How to Identify the Pipe Materials in Your Home

How to Identify the Pipe Materials in Your Home

Knowing what your pipes are made of is critical for diagnosing problems and planning repairs.

Mike Torres05/07/2026 · 5 min readDifficulty: Easy InspectionCost: $0

TL;DR

LA homes have one or more of: copper (most common 1960-2000), galvanized steel (pre-1965), PEX (post-2000), CPVC (some 1980s), PVC for drains. Each has different repair, replacement, and lifespan profiles.

Time
15 min
Difficulty
Easy Inspection
Cost
$0
Skill Level
DIY inspection

What’s in this guide

  1. Why this matters
  2. Visual identification
  3. Lifespan of each
  4. When to repipe

Knowing your pipe materials is critical for understanding what problems to expect and what repairs cost. Here’s how to identify each.

Tools & Materials You’ll Need

Tools

  • Flashlight
  • Magnet (to test ferrous)

Materials

  • Nothing

Step-by-Step Instructions

Inspect Visible Supply Pipes

Look in basement, crawlspace, under sinks, around water heater. Most homes have visible supply pipe sections.

Tip: Best access in basements and unfinished crawlspaces.

Identify by Color and Texture

Copper: orange-brown metal, smooth surface. Galvanized: silver-grey, threaded fittings, rough texture, often with rust spots. PEX: red, blue, or white plastic, flexible. CPVC: cream or off-white plastic, rigid. PVC (drains): white plastic.

Tip: Magnet test: galvanized is magnetic, copper isn’t.

Note the Connections

Copper: soldered joints (smooth). Galvanized: threaded couplings. PEX: crimp rings or push fittings. CPVC: glued joints.

Tip: Mixed materials in same home is common — pre-war original galvanized, partial copper repairs, modern PEX additions.

Estimate Pipe Age

Galvanized pre-1965, copper 1960-2000, CPVC 1970s-1990s, PEX 2000+. Cross-reference with your home’s build year and renovation history.

Tip: Pre-1965 LA homes often have galvanized still in walls even after partial repipes.
MT
Pro Notes from Plumb Inc
Mike Torres · Master Plumber, serving Los Angeles since 2014

For LA homes built before 1965 that haven’t been fully repiped, you almost certainly have some original galvanized supply remaining in walls. These will fail eventually — usually catastrophically. Plan a repipe budget ($9,800–$14,500) before failure happens.

Galvanized supply lines are at end of life

Pre-1965 galvanized has been corroding internally for 60+ years. Repipe is preventive maintenance.

Real Scenarios from Our LA Service Calls

Echo Park

1924 home, mixed materials

Inspection revealed: original galvanized in walls, copper repairs in kitchen and bathroom from 1980s remodel, PEX in master bath addition from 2010. Recommended whole-house PEX repipe to standardize and address aging galvanized.

When to Call a Plumber Instead

DIY isn’t always the right call. Bring in a licensed plumber if any of these apply:

  • Repipe planning
  • Identifying hidden pipes (in walls)
  • Estimating remaining service life

Frequently Asked Questions

Lifespan of each material?

Copper: 30-50 years. Galvanized: 40-50 years (pre-1980 LA homes are at end of life). PEX: 50+ years. CPVC: 50+ years. PVC (drains): indefinite.

Best repipe material for LA?

PEX for most homes — flexible, affordable, fast install, 50+ year lifespan. Copper for premium/long-term homes ($2,000-3,000 more).

Mixed materials okay?

Yes, common, no major issues. Different materials connect via transitions.

How do I tell what’s in walls?

Inspect visible sections in basement/crawlspace; pipe extends into walls of same material typically. Cutting a section open is the only way to verify.

Can I tell pipe age from inside?

Mostly visual. Copper develops patina (green-blue) over decades. Galvanized develops pitting and rust.

Need professional help in Los Angeles?

Same-day service. Flat-fee pricing. No surprise add-ons.

Call (818) 938-8660
MT
Master Plumber · CA C-36 #1095692 · Founder of Plumb Inc
Mike has been serving Los Angeles homeowners since 2014, with hands-on experience across the San Fernando Valley, Hollywood, Santa Monica, and greater LA. Every guide on this site reflects what we actually see on real service calls.

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