Faucet Installation

A new faucet upgrades both function and style, and Overbrook Plumbing handles faucet installation across Pittsburgh, PA, fitting kitchen and bathroom models correctly so they look great and never leak.

Professional Faucet Installation in Pittsburgh, PA

Picking a faucet is the easy part; installing it so it seals and lasts takes skill. Overbrook Plumbing installs every style, from single handle kitchen models to widespread bathroom sets. We confirm the new fixture matches your sink configuration and supply lines before we begin. Old shutoff valves often fail during a swap, so we check them and replace any that leak. Proper seating and sealing prevent the slow drips that waste water and stain countertops. We connect supply lines snugly without overtightening, which can crack fittings. After installation, we run the faucet and inspect every connection for leaks. Hard water is common in parts of the Pittsburgh area, and we can suggest fixtures that hold up well to it. If your old faucet left corrosion or buildup behind, we clean the area before mounting the new one. We also handle pull down sprayers, touchless models, and filtered faucet setups. Honest pricing means no surprises once the job is done. Our local plumbers leave your space clean and your new faucet working perfectly.

Stacy Rodham
May 20, 2026

We had a major leak in our basement and Overbrook Plumbing responded quickly and got everything repaired the same day. The plumber explained the issue clearly and made sure everything was cleaned up before leaving. Highly recommend them if you need a reliable plumber in Pittsburgh.

Benjamin Lincoln
May 4, 2026

Overbrook Plumbing installed a new tankless water heater for our home and the entire process was smooth. They showed up on time, answered every question we had, and completed the installation without any issues. The quality of work was excellent.

Dillon Kobeck
April 13, 2026

Our sewer line backed up unexpectedly and Overbrook Plumbing handled the repair quickly and professionally. Their team kept us updated throughout the process and worked efficiently to get everything flowing again. Very knowledgeable crew.

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We Offer Faucet Installation in Pittsburgh & Beyond

Overbrook Piping Specialists provides Faucet Installation across Pittsburgh, PA and the surrounding communities. We focus on nearby cities where fast response times and reliable plumbing work matter most. Explore the areas below to see where we offer Faucet Installation services:

Years experience
Customer Satisfaction
Water heaters installed
Completed Service Calls

Faucet Installation in Pittsburgh, PA

Faucets today come in a great many different styles, and choosing the right one matters for both proper fit and everyday function. Single handle faucets conveniently control both the hot and cold water with just one simple lever, which a great many people find very easy to use. Double handle faucets instead use two separate handles for the hot and cold water, offering a more classic look along with precise control. In the kitchen specifically, pull down and pull out sprayers add valuable reach and welcome flexibility for washing dishes and for rinsing out the whole sink. Touchless faucets turn on with a simple wave of the hand, which is both genuinely convenient and far more hygienic in a busy kitchen. For bathroom sinks, centerset, widespread, and single hole designs are all built to fit different sink configurations and layouts. The right choice always depends on your specific sink, your daily needs at the sink, and your own personal sense of style. We take the time to help you choose a faucet that fits your existing setup perfectly and genuinely suits how you actually use it each day.

The particular configuration of your existing sink ultimately determines which faucets will actually fit and work correctly. Sinks and countertops are made with a specific number of mounting holes, and the new faucet you choose must match that number. A sink with just one mounting hole needs a single hole faucet, while a three hole sink will fit either a centerset or a widespread design. The exact spacing between the existing mounting holes also matters a great deal when it comes to choosing exactly the right faucet. Installing a faucet that does not properly match the existing hole configuration leads directly to fit problems and real frustration. Sometimes a deck plate can be used to neatly cover any extra holes when switching over to a different faucet style. Understanding your sink’s specific mounting hole configuration ahead of time prevents buying a faucet that simply will not fit. We carefully assess your sink and its holes and then help you select a faucet that matches it properly and looks right in the space.

A proper, lasting installation depends heavily on the overall condition of the water supply lines and the shutoff valves below. The faucet connects to the hot and cold water supply through a pair of flexible supply lines running up from below. These flexible lines run from the shutoff valves located under the sink all the way up to the body of the faucet itself. The shutoff valves let you turn off the water to just that one faucet for the installation and for any future repairs down the road. Old, corroded, or stiff shutoff valves are genuinely worth replacing while the faucet is already off the line and pulled out of the way. Aging or worn supply lines should always be replaced rather than reused along with an otherwise brand new faucet. Addressing all of these underlying components during the installation itself prevents leaks and a host of other future problems. We inspect and update all of these important parts as needed in order to ensure a truly reliable, lasting installation.

