Category: Plumbing

Sink removal

Sink removal sounds simple — unscrew it and lift it off. In reality an old sink often fuses with the wall and pipes, and removing it without damage is harder than installing a new one. This is especially true for Israeli apartments from the 1980s: the ceramic has bonded to the tiles, the silicone has turned to stone, the shut-off valves will not budge.

Why people remove a sink

  • Before replacing with a new one — the most common case.
  • Before a cosmetic bathroom refresh — removed so walls can be painted and tiles laid.
  • Before a full renovation — everything goes, including supply and trap.
  • During layout changes — a partition is demolished or the bathroom is moved.
  • When selling or renting out — rare, but people remove personal furniture together with the vanity set.

How the job goes

  1. Water shut-off. The technician closes the valves under the sink and bleeds the remaining water from the supply.
  2. Disconnecting the faucet. If the faucet is kept for a future install, it is removed separately and carefully.
  3. Disconnecting trap and supply. Plastic traps almost always go in the trash — after 5+ years they are brittle.
  4. Cutting the silicone. Utility knife around the perimeter along the seam between sink and wall or countertop.
  5. Unmounting. Wall-mounted — lifted off the anchors. Vanity — detached from the cabinet. Drop-in — pushed out from below.
  6. Removal and (by agreement) haul-away of the old sink.
  7. Wall and supply inspection. The technician checks whether valves or fittings need replacing and whether openings need sealing.

What is left after removal

  • Anchor holes (2–4 of them) — filled with putty or plaster before painting.
  • A "ghost" of the sink on the tile — color difference between the area the sink used to cover and the rest. Usually cleans off; for a serious difference, retiling.
  • Fittings and valves sticking out of the wall — the technician can cap them with threaded plugs so the apartment stays usable.
  • Silicone residue on the wall — sliced off, the rest softened with a remover and scraped away.

If a full bathroom renovation is planned after the sink is gone, all these cosmetic scars will be absorbed into the renovation. If not, ask the technician who handles the putty and paint — some plumbers do it, some do not.

Pitfalls

  • Seized nuts. Metal-on-metal after 15–20 years becomes a single piece. The technician may cut with an angle grinder or break the fitting — this can eat up half the job time.
  • Broken shut-off valve. An old brass valve may fail to close or split during closing. Then the main riser has to be shut off and the valve replaced — adds 200–400 ILS.
  • Tile damage around the sink. When a wall-mounted sink is taken off, anchors sometimes come out with a chunk of tile. If the tiles are original and no match exists in stores, retiling is needed.
  • Countertop damage when removing a drop-in kitchen sink — rare, but happens if the clips are over-tightened.

What it costs in Israel

  • Removal of a wall-mounted or vanity sink — 200–400 ILS
  • Removal of a drop-in kitchen sink — 250–450 ILS
  • Removal preserving the sink for reuse — +100–200 ILS (extra care needed)
  • Haul-away of the old sink — 50–150 ILS, often included
  • Capping pipes if the sink stays off for a while — 80–150 ILS per point

How to prepare

  • Clear the space under the sink (cleaning supplies, trash can).
  • Empty the vanity if the sink sits on one.
  • Cover the hallway floor — residual water can drip during removal.
  • Confirm with the technician whether the old sink goes with them or you handle it.
  • If the apartment is rented, agree with the landlord whether the sink will return or not.

FAQ

Will the technician remove it without installing a new one?

Yes, removal is a separate service. Some technicians charge a small premium (since they expect to handle the new install), but generally it is 200–400 ILS and 30–60 minutes of work.

What happens to the pipes sticking out of the wall?

The technician caps them with threaded plugs so water can still be used in the rest of the apartment (if other points share the line). If they stick out unattractively, they can be cut shorter and hidden in the wall closer to renovation time.

Can the old sink be reused?

Ceramic or earthenware with no chips — yes, it is often moved to a country house, given to a neighbor, or sold on yad2 for 100–200 ILS. Warn the technician in advance that you want to keep it — they will work more gently.

Who is liable for tile damage during removal?

It depends on the agreement. Hairline cracks and anchor marks are normally an unavoidable side effect and are not covered. Serious damage (a tile breaking off) — the technician is liable if there was clear technique violation. A good technician warns about the risks up front and photographs the starting state.