🏢 Commercial Plumbing Dispatch · Restaurants · Retail · Office · Multi-Tenant

Austin commercial plumbing — because for a business, downtime is lost revenue.

A backed-up kitchen line closes a restaurant. A failed RPZ test shuts off water to a whole building. A no-hot-water morning kills a salon’s bookings. The dispatch line connects your business with an independent, TSBPE-licensed Master Plumber — commercial-licensed where the job requires it — who works grease traps, backflow, jetting, water heaters, and tenant build-outs across Austin, and who understands that the fix has to fit your hours, not just your pipes.

No call center. No out-of-state routing — enter your ZIP and we’ll match you to a local Master Plumber.

✓ Grease trap + interceptor service✓ Annual backflow / RPZ testing✓ After-hours / no-downtime scheduling✓ Permits + TI rough-ins

📞 Calls free · Real diagnosis before any quote

Local NetworkMaster Plumbers in every ZIP
🛡
TSBPE LicensedEvery dispatched plumber
Under 60 minAvg emergency dispatch
💰
Free EstimatesOn any $500+ job

How the dispatch line works

Four steps, end to end. The call is free. The matched plumber’s estimate is free on any job over $500. You decide whether to proceed.

1

You call

The 24/7 dispatch line picks up. A real coordinator captures your ZIP, the symptom, and the urgency.

2

You get matched

Dispatch routes to the nearest TSBPE-licensed Master Plumber familiar with your ZIP and build era.

3

On-site diagnosis

The dispatched plumber walks the job, writes a line-item estimate, pulls any required permits.

4

You decide

Free written estimate on $500+ work. No obligation. Work is performed to Texas plumbing code.

Why Austin commercial plumbing isn’t just residential at a bigger scale

A food-and-bar town built on a mix of century-old downtown stock and brand-new tech-corridor shells. The dispatched plumber knows which problems come with which building — and which ones the City will fine you for.

🍳 Austin’s food scene runs on grease traps

Every restaurant, bar, brewery, taqueria, and commissary kitchen in Austin discharges fats, oils, and grease (FOG) — and the City regulates how that’s captured before it hits the sewer. That means a properly sized grease trap or in-ground interceptor, pumped and serviced on a schedule, plus documentation. Skip it and you get backed-up kitchen lines mid-service, plus exposure under Austin’s FOG and pretreatment rules. The dispatched plumber services traps, clears the lines feeding them, and keeps the kitchen draining during the dinner rush.

🚱 Backflow / RPZ testing is a recurring legal requirement

The City of Austin requires annual testing of backflow prevention assemblies (commonly RPZ devices) on commercial buildings, irrigation systems, fire lines, and anything that could siphon contaminants back into the public water supply. It is not a one-time install — it is a yearly, documented test by a certified tester, and a failed or missed test can mean a shut-off notice. For a multi-tenant building, an office park, or a property with irrigation, that is a predictable recurring need the dispatched plumber can handle and certify.

🏗 Old downtown stock vs. new tech-corridor shells

Austin commercial buildings split into two worlds. Downtown and East Austin historic buildings hide cast-iron and galvanized lines, undersized supply, and decades of additions — great character, ugly plumbing surprises. The Domain, the tech corridors, and newer suburban retail are PEX/PVC shells where the work is tenant-improvement rough-ins, fixture sets, and getting it past inspection on schedule. The dispatched plumber sizes the approach to the building you actually have.

⏱ For a business, the plumber’s real job is uptime

A homeowner can live with a slow drain for a week. A restaurant, salon, clinic, or retailer cannot — every hour the water is off is revenue walking out the door, and in food service it can mean a health-code closure. That is why commercial work leans on after-hours and weekend scheduling, fast diagnosis, and temporary work-arounds that keep you open until the permanent repair lands. The dispatch line prioritizes commercial calls where downtime is actively costing money.

Commercial plumbing is bid per job, not priced off a menu. Building size, fixture count, whether it’s union or prevailing-wage, after-hours premiums, permit and inspection requirements, and how buried the existing lines are all move the number. Anyone quoting a flat commercial price sight-unseen is guessing — the ranges on this page are planning context, not a quote.

