About us
Billy The Plumber London
We help London homeowners, tenants, landlords and businesses arrange plumbing repairs quickly. The process is built around clear communication: send the job, get a callback, confirm the price, then approve the visit.
Call 020 3907 3663
Who attends
A dedicated engineer for every London callout
Every job is confirmed with a named engineer, a fixed price and an access plan before anyone travels out, so there are no surprises when the plumber arrives.
Built for fast plumbing decisions
Describe the problem, get a callback, agree the price, then the plumber attends. No extra steps for homeowners, tenants, landlords or businesses.Plumbing guide
How Billy The Plumber works
Billy The Plumber exists to make a stressful moment less stressful: something in your home or business is leaking, blocked or not working, and you need someone who will turn up, explain what is actually wrong, and agree a price before touching anything.
We work with homeowners dealing with an unexpected leak, tenants who need a landlord's sign-off first, letting agents juggling several properties at once, and small businesses that cannot afford to shut the toilets for the afternoon.
Our process, start to finish
You call or send the form with your postcode and a description of the problem. We confirm the next available slot, look at the job, and agree a fixed price with you before any work starts.
If the job turns out to be bigger once a panel is off or a floor is lifted, we stop and talk it through with you again rather than carrying on and hoping you will not mind the extra cost on the invoice.
What we will not do
We will not start work you have not agreed to, and we will not leave a job half-explained. If we cannot fix something in one visit, for example because plaster needs to dry before it is made good, we tell you that at the quote stage, not after the invoice.
We will not guess a diagnosis over the phone and charge for it later. If we are not sure what is causing a fault until we see it, we say so.
Who we work with
Homeowners call us for the repairs that come up in any property: leaks, blockages, tap and toilet faults, boiler and radiator problems. Tenants and landlords call us together, often on the same job, with the tenant arranging access and the landlord approving the cost.
Letting agents managing several properties get a consistent process every time, and small businesses get a plumber who understands that a blocked staff toilet is a trading problem, not just a plumbing one.
Across every London borough
We cover all 32 London boroughs, which means the plumber attending a job in a period conversion in Camden and one attending a new-build flat in Newham are working from the same process, even though the properties themselves are very different.
That consistency matters for landlords and agents managing property across more than one part of London, where the last thing anyone needs is a different set of expectations for every borough.
Getting in touch
Call 020 3907 3663 for anything urgent, or send your postcode and a short description through the quote form if you would rather arrange a convenient time. Either route leads to the same place: a plumber who understands the job, a price you have agreed to, and work that starts only once you have said yes.
If you manage property on behalf of someone else, or you are contacting us for a tenant, mention that up front so we can set the call up properly from the start.
Getting a price agreed
Whatever brought you to this page, the pricing process stays the same: we look at the job, agree a fixed figure with you, and only then start work. If the scope changes once we are on site, for example a straightforward repair turning out to need a part replaced, we stop and talk to you again before carrying on.
That agreed-price step matters most when the person approving the cost is not the person on site, which is exactly the situation most landlords, agents and business owners are in.
Before we arrive
If water is running, isolate it if you safely can, using the stopcock or nearest valve. Do not force anything that will not turn. Keep clear of any electrics near water, move belongings out of the way, and take a few photos once things are under control. If a drain is blocked, stop using the affected fixture rather than continuing to run water into it.
In flats and managed buildings, check whether building management controls any shared valves or riser access before we get there. If the property is rented, tell the landlord or agent early if their sign-off is needed before work can go ahead.
Recognising a genuine emergency
Treat it as urgent if water is actively escaping, a ceiling is dripping, electrics might be affected, a toilet cannot be used, a drain is backing up, a business cannot operate normally, or someone vulnerable has no hot water or heating. These situations need a same-day decision, because delay tends to make the damage or the disruption worse rather than better.
Contained issues can still go through the quote form rather than a phone call. If a leak has stopped, the water is isolated, or a fixture can simply be left unused for now, describe the problem and we will call you back to arrange a convenient time instead.
Describing the problem clearly
Be specific about the room, the fixture and when it started. Say whether it is under a sink, behind a toilet, near a radiator, below a bath, around a shower tray, inside a kitchen unit or outside near a drain. Mention whether it started suddenly, only happens when a fixture is in use, or has been getting worse over a few days.
