Pipe repair splits into two very different scenarios: "stop the leak right now" and "repair it properly so it lasts decades". The first is done in an hour by any means available. The second requires the right material and approach — and is not always possible; sometimes it is easier to replace the whole section.
Types of pipe failure
- Pinhole — a tiny hole in the pipe wall, a pinpoint leak. Typical for old steel corroded from the inside (pressure pushes through a pitted weak spot).
- Crack — a split along the pipe. Typical for frozen water (rare in Israel), water hammer, or old copper/brass from metal fatigue.
- Seam failure — galvanised pipe splitting along the welded seam.
- Broken threaded joint — a fitting rotted through or sheared off from over-tightening.
- Impact puncture — nail, drill bit, falling object.
- Leaks along the whole run (many micro-pinholes) — the pipe is "tired"; repair won't help, it needs replacing.
How quickly you need to react
Depends on material and size. Typical situations:
- A jet shooting from a pipe in the wall — shut off the apartment valve and call an emergency plumber (arrives within an hour, 400–800 ILS plus work).
- Dripping on the balcony from an outside pipe — can wait until morning; put a bucket underneath, partially close the valve.
- A damp patch on the wall with no visible water — not urgent, but locate and fix it within 2–3 days, otherwise it will travel to the neighbours below.
- Drips down the riser on the stairwell — call the Vaad Bayit; this is a building-wide problem.
Repair methods by pipe material
Galvanised steel
- Repair clamp with rubber — quick temporary fix. Bolts around the leak, holds 6–12 months. Clamp costs 30–120 ILS plus labour.
- Cut out and weld in a new section — proper repair, but needs a welder. Rarely done in apartments — people usually replace the whole line with PEX or copper.
- Replacing the segment between fittings — if the failure is at the thread, unscrew and fit a new piece. Tricky when old threads are seized.
Copper
- Soldering — gas torch with tin solder. Needs an experienced plumber with proper gear.
- Press fittings — no flame, installed with a dedicated crimping tool. More expensive but doable without shutting down the whole apartment.
- Compression fittings — for small quick repairs.
PEX / multilayer
- Cut out and insert a coupling — the standard solution. A coupling with two press fittings is slotted into the cut section. Holds like a continuous pipe.
- Fast-fit repair coupling — with compression rings, no press tool. Works, but weaker.
PVC (drainage)
- Bonding with a dedicated solvent cement — for small cracks, after degreasing.
- Inserting a new piece with PVC couplings — the standard for any serious repair.
What an emergency plumber does on site
- Shuts off the water — apartment or building valve.
- Locates the leak. Water often emerges far from the actual failure point (e.g. in the wall the leak is higher up but water drips lower).
- Decides: "quick on-site fix" or "scheduled full repair required". If old steel crumbles in your hand, a clamp alone will not save the day.
- Performs the temporary repair (clamp, coupling).
- Turns the water back on and checks for leaks.
- Schedules a follow-up visit for the proper repair if the first visit was temporary.
How much it costs in Israel
- Emergency call-out — 300–800 ILS (depending on time and day)
- Clamp on a pinhole (labour + parts) — 200–500 ILS
- PEX coupling insertion — 300–600 ILS
- Copper section replacement with soldering — 500–1,200 ILS
- Steel section replacement (weld / fitting swap) — 600–1,500 ILS
- Riser replacement between floors — 1,500–4,000 ILS
- Hidden leak detection in a wall (acoustic, moisture meter) — 400–1,200 ILS
- Plaster / tile reinstatement after opening — separate, 500–3,000 ILS
When a repair no longer makes sense — replace
- Galvanised pipe, 30+ years old, with leaks already in other spots.
- Several pinholes within a single metre.
- Pipe "crumbles" in your hand when the clamp is removed.
- The repair is buried in screed — opening it means demolishing the floor.
- A renovation is planned — better to redo the whole water distribution in PEX at once.
Pitfalls
- Hidden leak behind a wall. The plumber clamps the visible spot, but if the real leak is 40 cm away inside the wall, it goes undiagnosed and is found too late. You need acoustic leak detection before opening up.
- Water hammer after turning the supply back on. Opening a valve sharply after a repair spikes the pressure against a fresh joint and it fails. Open slowly.
- Mixed materials. A "steel + copper" joint creates galvanic corrosion — that spot will rust through within 5 years. A dielectric fitting is required.
- Repair under plaster with no reinstatement. The plumber makes the joint, but plastering and painting is not their job. Budget separately for a finisher (or a handyman with the right skills).
FAQ
Can I fit a clamp myself when there is a leak?
In theory — yes, clamps cost 40–100 ILS at Ace / Home Center. But: you need to locate it correctly, shut the water, dry the pipe and tighten to the right torque. A mistake and the clamp holds 2 hours instead of 6 months. For a rented flat or a riser — hire a plumber.
Who pays for the repair — me or the Vaad Bayit?
If the leak is in the apartment pipework — you. If it is in the building riser (up to the apartment valve) or in a shared main on the floor — the Vaad. The boundary is the apartment shut-off valve. In disputes, call both and decide on site.
How long does a clamp repair last?
From 3 months to several years — depends on pipe condition. If the metal around the clamp is crumbling, six months maximum. If the clamp is on a localised pinhole in an otherwise healthy pipe, it can last 3–5 years. Still, plan a proper repair within 6–12 months.
Is there "pipe glue" that holds better than a clamp?
For temporary fixes — yes, there are epoxy tapes (so-called "waterstop") wrapped around the pipe. They hold as well as a clamp for pressures up to 4 bar. Most apartment systems (3–4 bar) are fine. Above that they can fatigue.