The actual installation process always follows a careful, deliberate sequence from the very beginning all the way to the very end. We always begin by first shutting off the water supply and then carefully removing the old faucet if there happens to be one in place. We then thoroughly clean the mounting area and properly prepare the surface of the sink or the countertop for the new faucet. The new faucet is then carefully positioned and then secured firmly in place from below the sink. We then connect both the hot and cold supply lines, making absolutely sure to achieve tight, completely leak free fittings throughout. For a faucet that has a sprayer or other special features, we carefully connect and test all of those components as well. We then restore the water supply and check very carefully for any sign of a leak at every single connection point. Finally, we test the new faucet through its full range of motion and water flow to confirm that it works perfectly and holds tight.

Pittsburgh’s distinctive mix of older and newer homes naturally creates a wide variety of different faucet installation situations for us. Many older homes here have corroded shutoff valves, aging supply lines, or somewhat unusual sink configurations that all need attention first. The plumbing tucked under many of the older sinks can be tight, cramped, and quite dated, which requires real care during the installation. The hard water common throughout the area affects faucets and their finishes over time, which also factors into the right choice. We have installed countless faucets in homes throughout Baldwin, Bethel Park, Mount Lebanon, Penn Hills, Ross Township, and the surrounding communities. That deep, hands on local experience helps us accurately anticipate exactly the conditions we are likely to find under area sinks. We know precisely how to handle old corroded valves, frustratingly tight spaces, and all the little quirks of older local plumbing. Knowing the local housing stock and its quirks so thoroughly helps us complete every faucet installation cleanly, quickly, and correctly the first time.

Why Plumbing Code Matters for Faucet Installation

Plumbing code applies to faucets because they sit at the point where clean water enters your home. Pennsylvania follows the Uniform Construction Code, which adopts national plumbing requirements. Federal standards limit how much water a faucet can use, and code enforces those flow rate limits. A bathroom faucet generally cannot exceed a set gallons per minute rating, which conserves water. Code requires that faucet connections protect against backflow so dirty water cannot reverse into the supply. Supply lines and shutoff valves must meet approved material standards for potable water. Proper air gaps and spacing keep contamination from entering at the fixture. Code also addresses accessible faucet designs in certain settings, such as lever handles for easier use. Correct installation prevents cross connection between hot and cold lines. Meeting code keeps your water safe to drink and your warranty intact. Faulty installs can lead to leaks behind cabinets, which cause mold and rot over time. Overbrook Plumbing installs every faucet to Pittsburgh and Pennsylvania code standards.

Most Common Faucet Installation Questions

Faucet installation raises plenty of practical questions, from cost and timing to materials and maintenance. The answers below cover what Pittsburgh homeowners ask us most, so you can plan your project with confidence.

Most standard faucet installations take between thirty minutes and two hours from start to finish. A straightforward kitchen or bathroom swap on a sink with working shutoff valves sits at the shorter end of that range. The timeline stretches when older valves need replacing or when corroded connections refuse to budge. Reaching mounting nuts on a deep or crowded undermount sink also adds time, since the space underneath demands patience. If the new faucet uses a different hole configuration than the old one, extra fitting work comes into play. We always quote a realistic window after seeing your setup rather than promising a flat number. Rushing the job only invites leaks, so we move at the pace the work requires. Most customers are surprised how quickly a clean install actually goes.

Several factors can shorten or lengthen the appointment in predictable ways. A single-hole faucet replacing another single-hole unit usually goes fastest because no deck plate or alignment puzzle gets involved. Three-hole widespread faucets take longer since each piece mounts separately and must line up precisely. The condition of your existing supply lines matters too, because seized fittings sometimes require cutting rather than unthreading. We carry the tools to handle stubborn hardware without damaging your sink or countertop. When we replace shutoff valves during the visit, expect another thirty minutes or so per valve. Bathroom faucets with pop-up drain assemblies add a few minutes for proper linkage adjustment. None of these steps should be skipped to save time. The right speed protects your home.

