Room repair cost guide

Laundry Room Repair Cost: Leaks, Drywall, Flooring, Outlets, Vents, and Washer Hookups

Laundry room repair cost depends on whether the problem is a small washer leak, a failed shutoff valve, damaged drywall, flooring edge damage, outlet trouble, dryer vent issue, or a larger water-damage repair that spreads outside the laundry area.

Part of the main guide

This article is part of the Repair Cost by Room Guide. For a broader estimate across laundry rooms, kitchens, bathrooms, bedrooms, garages, basements, and exterior areas, use the repair cost by room estimator.

Quick answer: how much does laundry room repair cost?

Small laundry room repairs often cost about $150 to $700 when the issue is a washer hose leak, loose drain connection, minor valve issue, small drywall patch, outlet replacement, or paint touch-up. Moderate laundry room repairs commonly fall around $700 to $2,500+ when plumbing, drywall, flooring edges, dryer vent access, or electrical work are combined. Larger laundry room repairs with washer overflow, hidden pipe leaks, damaged flooring, ceiling damage below, or hookup relocation can reach $2,500 to $7,500+.

Laundry room repair type Typical planning range Why the cost changes Best next guide
Small washer hose or valve leak $150 to $700 Supply hose, shutoff valve, washer box, or connection leak Shutoff valve replacement cost
Laundry pipe leak repair $300 to $1,500+ Access, pipe location, wall damage, and water spread Pipe leak repair cost
Washer repair or appliance issue $200 to $700+ Pump, hose, drain, seal, control, or appliance diagnosis Whole-home minor repair cost
Drywall and paint repair $300 to $1,800+ Cutout, drying, patching, texture, primer, and paint Water-damaged drywall repair cost
Laundry room outlet or electrical repair $150 to $1,200+ Outlet, GFCI, dryer outlet, switch, or moisture exposure GFCI outlet cost
Washer/dryer hookup relocation $1,200 to $5,000+ Plumbing, drain, venting, electrical, drywall, and permits Room repair estimator

These are planning ranges, not quotes. Laundry room repair costs vary by leak source, wall access, appliance condition, flooring damage, venting, electrical proximity, urgency, and local labor rates.

Laundry room repair cost summary

Laundry rooms combine water supply, drainage, appliances, dryer venting, outlets, flooring, drywall, and sometimes finished walls in a tight space. A small leak can stay small if it is caught early, but washer overflows and hidden hose leaks can spread quickly.

The first cost question is the source. The issue may come from a washer hose, drain standpipe, shutoff valve, washer box, pipe inside the wall, appliance failure, dryer vent, outlet, or floor edge. The second question is damage: drywall, flooring, trim, ceiling below, paint, or electrical exposure.

The clean way to estimate a laundry room repair is to separate the source repair from the room repair. The source repair stops the leak or failure. The room repair restores drywall, flooring, paint, trim, or damaged surfaces after the source is fixed.

Compare related room repair costs

Compare this page with kitchen repair cost, bathroom repair cost, basement repair cost, and whole-home minor repair cost.

1. Laundry room repair cost by problem type

Washer hose or supply valve leak

A washer hose, supply valve, or laundry shutoff leak often costs about $150 to $700 if the problem is visible and the wall is not damaged. The repair may involve replacing a hose, tightening a connection, replacing a shutoff valve, or fixing a washer box connection.

The cost rises when the valve is stuck, corroded, leaking inside the wall, or connected to damaged pipe. Compare with shutoff valve replacement cost and pipe leak repair cost.

Washer drain or standpipe leak

Washer drain leaks often cost about $200 to $900+ depending on whether the issue is a loose hose, clogged standpipe, drain overflow, cracked drain pipe, or hidden wall connection. A simple hose issue is different from water backing up from the drain.

If water returns from the drain or the washer overflows during discharge, the repair may be closer to a drain issue. Compare with drain unclogging cost.