If there is water, say whether it is dripping, running, pooling or just showing up as a damp patch. If there is a blockage, say whether it is one fixture or several running slowly at once. If it is a boiler pressure problem, say how often it drops and whether any radiator valves or nearby pipework look damp.
Staying safe until we arrive
Do not lift flooring, remove panels or force valves you are not sure about. Avoid using the affected fixture if we have advised against it. Keep clear of any water near sockets, switches or appliances, and mention that when you call. If a ceiling is leaking, a container underneath is fine if it is safe to place one, but stay well away from any plaster that looks like it is sagging.
In flats and managed buildings, tell a neighbour or the building manager if water might be travelling between properties; shared plumbing can make the source hard to pin down, and an early heads-up avoids access problems later. If you run a business, keep staff and customers clear of wet floors and let us know if trading is affected.
What a fair quote actually looks like
A fair quote states the job clearly, covers labour and any parts needed, and does not change once work has started unless the scope genuinely changes. It should not leave you guessing what is and is not included. If a job might need a follow-up visit, for example to let plaster dry before a wall is made good, we say so at the quote stage rather than after the invoice lands.
Not every job costs the same, because not every property is the same. A ground-floor flat with an easy-to-reach stopcock is a different job to a boxed-in pipe run behind a bath panel in a top-floor conversion. What stays consistent is the order things happen in: we look, we quote, you agree, then work starts.
Phone or quote form: which to use
Call 020 3907 3663 when the problem is active, spreading, or stopping you from using the property normally. Use the quote form when it is contained, when you would rather book a convenient time, or when a landlord, tenant or agent needs the details written down before approving the visit.
Either route gets you to the same place: we understand what is wrong, confirm when someone can come, and agree the price before work starts. Neither one commits you to anything until you have said yes to the quote.
Getting ready for the visit
Before the plumber arrives, clear access to the affected area if it is safe to do so: empty the cupboard under a sink, move boxes away from a boiler, or unlock a meter cupboard if that is where access is needed. Make sure someone can answer a call from an unknown number around the appointment time, in case the plumber needs to confirm anything on the way.
If the property is rented, tell the landlord or agent as early as possible so their approval does not hold up the visit once a slot is booked. If you are in a managed block, check whether the building manager needs to be involved for lift access, concierge sign-off, or a shared riser cupboard.
Common reasons people get in touch
Most calls start with something visible or inconvenient: a ceiling stain after a shower upstairs, a blocked kitchen sink, a toilet that keeps refilling, a tap that will not shut off, a wet patch near a pipe, a boiler pressure drop, or a drain smell that keeps coming back. The sooner the symptom is described clearly, the easier it is to work out whether it needs urgent attention or a planned visit.
Some faults are not dramatic at first. A small drip can damage cabinets, flooring and plaster if it is left. A slow drain can become a full blockage within days. A pressure drop can point to a leak nowhere near the boiler itself. A short call is usually enough to turn a vague worry into a clear next step.
Keeping the call short
You should not need to work through a long list of questions before speaking to someone. The basics get things moving: the type of problem, your name, phone number, postcode and a short explanation of what is happening. Anything more detailed can be sorted out once we are talking, rather than making you pick a technical term for a fault you have never had to name before.
Describing what you can actually see matters more than getting the terminology right. We would rather hear "water dripping from the light fitting below the bathroom" than have you guess at a diagnosis over the phone.
Explore the site
Common questions
Do you cover the whole of London?
Yes. We work across all 32 London boroughs, with a page for each one covering local property types and the services on offer there.
Will I get a price before anyone starts work?
Yes. We look at the job, agree a fixed price with you, and only then start work.
Can someone come out at night or on a weekend?
Yes. We run a 24/7 line and will give you a straight answer on the next available slot rather than a vague callback promise.
Do you deal with landlords, agents and rented properties?
Yes. We work with landlords and letting agents regularly, and are used to arranging access with a tenant while the landlord approves the cost.
How do you decide the price?
We look at the job first, then agree a fixed price with you. Nothing starts before you have said yes to that figure.
Do you work with landlords and letting agents?
Yes, regularly. We are used to arranging access with a tenant while the landlord or agent approves the cost separately.