ownership horizon: PEX. Lower install cost, faster job, fully insurable, fully transferable. The buyer at sale doesn’t care which material is in the wall as long as it’s not polybutylene or galvanized. Spending 30-40% more for copper to recoup it at sale doesn’t pencil.
Medium horizon: Either material works. Run the numbers on lifecycle cost (install cost divided by expected remaining life) and pick the cheaper option. PEX usually wins.
Forever home: Copper Type L. Higher upfront cost amortizes across the long lifespan. The aesthetic argument matters too — exposed copper in utility rooms looks like quality, exposed PEX looks like a temporary fix. Some buyers and home inspectors notice.
The mistake is paying for a forever-home material on a short-horizon home, or vice versa. The mismatch is invisible in the wall but expensive on the spreadsheet.
Gate 5: Permits and inspections
Seattle requires permits on supply line repipes. SDCI tracks them. The permit gate isn’t optional, and homeowners who try to skip it learn about the gap when the home sells and title pulls the records.
Both PEX and copper pass current Seattle code. CPVC is allowed but increasingly rare. Galvanized is not allowed in new installs — it can stay if it’s existing, but you can’t add new galvanized supply lines.
The practical implication: any quote that tells you the job will be cheaper “if we skip the permit” is the wrong contractor. Walk away. The savings are imaginary because the work will get redone at sale time, and the contractor’s incentive to skip the permit is usually a sign of other corner-cutting on the install itself.
Putting the framework together
A Seattle homeowner with a polybutylene-era split-level, polybutylene supply lines, a crawlspace, soft city water, and a medium ownership horizon should expect a PEX repipe with copper at the manifold and at fixtures, full permit, full inspection. That’s the answer the decision tree produces.
A homeowner with a mid-century house, original Type L copper, slab-fed, soft city water, forever-home plans should expect targeted repair of failed runs in copper, not a whole-house repipe. The framework rules out the bigger project before it ever gets quoted.
A homeowner with a newer wall-fed home, healthy copper Type M, soft city water, short horizon should expect to do nothing. The framework rules out a project that didn’t need to happen.
The decision tree’s job is to filter out the wrong projects and price the right ones. It’s not a sales tool. It’s a triage tool.
What this means for getting a quote
Walk into a quote conversation with the answers to gates 1 through 4 already in hand:
- Existing material: identified
- Layout: known
- Water chemistry: pulled from the SPU report
- Ownership horizon: stated
A plumber who can take those four data points and walk you through gate 5 quickly is the contractor you want. A plumber who skips straight to “we usually recommend PEX” without asking gates 1-4 is selling, not diagnosing.
The repipe quotes that come in over budget or with surprise change orders almost always trace to a gate that wasn’t asked. A repipe that lands clean traces to a homeowner who showed up with the answers ready.
Bottom line
Repiping a Seattle home isn’t a single decision. It’s five decisions stacked, in order, and the answer at gate 5 is invalid if any earlier gate was guessed. The material is downstream of the existing system, the layout, the water, the horizon, and the code. The cost is downstream of the material.
Run the gates in order. Get the answer that fits the house, not the answer that fits the contractor’s truck. The wall lasts longer that way.