From Spotlight: Your New Home: 53 Tips to Save a Bundle

Home Repair Costs: Are You Paying Too Much?

The things most likely to break in your home and how much they typically cost.

Dripping kitchen faucet
Image: Liz Foreman for HouseLogic

Many home repairs are simple, inexpensive, and DIY-friendly. But if you need to call in a pro, here's a rundown on typical home repair costs:

Common home repair costs infographic
Image: HouseLogic

#1 Cost to Repair Leaky Fill Valve in Toilet

That annoying sound of water continually filling and draining from your toilet tank is often caused by leaky fill valve, which a plumber can replace, stopping water waste and restoring quiet. Plumber rates vary widely around the country, from $45 to $150 per hour, and the job will take about two hours -- the minimum some plumbers require just to take the job.

  • Labor: $50 to $200
  • Materials: $11 to $23
  • Total: $61 to $223

#2 Repair a Leaky Faucet

The water torture drip-drip-drip from a leaky faucet won’t just drive you insane, it can drive up water bills, too, costing more than the repair to fix it. Depending on the type of faucet you have, fixes typically involve replacing damaged rubber washers (10 for $2), O-rings (10 for $2), or a faucet cartridge ($8 to $30).

  • Labor: $95 to $300
  • Materials: $2 to $30
  • Total: $97 to $330

#3 Replace a Ceiling Fan

If you’ve got a ceiling fan, sooner or later the motor will burn out, the blades will warp, and fashions will change, so you’ll need to replace it. Replacing isn’t a big deal, because upgraded wiring, a reinforced ceiling box, and a light switch with ceiling fan controls are already in place. What you’re paying for is an electrician’s time -- one or two hours -- and a new fixture.

  • Labor: $50 to $200
  • Materials: $54 to $1,000 and up
  • Total: $104 to $1,200

#4 Repair Drywall

Nicks, gashes, and smashes inevitably mar your beautiful walls. You’ll have to patch and paint to make them look as good as new. A painter can do both jobs and will probably give you a flat rate that will include patching or filling blemishes, then sanding, priming, and painting.

Painters charge $25 to $62 per hour for labor or $2.68 to $4.60 per square foot including materials. Figure it will take about three hours to repair a wall, including drying time for the patching compound and paint. It’s a good idea to save up painting chores so you have enough to keep a painter busy while repairs cure.

Materials include paint at $12 to $50 or more a gallon, which should cover about 350 square feet; plus another $10 to $50 for brushes, rollers, drop clothes, and drywall patching compound.

  • Labor: $75 to $186
  • Materials: $22 to $100
  • Total: $97 to $286

#5 Repair Cracked Tile

Tile is hard and durable, but drop something heavy on it and it’s likely to crack -- a reason to always order more tile than you need so you’ll always have spares. To replace cracked tiles, a handyman must pry out the damaged tiles, scrape away old fixative, re-glue new tiles, and spread new grout. Replacing a 2-foot-by-2-foot section of tile should take one to two hours, not including the drying time required for the adhesive to set.

  • Labor: $30 to $125 per hour; with possible $150 to $350 minimum charge for a handyman
  • Materials: $1 to $20 per square foot
  • Total: $34 to $430

#6 Replace Caulk Around Tubs, Sinks, and Showers

Caulk is the waterproof seal around sinks, tubs, and showers that prevents moisture from seeping through gaps and onto drywall and flooring. When caulk cracks or peels, it should be replaced immediately to prevent mold and rot.

A handyman can dig out old caulk around a tub and reseal with new in about an hour.

  • Labor: $30 to $125 per hour; with possible $150 to $350 minimum charge for a handyman
  • Materials:  $1 to $4 for a tube of bathroom caulk
  • Total: $31 to $354

#7 Fix Gutters

Gutters and downspouts carry water from rain and snow away from your house and onto the ground. Sometimes the weight of wet snow and soggy leaves puts too much pressure on gutters, causing them to pull away from the house or pitch at inefficient angles.

A gutter contractor will clean gutters, and replace or reinstall supportive hardware and hangers. To restore the correct pitch, the contractor must detach and reattach each gutter section.

  • Labor: $127 to $282 (depending on length of gutter)
  • Materials: $10 for five hangers; $6 to $9 for gutter sealant
  • Total: $143 to $301

#8 Fix Out-of-Alignment Doors

Over time, your house moves as its foundation settles and building materials expand and contract with changes in humidity. The movement often is noticed when doorframes shift slightly, causing hinges to creak and doors to not shut properly.

Adding wooden shims to frames and hinges can bring doors back into alignment and let them easily open and close once again. Replacing worn-out screws with longer screws helps secure hinges tightly.

A handyman can fix a door in about an hour. Materials will include shims and screws.

  • Labor: $30 to $125 per hour; with possible $150 to $350 minimum charge for a handyman
  • Materials: $5
  • Total: $35 to $355

#9 Fix a Faulty Light Switch

Sometimes you turn on the light but nothing happens; or sparks crackle, and the light turns on. It’s disconcerting, but most likely it’s an easy fix. An electrician will turn off the power, take off the faceplate, check and perhaps tighten wires; or replace the switch. All told, it will take less than an hour.

Labor: $50 to $100 per hour
Materials: $1 to $6 for a single pole light switch
Total: $41 to $106

Housing And Real Estate Expert Lisa Kaplan-Gordon
Lisa Kaplan Gordon

Lisa Kaplan Gordon is an award-winning, Pulitzer Prize-nominated writer who contributes to real estate and home improvement sites. In her spare time (yeah, right!), she gardens, manages three dogs, and plots to get her 21-year-old out of her basement.