Planning a bathroom remodel in Murphy TX? Schedule a plumbing inspection

Plumbing Inspection and Bathroom Remodel Murphy TX Master Plumber Report

Plumbing Inspection and Bathroom Remodel in Murphy, TX

Written by Steven Shipler, Texas Licensed Master Plumber, Responsible Master Plumber (RMP), MBA, and host of The 4 Guys Education on YouTube.

A bathroom remodel in Murphy, TX should start with a plumbing inspection. Before tile is installed, before walls are closed, before the vanity is set, and before the toilet and shower are finished, the plumbing needs to be checked by someone who understands drains, vents, water lines, fixture layout, sewer risk, and under-slab plumbing concerns.

A bathroom can look beautiful after a remodel and still have hidden plumbing problems behind the wall or under the slab. The real goal is not just a good-looking bathroom. The goal is a bathroom that drains correctly, supplies water properly, vents properly, and avoids expensive problems after the remodel is finished.

The best time to find a plumbing problem is before the bathroom is finished. Once the tile, vanity, toilet, shower glass, and flooring are installed, every mistake becomes more expensive.

Need a Plumbing Inspection Before a Bathroom Remodel in Murphy, TX?

Get the drains, water lines, toilet flange, shower valve, sewer concerns, and under-slab risks checked before the remodel is complete.

Call Now: 972-333-5448

Inspect First. Remodel Smarter.


Project Location: Murphy, Texas

This Murphy, TX plumbing inspection and bathroom remodel project is located near 708 Smoke Tree Dr, Murphy, TX 75094. Murphy homes are often close to Plano, Wylie, Richardson, and Sachse, and many homes in this area can have plumbing issues related to age, remodel work, foundation movement, drain layout, and previous repairs.

Why a Plumbing Inspection Matters Before a Bathroom Remodel

A bathroom remodel touches some of the most important plumbing in the home: the toilet, shower, tub, sink, drain lines, water lines, shutoff valves, venting, and sometimes the under-slab sewer line. If those systems are not checked before the remodel is finished, hidden problems can get covered up.

I have seen beautiful bathrooms where the finished product looked great, but the plumbing underneath was wrong. A toilet flange set too low, a shower drain that does not flow right, a leaking shutoff, an old cast iron line, or a bad drain connection can turn a remodel into a repair job.

The point of the inspection is simple: check the plumbing before the finishes make everything harder to access.

What We Check During a Bathroom Remodel Plumbing Inspection

A bathroom remodel plumbing inspection in Murphy, TX may include checking:

  • Toilet flange condition, height, stability, and location
  • Shower valve installation and access
  • Hot and cold water supply lines
  • Sink and vanity drain connections
  • Shower or tub drain performance
  • Fixture shutoff valves
  • Drain slope and visible piping concerns
  • Vent system red flags
  • Signs of prior leaks or water damage
  • Cleanout access
  • Sewer line warning signs
  • Under-slab plumbing concerns
  • Water heater and hot water delivery concerns, when related

A remodel inspection should answer one question: is the plumbing ready to be covered, finished, and trusted?

Bathroom Remodel Plumbing Problems We Commonly Find

Some bathroom remodel problems are obvious. Others are hidden until the fixture is used. Common issues include:

  • Toilet flange too low after new flooring is installed
  • Loose toilet flange or unstable toilet base
  • Improper shower valve depth
  • Old shutoff valves that leak when touched
  • P-trap or drain alignment problems
  • Slow shower or tub drain
  • Improper vanity drain connections
  • Old galvanized, copper, or PEX transition concerns
  • Unverified plumbing inside opened walls
  • Missing cleanout access
  • Sewer odor after remodel work
  • Under-slab drain or sewer line problems that were never checked

These are the kinds of problems that can be fixed much more easily before the bathroom is finished.

Plumbing Inspection vs. Sewer Camera Inspection During a Bathroom Remodel

A plumbing inspection looks at the accessible plumbing work: fixture connections, shutoffs, drains, valves, visible piping, toilet flange, and installation quality. A sewer camera inspection looks inside the underground sewer line.

If the bathroom remodel involves a toilet, shower, tub, or drain that connects to older under-slab piping, a sewer camera inspection may be worth doing before the bathroom is finished. This is especially true if there are slow drains, sewer odors, foundation repair history, old cast iron pipe, or recurring backups.

A remodeled bathroom is not truly complete if the underground drain system is already failing.

