Hopkins Plumbing & Heating is a licensed plumbing contractor serving Oklahoma City's residential and light commercial properties, operating for both scheduled repairs and emergency calls around the clock.
Hopkins functions as a full-service plumbing operation handling water line repairs, drain cleaning, fixture installation, water heater service and replacement, and leak detection. The company holds an Oklahoma plumbing license, which means technicians have passed state certification and must follow Oklahoma's plumbing code. That distinction matters: unlicensed operators cannot legally handle permit-required work like main line replacements or new installations in most Oklahoma City jurisdictions, and their work voids insurance coverage if problems arise.
The business operates a 24-hour emergency line for customers facing burst pipes, backed-up drains, or failed water heaters at 2 a.m. on a Sunday. This availability is standard among Oklahoma City's larger plumbing shops but not universal among smaller operators who work business hours only.
Hopkins offers diagnostic visits, typically charged at a service call fee of around $85 to $110 (call to confirm current rates). That fee applies toward the final bill if you proceed with repairs. Common jobs and rough pricing windows include drain cleaning starting around $150 to $300 depending on severity and access, water heater replacement in the $1,200 to $2,500 range for conventional tank models (depending on capacity and location difficulty), and faucet replacement from $200 to $400 including the fixture and labor.
Emergency after-hours service generally carries a surcharge above the base service call fee, often $50 to $150 on top of standard rates. The company offers maintenance contracts on HVAC systems bundled with plumbing checkups, which run roughly $300 to $500 annually for quarterly visits; these contracts typically include priority scheduling and small-repair discounts.
Pricing varies significantly based on whether a job requires a city permit and inspection. Main water line work, for example, must be inspected by Oklahoma City's building department before the line is buried, which adds time and compliance costs. Hopkins handles the permit paperwork as part of licensed service.
Oklahoma City's plumbing market divides roughly into three tiers: large franchise operations like Roto-Rooter and Plumb Pros, independent licensed contractors like Hopkins, and handymen or unlicensed operators offering lower prices for non-code-critical work.
Roto-Rooter and Plumb Pros maintain larger service areas and more aggressive marketing, but their service calls typically cost $120 to $150 for diagnostics, and they often push toward larger replacement jobs. Hopkins, as an independent contractor, tends to carry lower overhead and can sometimes undercut those prices on straightforward repairs. However, Roto-Rooter's national backing means faster response in some neighborhoods and easier scheduling through their app; Hopkins requires a phone call.
Unlicensed plumbers or handymen offering $50 service calls appear cheaper upfront but cannot pull permits or guarantee code compliance. If your water heater fails and needs relocation per updated Oklahoma City code, an unlicensed operator cannot legally do that work. Hopkins and the franchises all carry that licensing requirement.
For emergency response, Hopkins and Plumb Pros both answer 24/7. Roto-Rooter's local dispatch varies by branch, so availability depends on which Oklahoma City location serves your zip code. Smaller independent contractors often do not field midnight calls at all.
Hopkins is the right choice if you need licensed work on drain lines, water heaters, or fixtures where permits apply; if you live in a part of Oklahoma City where 24-hour availability matters; or if you prefer working with an independent contractor who can often schedule faster than large franchises during non-emergency periods.
This is not the place if you want the lowest possible diagnostic fee (unlicensed handymen undercut at $25 to $50, though you assume the code and liability risk) or if you need same-day emergency service in a distant Oklahoma City suburb where Hopkins' dispatch map is thin. The company's strength is reliability and legal compliance, not rock-bottom pricing.
Call Hopkins directly to schedule or report an emergency. A technician will arrive within the window you agree on (usually 2 to 4 hours for non-emergencies, 30 to 60 minutes for emergency calls, though response varies by day and weather). The tech will diagnose the problem, explain findings and options, and quote repair costs before proceeding. Service calls include a written estimate and invoice with itemized labor and parts.
For emergency calls, expect payment due at completion, typically cash or card on-site; for scheduled work, most contractors offer net-30 terms to homeowners without credit issues.
Hopkins operates 24 hours daily for emergency calls. For office scheduling and business inquiries during daylight, calling during standard business hours (Monday through Friday, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.) ensures faster routing. The company dispatches from a local warehouse; technicians arrive in marked vans carrying inventory for common jobs, reducing callbacks for missing parts.
Parking is not a customer-facing concern since service happens at your home, but for those dropping off water heaters or fixtures for service, confirm warehouse access when booking.
Hopkins' local knowledge and licensing make it a dependable choice for any Oklahoma City plumbing job that touches city code, and the 24-hour availability removes the panic of a burst pipe on a holiday weekend.