Booking with a professional removes the uncertainty that makes do-it-yourself faucet jobs drag on for hours. Homeowners often start a swap on a Saturday and end up calling us when a valve breaks or a connection leaks. We arrive with parts already on the truck, which keeps the job moving without a hardware run. Our plumbers have repeated the process so many times that the sequence is second nature. That efficiency means less disruption to your kitchen or bathroom during the day. We also clean as we go, so you are not left with a mess to handle afterward. For most Pittsburgh homes, we complete the work in a single visit. You get a finished, tested faucet without losing your whole afternoon.

Faucet installation cost depends on the faucet itself, the condition of your existing plumbing, and the scope of the work. Labor for a standard swap typically falls within a clear, predictable range that we share before starting. If your shutoff valves need replacing, that adds a modest amount per valve in parts and labor. New braided supply lines, when yours are worn, represent another small cost that pays off in reliability. The faucet you choose drives the largest share of the total, since fixtures span from budget models to high-end designer units. Overbrook Plumbing keeps pricing honest and straightforward, with no hidden fees tacked on at the end. We explain every line item so you understand exactly what you are paying for. That transparency is part of why Pittsburgh homeowners keep calling us back.

Several variables can move the final number up or down. A simple single-hole replacement on healthy plumbing costs less than a three-hole widespread install that requires careful alignment. Difficult access under a deep undermount sink can add labor time, which affects the total. Emergency or after-hours service carries a different rate than a scheduled daytime appointment. If we discover corroded pipes or a failing valve during the visit, we discuss the added work with you before proceeding. You stay in control of the budget at every step. We never start extra work without your approval. This approach prevents the bill shock that gives some contractors a bad name.

We also help you save money in ways that matter over time. Choosing a faucet with a ceramic disc valve and a solid brass body costs a little more upfront but resists drips and corrosion for years. A cheap faucet that fails in two years ends up more expensive than a quality unit installed once. Military members and seniors receive a discount from us as a genuine thank you. We are happy to install a faucet you already purchased, which lets you shop for the best deal yourself. Our written estimate locks in the price so you face no surprises. Quality work that lasts is the real value, and we deliver it without inflating the cost. Call us for a clear quote tailored to your home.

You can attempt a faucet installation yourself, and some handy homeowners pull it off without trouble. The reality is that many seemingly simple swaps turn complicated once the cabinet doors open. Old shutoff valves frequently seize or leak the instant you turn them, leaving you with running water and no easy fix. Corroded mounting nuts can refuse to loosen, and forcing them risks cracking a sink or countertop. The supply line connections must be tightened to the right tension, since too loose drips and too tight strips the threads. Sealing the base correctly takes the proper product and a clean technique to avoid hidden leaks. None of this is impossible, but the margin for error is real. A small mistake can flood the cabinet below.

The tools and knowledge gap trips up more people than they expect. A basin wrench reaches the mounting nuts tucked behind a deep sink, and most households do not own one. Knowing when to use plumber’s putty versus silicone matters for both sealing and protecting certain finishes. Recognizing a worn supply line before it bursts requires an experienced eye. Many do-it-yourself installs look fine on day one, then develop a slow leak that rots the cabinet over months. That hidden damage often costs far more than the original installation would have. Water that wicks into the floor or wall can invite mold you never see coming. The savings can vanish fast when something goes wrong.

Calling Overbrook Plumbing removes the risk and the frustration from the equation. Our licensed plumbers handle the surprises, like a broken valve or a mismatched hole pattern, without missing a beat. We carry the right parts and tools, so a small complication does not stall the whole project. Every connection gets tested before we leave, which means you never discover a leak days later. We also keep your manufacturer warranty intact by following the installation specifications exactly. For many people, the peace of mind alone justifies the call. You get a clean, finished result with no guesswork. If you would rather spend your weekend on something other than plumbing, we are ready to help.