Washer repair or appliance-related leak

Washer repair often costs about $200 to $700+, depending on the appliance issue. A washer can leak from a hose, pump, seal, door boot, drain line, filter, or internal connection. The appliance repair is separate from drywall, flooring, or ceiling repair caused by the leak.

If the washer leaked long enough to damage the room, price the appliance repair and room repair separately. A working washer does not automatically mean the damaged floor or drywall is fixed.

Laundry room pipe leak repair

Laundry room pipe leak repair often costs about $300 to $1,500+. A visible leak near a valve or supply line is usually simpler. A hidden leak inside the wall behind the washer can require leak detection, wall access, pipe repair, drywall patching, texture, and paint.

If the leak affected a finished wall, use water-damaged drywall repair cost for the surface repair after the plumbing is fixed.

Laundry room drywall repair

Laundry room drywall repair may cost about $300 to $1,800+ depending on the damaged area, texture, moisture level, and paint matching. Drywall behind a washer or dryer may be harder to access because appliances must be moved.

If the wall is wet, soft, stained, swollen, or musty-smelling, do not patch it until the leak source is fixed and the area is dry enough to repair.

Laundry room flooring or floor-edge repair

Laundry room flooring repairs can cost about $300 to $2,500+ depending on material, water spread, subfloor condition, and whether appliances must be removed. A small vinyl edge repair is different from water that reached subfloor or an adjacent room.

If the floor feels soft, swollen, or uneven near the washer, treat the repair as more than a surface patch. The leak may have been active longer than it first appears.

Laundry room outlet or dryer electrical repair

Laundry room electrical repairs may cost about $150 to $1,200+ depending on whether the issue is a standard outlet, GFCI outlet, dryer outlet, switch, breaker, wiring, or moisture-related fault.

Electrical symptoms near water should be handled carefully. Compare with GFCI outlet cost, outlet replacement cost, and electrical troubleshooting cost.

Dryer vent repair or access repair

Dryer vent repair may cost about $150 to $900+ depending on access, vent length, clogs, disconnected ducting, exterior vent cover condition, and whether drywall or cabinet access is needed. A simple vent cover repair is smaller than rerouting a vent.

Poor venting can affect dryer performance and moisture. If the vent is crushed, clogged, disconnected, or routed poorly, fix the venting before repairing nearby wall or trim damage.

2. Labor vs material breakdown

Laundry room repairs are usually labor-heavy because access is tight and appliances often need to be moved. Materials may be simple, but the repair can include diagnosis, water shutoff, appliance movement, leak testing, drywall patching, outlet testing, vent access, cleanup, and finish work.

Repair level Estimated labor share Estimated material share Why
Small hose or valve repair 75% to 90% 10% to 25% Low-cost parts, access, shutoff, testing
Pipe leak behind washer 70% to 85% 15% to 30% Appliance movement, wall access, leak testing
Drywall and paint repair 65% to 80% 20% to 35% Cutout, patch, texture, primer, paint
Flooring edge repair 60% to 80% 20% to 40% Appliance removal, drying, material matching
Outlet or dryer electrical repair 75% to 90% 10% to 25% Diagnosis, safe access, replacement, testing
Hookup relocation 55% to 75% 25% to 45% Plumbing, drain, venting, electrical, drywall

If a quote includes plumbing, appliance movement, drywall, paint, flooring, and electrical work, ask for the scope to be separated. That makes it easier to compare the source repair from the room restoration cost.

Use the room estimator first

If the laundry room has more than one damaged area, start with the repair cost by room estimator. If the issue is clearly only plumbing, drywall, electrical, or painting, use the matching repair guide below.

3. Laundry room water damage repair cost

Water damage is the main reason laundry room repair costs rise. A washer leak can spread under appliances, behind baseboards, into drywall, under flooring, or into the ceiling below if the laundry room is upstairs.