Why Murphy, Plano, and Wylie Homes Need Careful Plumbing Review

Murphy homes are often affected by North Texas soil movement, remodel history, and changes made over time by different contractors. Nearby Plano has many older homes with mature trees and plumbing systems that may need deeper inspection. Nearby Wylie has a mix of newer and older homes where bathroom remodels may still uncover drain, water line, or sewer issues.

The city changes, but the rule does not: inspect the plumbing before you cover it up.

Sewer Inspection Videos: Why Camera Evidence Matters

These videos show why plumbing inspections and sewer camera inspections work together. If a bathroom remodel reveals drain or sewer red flags, the next step may be video evidence inside the sewer line.

Sewer Inspection Video 1

Sewer Inspection Video 2

Sewer Inspection Video 3

Sewer Inspection Video 4

Sewer Inspection Video 5

Sewer Inspection Video 6

Bathroom Remodel Plumbing Inspection Checklist

Area What We Look For Why It Matters
Toilet Flange height, stability, wax seal risk, rough-in, and drain connection. A bad toilet flange can cause leaks, rocking, odors, and finished floor damage.
Shower Valve depth, drain, slope, hot/cold orientation, and access concerns. Shower mistakes can be expensive after tile and glass are installed.
Vanity Supply lines, shutoffs, trap, drain alignment, and cabinet fit. The vanity can hide leaks and bad drain connections.
Sewer Line Camera inspection when drain red flags or under-slab concerns exist. A finished bathroom does not fix a failing sewer line underground.

Tools and Equipment Used for Bathroom Remodel Plumbing Inspections

A good remodel inspection depends on the right tools and the experience to know what matters before the walls, floors, and fixtures are finished.

  1. RIDGID SeeSnake Sewer Camera: Used when bathroom drain or sewer concerns need video evidence inside the underground line.
  2. RIDGID Locator: Used to help locate underground sewer line defects when the camera identifies a problem.
  3. Pressure Testing and Leak Detection Tools: Used when water line, valve, or hidden leak concerns need confirmation before finishing the remodel.

Helpful Internal Links

Schedule a Plumbing Inspection for Your Bathroom Remodel in Murphy, TX

If you are remodeling a bathroom, buying a home, changing fixtures, moving drains, or worried about under-slab plumbing, do not guess.

Get the plumbing inspected before the remodel is finished.

Call Now: 972-333-5448

Inspect before you cover it up.

Schedule Online

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FAQs

Should I get a plumbing inspection before a bathroom remodel in Murphy, TX?

Yes. A plumbing inspection can identify drain, water line, toilet flange, shower valve, and under-slab concerns before the bathroom is finished.

When should the bathroom plumbing be inspected?

Ideally, the plumbing should be inspected before walls are closed, before tile is installed, and before final fixtures are permanently set.

Can a bathroom remodel reveal sewer line problems?

Yes. Slow drains, sewer odors, old piping, foundation movement, or under-slab drain concerns can point toward the need for a sewer camera inspection.

What bathroom plumbing issues are most expensive after the remodel is finished?

Toilet flange problems, shower drain issues, leaking valves, sewer odors, failed under-slab drains, and hidden water line leaks can become expensive after finishes are installed.

Plumbing Code Reference Topics

Bathroom remodel plumbing should be evaluated with attention to fixtures, water supply, drainage, venting, trap protection, cleanouts, approved materials, testing, local permits, and inspection requirements. Always verify local requirements with the authority having jurisdiction.

# Code Topic Why It Matters Code
1 General Plumbing Requirements General plumbing standards, protection, testing, and inspection context. Code
2 Fixtures Toilets, sinks, showers, tubs, faucets, and fixture setting. Code
3 Water Supply Hot and cold supply lines, shutoffs, and fixture water delivery. Code
4 Sanitary Drainage Bathroom drains, sewer connections, cleanouts, and under-slab drain context. Code
5 Venting Venting supports drainage performance and trap protection. Code
6 Traps Trap configuration helps protect against sewer gas and drainage issues. Code
7 Cleanout Access Cleanouts matter for inspection, service, and future drain access. Code
8 Shower and Tub Drains Drain alignment and trap condition matter before tile and finishes are installed. Code
9 Testing and Inspection Testing helps verify plumbing work before walls, floors, or trenches are closed. Code
10 Approved Materials and Fittings Pipe and fittings should match the remodel scope, code, and local inspection requirements. Code