Homeowners typically pay costs between $60 and $180 per sprinkler head for repairs, with total system costs depending on head type, pipe layout, and accessibility. The price range reflects service calls, part quality, and whether a repair can be done on-site or requires head replacement. This guide outlines typical costs, drivers, and savings ideas for U.S. buyers.
| Item | Low | Average | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Service Call | $60 | $110 | $180 | Includes diagnostic and on-site assessment |
| Head Repair | $15 | $40 | $80 | Valves, seals, minor fixups |
| Head Replacement | $30 | $65 | $120 | New head and seal; rotor or spray type matters |
| Materials | $5 | $15 | $40 | O-rings, seals, nozzles, adapters |
| Labor | $40 | $70 | $120 | Typically 0.5–2.0 hours per head |
| Equipment | $0 | $5 | $15 | Tools, trenching gear if needed |
| Permits | $0 | $0 | $100 | Rare for residential irrigation repairs |
| Delivery/Disposal | $0 | $5 | $15 | New parts and waste handling |
| Overhead & Taxes | $5 | $15 | $40 | Shop costs and local taxes |
Assumptions: region, head type, access, and labor hours affect final pricing.
Overview Of Costs
Typical project ranges for a single sprinkler head repair fall between $60 and $180, while a full head replacement or more complex head assemblies can push costs to $200–$400 per head in some markets. For a small yard with a handful of heads, a repair is often closer to $60–$120 per head, including service call and labor. If the system has multiple heads in hard-to-reach areas, the total project can exceed $1,000 for dozens of repairs. Assumptions: one head, standard residential territory, and ordinary soil conditions.
Per-unit pricing examples help compare options: a repair may cost $15–$40 per head, while replacement parts and a new nozzle can bring per-head totals to $30–$120 depending on model. Rotor heads usually command higher per-head costs than spray heads due to complexity and nozzle variety. Costs also scale with run length and depth of the pipe where the head connects.
Cost Breakdown
Table shows where money goes for common sprinkler head repairs. The table uses totals plus a per-head perspective to reflect small versus large jobs. Assumptions include standard 1/2-inch to 3/4-inch pipes and typical head types.
| Category | Low | Average | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Materials | $5 | $15 | $40 | O-rings, seals, nozzles |
| Labor | $40 | $70 | $120 | 0.5–2.0 hours per head |
| Equipment | $0 | $5 | $15 | Tools; trenching if needed |
| Permits | $0 | $0 | $100 | Residential rarely requires permits |
| Delivery/Disposal | $0 | $5 | $15 | New parts, waste handling |
| Overhead | $5 | $15 | $40 | Shop costs, admin |
Formula: labor hours × hourly rate is often used to estimate on-site work when multiple heads are touched in a single visit.
What Drives Price
Head type and component quality strongly influence pricing. Rotor heads cost more than fixed spray heads due to moving parts and precision nozzles. The diameter of the supply line and run length from the valve to the head also affect labor time. Higher-head assemblies or specialty products with weather-resistant seals add to the bill. For 8–12 heads in a typical backyard, expect a mid-range project cost of $500–$1,200 if several heads need replacement or seals are failing.
Accessibility and depth are practical price levers. A head buried beneath mulch, concrete, or dense roots may require more labor or partial excavation, adding 10–40% to the cost. If valves are leaking or multiple heads are out of alignment, the job complexity increases and the price follows suit. A routine head tighten and seal replacement is usually lower than full head replacement when a system is in good condition.
Ways To Save
Bundle services where possible by coordinating repairs on multiple heads in one visit to reduce dispatch fees and repeated service calls.
Ask for a fixed-price option for head replacement when the scope is clear, rather than hourly billing. If a head is near the end of its life, compare the cost of a full replacement kit against individual components. Consider hardware compatibility with existing controllers and rain sensors to avoid misfits and future adjustments. Knowledge of existing head models can help negotiate a better price for parts and warranty alignment.
Regional Price Differences
Prices vary by region due to labor markets, material availability, and climate-driven irrigation needs. In the Northeast, service calls may run higher due to winterization steps included in the season. The Midwest often shows mid-range pricing, while the Southeast can be slightly lower for standard repairs, though humidity and soil conditions can raise head wear. Expect regional deltas of roughly ±10–25% depending on urban vs suburban vs rural markets.
Labor, Hours & Rates
Typical hourly rates for irrigation technicians range from $65 to $120. Most single-head repairs take 0.5–2.0 hours, with suburban crews leaning toward the lower end and urban crews toward the higher end because of travel time and equipment access. Larger installations with many heads in a single zone will incur higher total labor due to travel and multi-head coordination.
Real-World Pricing Examples
Three scenario snapshots help anchor expectations. All assume a standard residential yard with 6–12 spray heads and 2–3 rotor heads in accessible locations.
- Basic — 1 head repaired, minor seal; service call plus repair: Head repair $25, labor 0.5 hour, materials $5; total around $100–$140.
- Mid-Range — 4 heads replaced or repaired; rotor conversion where needed; service call, parts, labor 2.0 hours; totals typically $280–$520.
- Premium — 6–8 heads repaired or replaced with premium nozzles and certification; longer labor block; total $600–$1,200 as a multi-head project with potential trenching costs.
Assumptions: region, head type, access, and labor hours.