Visible sign Possible source Possible added repair
Water behind washer Supply hose, shutoff valve, washer box, or pipe leak Plumbing, drywall, paint, trim
Water during washer drain cycle Standpipe clog, drain hose, or drain overflow Drain clearing, wall repair, floor cleanup
Soft floor near washer Long-term leak or repeated overflow Flooring, subfloor, trim, drying
Ceiling stain below laundry room Washer leak, pipe leak, drain leak, or overflow Ceiling drywall, primer, paint, leak repair
Outlet near wet area trips Moisture, GFCI issue, wiring fault, or appliance issue Electrical troubleshooting and leak correction

Fix the source before repairing drywall, flooring, trim, or paint. Laundry room water damage often returns if the surface is repaired before the valve, hose, pipe, drain, or washer problem is solved.

4. DIY vs professional laundry room repair

Some laundry room repairs are reasonable DIY jobs, but water and electrical systems are close together. The repair becomes less DIY-friendly when there is active water, wet flooring, appliance wiring, dryer electrical work, or hidden wall damage.

Laundry room repair DIY difficulty Risk level Better choice
Replace visible washer hose Low Low to medium DIY if shutoff valves work
Small paint touch-up Low Low if area is dry DIY
Minor drywall patch Low to medium Medium if moisture remains DIY or drywall pro
Washer valve or box leak Medium to high Medium to high Plumber recommended
Hidden pipe leak High High Plumber
Outlet or dryer electrical issue High High Electrician
Washer/dryer hookup relocation High High Licensed pros

DIY is reasonable for small dry cosmetic repairs and simple hose swaps. Use a professional when the repair involves failed valves, hidden leaks, wet outlets, dryer electrical work, vent routing, soft flooring, or ceiling damage below.

5. What affects laundry room repair cost?

Whether appliances must be moved

Moving a washer and dryer can add labor, especially in tight laundry closets or second-floor laundry rooms. Access behind the appliances often controls how quickly the repair can be done.

Whether the leak is visible

A visible hose leak is easier to repair than a hidden pipe leak behind the wall. Hidden leaks may require drywall access, leak detection, and surface repair after plumbing work.

Whether the floor is damaged

Laundry room flooring can hide water at edges, under appliances, and near baseboards. Soft flooring, swollen trim, or staining can mean the leak has been active longer than expected.

Whether electrical is nearby

Laundry rooms often have washer outlets, dryer outlets, switches, lights, and sometimes GFCI protection. Moisture near electrical devices should be handled carefully.

Whether dryer venting is involved

Dryer vent problems can add access work, wall repair, exterior vent cover work, or rerouting. Poor venting can also create moisture and performance issues.

Whether the laundry room is upstairs

Upstairs laundry rooms can create ceiling damage below when a washer leaks or overflows. That can add ceiling drywall, stain blocking, texture, primer, and paint.

6. Connected repairs that may add cost

Laundry room problems often connect to plumbing, drywall, flooring, electrical, painting, or ceiling repair pages. Use the guide that matches the cause, not only the room where the damage appears.

Laundry room symptom Likely repair category Related guide
Water behind washer Valve, hose, washer box, or pipe repair Shutoff valve replacement cost
Wall is wet or soft Drywall and moisture repair Water-damaged drywall repair cost
Washer drain overflows Drain clearing or plumbing diagnosis Drain unclogging cost
Ceiling stain below laundry room Leak source plus ceiling repair Ceiling drywall repair cost
Outlet trips near washer GFCI or electrical troubleshooting Electrical troubleshooting cost
Paint stain or bubbling Paint repair after leak correction Paint touch-up cost

7. What to check before calling a contractor

Before calling, gather a few details. This helps separate a simple hose repair from a larger laundry room water-damage repair.

  • Is water coming from the washer, hose, valve, wall, drain, or floor?
  • Does the leak happen only during the drain cycle?
  • Do the hot and cold shutoff valves close fully?
  • Is the wall behind the washer wet, soft, stained, or swollen?
  • Is the floor soft, lifted, stained, or uneven?
  • Are outlets, switches, dryer connections, or lights near the wet area?
  • Is there a ceiling stain below the laundry room?
  • Does the dryer vent look crushed, clogged, disconnected, or poorly routed?