The best faucet for your space balances how you use the sink, the look you want, and the durability you expect. In the kitchen, a pull-down or pull-out spray head gives you flexibility for filling pots and rinsing dishes. A single-handle design lets you adjust temperature with one hand, which helps when your other hand is full. Higher arc spouts clear tall pots but can splash in shallow sinks, so the basin depth matters. For bathrooms, the choice often comes down to the existing hole configuration and the style you prefer. Centerset, widespread, and single-hole faucets each suit different sink layouts. Matching the faucet to your sink prevents costly modifications. We walk you through these options based on your actual daily habits.

Material and valve quality separate faucets that last from ones that fail early. A solid brass body resists the corrosion that our regional water can cause over time. Ceramic disc valves outperform older ball and compression designs, rarely dripping even after years of use. Finishes range from chrome and brushed nickel to matte black and bronze, and each handles fingerprints and water spots differently. Brushed finishes tend to hide spots better than polished chrome in busy households. We also weigh the warranty, since strong coverage signals a manufacturer’s confidence in the product. A faucet is a daily-use fixture, so spending a little more on quality usually pays off. Cheap units often feel loose and drip within a couple of years.

Your lifestyle shapes the right pick as much as any spec sheet does. A busy family kitchen benefits from a touch-activated or motion-sensor faucet that reduces mess and germs. Households with hard water may prefer finishes and aerators that resist mineral buildup. If accessibility is a concern, lever handles operate more easily than knobs for those with limited grip strength. Bathroom faucets in a guest powder room can lean toward style, while a main bath needs durability. We help Pittsburgh homeowners weigh these tradeoffs without pushing the most expensive option. Our goal is a faucet you enjoy using every day for years to come. Bring us your ideas, and we will point you toward fixtures that fit both your sink and your routine.

A new faucet that leaks usually points to a connection or seal that was not set correctly. The most common culprit is an under-tightened or over-tightened supply line at the shutoff valve. Too little tension leaves a gap that weeps, while too much can crack the fitting or strip the threads. The gasket beneath the faucet base may also have shifted or compressed unevenly during installation. A worn or reused washer at any joint can let water escape under pressure. Sometimes the faucet body itself has a factory defect, though that is less frequent. Even a small leak deserves quick attention before it damages the cabinet below. Catching it early keeps the problem cheap to fix.

The location of the drip tells an experienced plumber a lot. Water pooling at the base of the faucet on top of the sink often means the deck seal failed or the mounting nuts loosened. Moisture appearing under the sink near the supply connections points to the lines or valves. A leak from the spout when the handle is off suggests a worn cartridge or valve seat inside the faucet. Drips around the handle base usually involve an O-ring or seal within the assembly. Tracing the source matters, because tightening the wrong spot wastes effort. We dry every connection and watch carefully to pinpoint exactly where the water originates. That precision leads to a real fix rather than a guess.

If you installed the faucet yourself and it leaks, do not keep tightening blindly. Overtightening often makes the problem worse by deforming a gasket or cracking a fitting. Shut off the water at the valves to stop further damage, then call a professional. Overbrook Plumbing diagnoses the leak quickly and corrects it with the right parts and technique. When we perform the original installation, leaks are rare because we test every joint before leaving. If a manufacturer defect surfaces, we help you handle the warranty claim. A leak should never become a long-term annoyance under your sink. Reach out and we will make it right fast.

We inspect the shutoff valves on every faucet installation, and we replace them when they are not in good shape. These small valves control the water feeding your faucet, and they tend to deteriorate after years of sitting untouched. Mineral buildup and aging seals cause many older valves to seize or leak the moment you turn them. Discovering a failed valve mid-installation can turn a routine job into a flooded cabinet. That is why we check them early rather than assume they work. If a valve turns smoothly and holds tight, we leave it alone. When it shows corrosion, stiffness, or weeping, we recommend replacement. Addressing it during the same visit saves you a separate appointment later.

Replacing a shutoff valve is straightforward work for a licensed plumber, but it does require shutting off water at a higher point. Quarter-turn ball valves have largely replaced the old multi-turn compression valves because they operate reliably for far longer. We typically install quarter-turn valves so future faucet work or emergencies become easier to handle. The replacement also gives us a chance to confirm the supply stub and connections are sound. A fresh valve paired with a new braided supply line creates a connection you can trust for years. This combination prevents the slow leaks that plague aging plumbing. We always discuss the cost with you before doing the added work. You decide, and we proceed only with your approval.