The two things that quietly cost Austin businesses the most are missed backflow tests (a compliance shut-off you didn’t see coming) and under-maintained grease traps (a kitchen backup mid-service). Both are predictable and schedulable. Ask the dispatched plumber to set you up on a recurring cadence so neither one becomes a 7pm emergency.

Common Austin commercial plumbing service categories

The recurring and emergency work the dispatch line routes most often for Austin businesses — relative share, illustrative.

Commercial Plumbing — Common Service CategoriesRelative share of commercial dispatch calls · illustrative, varies by property typeDrain / sewer jetting (high-use kitchens)very commonGrease trap / interceptor servicevery commonBackflow / RPZ annual testingrecurring / requiredCommercial water heater / tankless bankcommonTI rough-ins · fixture / ADA complianceproject-basedSource: illustrative mix of Austin commercial dispatch categories · not a statistical survey · actual needs vary by building and use
Master Plumber servicing a commercial kitchen drain line in an Austin restaurant

What commercial plumbing dispatch actually covers in Austin

The dispatch line connects Austin businesses — restaurants, bars, breweries, retail, offices, clinics, salons, warehouses, and multi-tenant properties — with an independent TSBPE-licensed Master Plumber, commercial-licensed where the scope requires it. Recurring work includes grease trap and interceptor pumping/service, annual backflow (RPZ) testing and certification, high-pressure hydro-jetting of grease-loaded kitchen and main lines, and commercial water heater or tankless-bank service. Emergency work covers main and slab breaks, sewer backups, restroom outages, and the dreaded mid-shift kitchen stoppage.

On the project side, the dispatched plumber handles tenant-improvement rough-ins, fixture sets, ADA fixture compliance, and the permits and inspections that go with a build-out or remodel — coordinated around your operating hours so the work doesn’t close you down. Whether you’re in a century-old East Austin building or a new Domain shell, scheduling is built around no-downtime windows: after-hours, overnight, or weekend, because for a commercial tenant the speed of the fix is the whole point.

Related Austin services:

Commercial plumbing problems — what you’re seeing and what it means

The scenarios that shut Austin businesses down — what’s causing it, and how dispatch responds.

Symptom Kitchen sinks and floor drains backing up mid-service

Almost always a grease-loaded line or a full/failing interceptor — FOG congeals and chokes the run feeding the trap. Snaking buys minutes; high-pressure jetting scours the pipe wall back to full bore. The fix is jetting plus getting the trap on a real pumping schedule so it doesn’t recur next Friday.

Hydro-jetting + grease trap service · after-hours scheduling ·

Symptom No hot water in the kitchen or restrooms

A failed commercial water heater, tankless unit, or recirculation pump — or a tripped/undersized supply for the demand. For food service, no hot water can mean a health-code stop, so it’s triaged as an emergency. The plumber diagnoses repair-vs-replace and sizes any replacement to your actual peak draw.

Commercial water heater / tankless service · emergency triage ·

Symptom Failed or overdue backflow / RPZ test

Austin requires annual backflow testing on commercial, irrigation, and fire lines — a failed or missed test can trigger a shut-off notice. The assembly either needs repair (rebuild kit) or replacement, then re-test and certification filed with the City. The dispatched plumber tests, repairs, and certifies.

Backflow / RPZ repair + re-test + certification ·

Symptom Slab leak or main water break in the building

A burst supply line or slab leak — common in older downtown/East Austin stock, but new buildings break too. Symptoms: pressure loss, hot spots in the floor, spiking water bills, or visible water. It needs locating and isolating fast to protect inventory and avoid closure, then a code-compliant repair.

Leak location + main/slab repair · isolate to stay open ·

Symptom Restrooms down — clogged, overflowing, or no water

For a retailer, office, or restaurant, an out-of-order restroom block can mean closing the floor or the whole location. Causes range from a blocked branch line to a sewer backup to a supply/valve failure. The plumber clears or repairs and, where possible, keeps part of the facility usable while working.