Clear photos of the washer valves, hose connections, drain hose, dryer vent, outlet area, wall surface, floor edge, and ceiling below can help a plumber, electrician, or repair contractor understand the job before arriving.

8. Example laundry room repair scenarios

Example 1: Washer hose leak caught early

A washer hose drips behind the appliance, but the wall and floor are still dry. The shutoff valves work. A reasonable planning range is $150 to $700.

Example 2: Washer drain overflows during spin cycle

Water backs up from the standpipe during the drain cycle. The repair may involve drain clearing, hose adjustment, or plumbing diagnosis. A reasonable planning range is $200 to $900+.

Example 3: Washer leak damaged drywall behind appliance

The wall behind the washer is soft or stained. The job may include leak repair, appliance movement, drywall cutout, patching, texture, primer, and paint. A reasonable planning range is $700 to $2,500+.

Example 4: Upstairs laundry leak reached the ceiling below

Water from the laundry room reached the ceiling below. The source must be fixed first, then ceiling drywall and paint may be needed. A reasonable planning range is $1,000 to $4,500+.

Example 5: Washer and dryer hookups need relocation

Moving hookups may require plumbing, drain, venting, electrical, drywall, paint, and permits. This is a larger project, often closer to $1,200 to $5,000+ depending on distance and access.

9. Common mistakes that increase laundry room repair cost

Pushing the washer back before checking for moisture

Water behind the washer can stay hidden. Check the wall, floor, and baseboard area before putting appliances back in place.

Assuming every washer leak is the appliance

Water may come from the washer, hose, valve, drain, wall pipe, or floor connection. Confirm the source before replacing the appliance.

Repairing drywall before fixing the leak

Drywall repair should come after the hose, valve, drain, or pipe issue is fixed and tested.

Ignoring dryer vent problems

A crushed or clogged dryer vent can create performance and moisture problems. Fix venting before repairing nearby finish damage.

Treating wet outlet symptoms casually

Laundry room outlets, dryer outlets, switches, and fixtures near moisture should be handled carefully. Use an electrician if anything trips, sparks, feels warm, or stops working repeatedly.

FAQ

How much does laundry room repair usually cost?

Small laundry room repairs often cost about $150 to $700. Moderate repairs involving plumbing, drywall, flooring, outlets, or venting can cost about $700 to $2,500+. Larger water-damage or hookup relocation jobs can reach $2,500 to $7,500+.

How much does it cost to fix a washer leak?

A simple visible washer hose or valve leak may cost about $150 to $700. The cost rises if the leak damaged drywall, flooring, trim, or the ceiling below.

Does laundry room repair include appliance repair?

Not always. A plumber or repair contractor may fix the hose, valve, pipe, drywall, or flooring, while washer appliance repair may be a separate service.

How much does laundry room water damage repair cost?

Laundry room water damage can range from a few hundred dollars for small surface damage to several thousand dollars when drywall, flooring, trim, electrical areas, or ceilings below are affected.

When should I call a plumber for laundry room repair?

Call a plumber when there is an active leak, failed shutoff valve, leaking washer box, hidden pipe leak, washer drain overflow, or water spreading into walls, floors, or ceilings.

When should I call an electrician for laundry room repair?

Call an electrician if outlets trip repeatedly, a dryer outlet is damaged, wiring is near moisture, lights flicker, or any electrical device feels warm, sparks, or stops working repeatedly.

Can I DIY a laundry room repair?

Simple hose replacement, small dry paint touch-up, and minor surface repairs may be DIY. Hidden leaks, failed valves, wet outlets, dryer electrical work, soft flooring, and ceiling damage are safer for a professional.

What should be fixed first in a laundry room repair?

Fix the source first. Hoses, valves, drains, pipes, dryer vents, or electrical issues should be handled before drywall, flooring, paint, trim, or ceiling repair.

Cost references

HomeRepairCalc uses conservative planning ranges and compares them with public cost references. Final prices vary by location, labor rates, access, materials, urgency, and repair scope.