Skipping a worn valve to save a few dollars rarely ends well. A valve that barely holds today often fails the next time someone needs to shut off the water in a hurry. During a real emergency, a seized valve forces you to kill water to the whole house instead of one fixture. Replacing it proactively during the faucet install costs far less than dealing with a failure later. We see this play out constantly in older Pittsburgh homes with original valves still in place. Our recommendation always reflects what we would do in our own homes. Honest advice and quality parts are how we earn repeat customers. If your valves are due, we will tell you plainly and handle it right.

Keeping a new faucet in top shape takes very little effort and pays off for years. Wipe the finish regularly with a soft, damp cloth to remove water spots and prevent mineral buildup. Avoid abrasive cleaners and scrubbing pads, since they scratch finishes and dull the surface over time. For hard water deposits, a mix of mild vinegar and water dissolves buildup without harming most finishes. Clean the aerator at the spout tip every few months, because trapped sediment reduces flow and creates uneven spray. Unscrewing the aerator, rinsing out the debris, and reattaching it takes only minutes. This simple step restores pressure that many people assume signals a bigger problem. A little routine care keeps the faucet looking and working like new.

The moving parts of a faucet benefit from gentle, attentive use. Operating handles smoothly rather than forcing them protects the internal cartridge and valve seats. If a handle starts to feel stiff or gritty, that often signals mineral accumulation that a cleaning can resolve. A pull-down spray head should retract fully on its own, and a sluggish return sometimes means the hose needs a wipe-down or the weight needs repositioning. Listen for new sounds, since a sudden whistle or rattle can hint at a loosening part or a worn washer. Catching small issues early prevents them from becoming leaks. Tightening a visibly loose base or handle promptly stops play that wears out seals faster. Small attention now avoids bigger repairs later.

Water quality plays a quiet but real role in how long a faucet lasts. Pittsburgh-area water carries minerals that gradually build up inside aerators, cartridges, and spray heads. A water filtration system or softener reduces that buildup and extends the life of every fixture in the home. If you notice persistent crusty deposits, addressing the water itself solves the root cause. Replacing worn O-rings or cartridges at the first sign of a drip keeps a minor issue from damaging the valve body. We are always glad to advise on the right cartridge or part for your specific faucet. With basic care, a quality faucet easily serves a decade or more. Reach out anytime you want guidance or a quick tune-up.

A new faucet can improve the water flow you experience at the sink, though the effect depends on what was limiting it before. Older faucets often suffer from clogged aerators, mineral-choked passages, and worn cartridges that all restrict flow over time. Swapping in a fresh unit with clean internal parts frequently restores a strong, steady stream right away. A new aerator alone delivers a more even spray than one packed with years of sediment. That said, a faucet cannot create pressure that your home’s supply does not provide. If the underlying water pressure feeding the fixture is low, a new faucet will not fix the root cause. Understanding the difference between flow and pressure matters here. We help you sort out which issue you are actually dealing with.

Several things upstream of the faucet shape the pressure you feel. The shutoff valves under the sink can restrict flow when they are partially seized or only opened halfway. Old, corroded supply lines narrow internally and choke the volume reaching the faucet. A clogged or undersized line limits flow no matter how good the new faucet is. Whole-home issues like a failing pressure regulator or mineral buildup in the main lines affect every fixture at once. If only one faucet runs weak, the problem is usually local to that fixture. If the whole house runs weak, the cause sits further back in the system. Our plumbers diagnose which scenario applies before recommending a fix.

Pairing a quality faucet with sound supporting plumbing gives you the best result. When we install a new faucet, we replace tired supply lines and confirm the shutoff valves open fully. That combination often delivers a noticeable improvement on its own. If we find a deeper pressure problem, we explain your options clearly rather than selling you a faucet that will not solve it. Some homeowners benefit from addressing aerator flow restrictors, while others need work further upstream. We tailor the recommendation to what your home actually needs. Honest diagnosis saves you from spending money in the wrong place. Call us and we will pinpoint exactly why your water feels weak and how to fix it.

Get Reliable Faucet Installation Today

Choosing Overbrook Plumbing means clean, code-compliant faucet work backed by honest pricing and a team Pittsburgh homeowners trust. Call us today at (412) 736-4654 to schedule your installation and get your new faucet running right the first time.