Drain clearing / fixture + valve repair · partial-open work-arounds ·

Symptom Persistent sewer odor through the building

Dry traps, a failing wax seal, a broken vent, or a partial main blockage letting sewer gas migrate — unpleasant for customers and a sign of a bigger drainage or venting fault. The plumber camera-inspects to find the source rather than masking it, then repairs the vent, seal, or line.

Camera inspection + vent / line repair ·

Downtime costing you money right now? Get a commercial plumber moving.

Grease traps · backflow / RPZ · jetting · water heaters · after-hours scheduling · TSBPE-licensed Master Plumbers

What a facilities manager can monitor — and where to stop

Light checks an owner or FM can do between service visits. The licensed, compliance, and pressurized work is a plumber’s job.

✓ Track your grease trap service dates

Keep a log of when the trap or interceptor was last pumped and how full it’s running — most Austin kitchens need service well before the 25%-grease-and-solids rule of thumb is hit. Watching slow drains develop lets you schedule a pump before a Friday-night backup. Keep your manifests and FOG records on file; the City can ask for them.

STOP if: lines are already backing up or you’re opening the trap yourself — grease-line jetting and interceptor service are a plumber’s job, and improper disposal is a code violation. Call dispatch to service it.

✓ Know your backflow / RPZ test due date

Austin requires annual backflow testing — note the anniversary date for every assembly (domestic, irrigation, fire) and schedule the certified test before it lapses. A lapsed or failed test can lead to a shut-off notice, so treat the due date like a license renewal.

STOP if: a test fails or an assembly is leaking — repair, replacement, and re-certification must be done and filed by a certified tester. Don’t adjust or cap an RPZ yourself.

✓ Watch for early warning signs between visits

Train staff to flag slow drains, gurgling, faint sewer odor, a drop in hot-water recovery, or a spike on the water bill. Catching these early turns a scheduled, off-hours repair into the alternative — an emergency during business hours. Knowing where your main shut-off and individual fixture valves are also saves critical minutes in a leak.

STOP if: you find active water, a slab hot spot, or a sewer backup — shut off at the valve you located and call dispatch. Pressurized and sewage work isn’t a DIY fix.

⚠ DO NOT DIY: Don’t let a building operate on a lapsed backflow certification or an unserviced grease trap to save a service visit — in Austin both carry real compliance exposure (shut-off notices, FOG/pretreatment enforcement) on top of the operational risk of a mid-service shutdown. And never have unlicensed staff modify gas lines, backflow assemblies, water heaters, or sewer connections — that’s licensed Master Plumber work, and on commercial property it’s also a permitting and liability issue.

Austin commercial plumbing — typical ranges (bid per job)

Market data, not promises. The dispatched plumber writes the line-item estimate for your job.

Source: HomeAdvisor / Angi Austin metro median pricing, 2025

Commercial service call / diagnostic
$95–$250
After-hours premium applies · often credited to the job
Grease trap / interceptor pump-out
$175–$900+
By size · indoor unit vs. in-ground interceptor
Backflow / RPZ annual test (per device)
$75–$250
Repair/rebuild or re-test billed separately
Commercial water heater (service → replace)
$350–$8,000+
Repair low end · high-capacity / tankless bank high end
Hydro-jetting (grease / main line)
$350–$1,200+
By line length, access & severity
Sewer camera inspection + locate
$200–$600
Diagnostic for odor, backups, recurring clogs
TI rough-in / fixture set (per fixture)
$450–$1,800+
Build-out work · ADA fixtures · plus permits
Slab / main leak repair
$1,000–$6,000+
Locate + access + repair · varies widely by building

Calls are free. The Master Plumbers dispatched through this line provide free written estimates on any job over $500.

Austin Texas downtown skyline

Local plumbers. Local dispatch. All of Greater Austin.

If you can see the Capitol from your roof, the dispatch line covers you.

Cities & suburbs the dispatch line covers

Austin commercial plumbing — real questions from business owners

What restaurants, retailers, offices, and property managers actually ask the dispatch line.

Is this a commercial plumbing contractor or a dispatch line?
It’s a dispatch line. It connects your Austin business with an independent, TSBPE-licensed Master Plumber — commercial-licensed where the scope requires it — rather than employing the plumbers directly. The call is free, you get matched to someone who works your type of property and ZIP, and the dispatched plumber provides the written, bid-per-job estimate. You decide whether to proceed.
How often does Austin require backflow / RPZ testing?
The City of Austin requires backflow prevention assemblies to be tested annually by a certified tester, with the results documented and filed. That applies to commercial buildings, irrigation systems, and fire lines — anywhere there’s a cross-connection risk to the public supply. It’s a recurring obligation, not a one-time install, and a lapsed or failed test can lead to a shut-off notice. The dispatched plumber can test, repair, and certify.
Do I legally need a grease trap for my restaurant?
If your Austin kitchen discharges fats, oils, and grease — which nearly all food-service operations do — the City’s FOG and pretreatment rules typically require a properly sized grease trap or in-ground interceptor, serviced on a schedule with records kept. The right size depends on your fixtures and volume. The dispatched plumber can advise on sizing for a build-out and set you up on a service cadence; specific permitting and sizing requirements are confirmed with the City.
Can the work be done after hours so we don’t close?
Yes — that’s the norm for commercial. Because downtime is lost revenue (and in food service can mean a health-code stop), commercial scheduling leans on after-hours, overnight, and weekend windows. For emergencies the dispatch line prioritizes calls where water is off or a business can’t operate. After-hours work typically carries a premium, which the dispatched plumber spells out in the estimate.
Why can’t you just give me a flat price for commercial work?
Commercial plumbing is bid per job. Building size, fixture count, after-hours premiums, permit and inspection requirements, whether existing lines are buried or accessible, and the age of the building all change the number. The ranges on this page are planning context drawn from typical Austin metro work — they are not a quote. The dispatched plumber walks the site and writes a line-item estimate for your specific job.
Do you handle both old downtown buildings and new Domain shells?
Yes — and they’re different jobs. Older downtown and East Austin buildings often hide cast-iron, galvanized, and undersized lines, so the work is diagnosis and repair of aging systems. New Domain and tech-corridor shells are PEX/PVC, where the work is tenant-improvement rough-ins, fixture sets, and inspection-ready build-out. The dispatch line matches you with a plumber experienced in your building era.
What commercial property types does the dispatch line cover?
Restaurants, bars, breweries, and commissary kitchens; retail and shopping centers; offices and medical/dental clinics; salons and gyms; warehouses and light industrial; and multi-tenant and mixed-use properties. The common thread is that the plumbing has to stay running for the business to operate, so scheduling and speed are built around your hours.
Do you pull permits and handle inspections for build-outs?
For tenant-improvement and remodel work, the dispatched Master Plumber pulls the required City of Austin plumbing permits and coordinates inspections as part of the job — rather than leaving you with unpermitted work that surfaces at your next sale, lease, or fire-marshal walk-through. Permit scope and timing are confirmed for your specific build-out.
How fast can a commercial plumber get to my business?
For emergencies — a sewer backup, a main break, no water to restrooms, a no-hot-water kitchen — the dispatch line routes to the nearest available Master Plumber and prioritizes commercial downtime. Response times vary with time of day, traffic across the metro, and crew availability, so dispatch gives you a realistic window when you call rather than a blanket promise.
Do you offer recurring service contracts for grease traps and backflow?
Recurring cadence is the smart play for both. Grease traps need scheduled pumping before they back up, and backflow assemblies need an annual test to stay compliant — so the dispatched plumber can set you up on a service schedule and remind you before the backflow anniversary, turning two predictable problems into routine maintenance instead of after-hours emergencies. Terms are arranged directly with the matched plumber.

Keep your Austin business open and to code.

Recurring service or emergency dispatch · grease trap, backflow, jetting, build-outs · calls free · independent TSBPE-licensed Master Plumbers

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