
Michael DiPietro profile information
With over 8 years of experience spanning residential new construction and complex service repairs, I’ve seen every side of a home's infrastructure. As a Red Seal licensed plumber and manager, my mission is to bridge the gap between technical complexity and homeowner peace of mind.
Through this blog, I translate "shop talk" into actionable advice—helping you maintain your systems, maximize government rebates, and make informed decisions about your home's longevity.
Recent blog posts

If you’re dealing with low water pressure or your water bill keeps rising for no obvious reason, we bet you’d never suspect your main water line. But do you really need to tear up your yard or drive to fix it?

You surely don’t think about your pipes until something goes wrong. A leak in the ceiling. A drop in water pressure. Rusty water is coming out of the tap. At first, it feels like separate issues. You fix one, then another. But these aren’t isolated problems you can keep patching—they usually point to one main culprit: your pipes.

One day, you notice a water stain on the ceiling, and it didn't come from nowhere. Is this coming from the roof, or from a pipe somewhere above? They can look the same, but what’s causing them isn’t obvious.

If you're asking, "Why did my water bill suddenly go up when nothing changed?", then you're not alone. It's one of the most common plumbing complaints homeowners have in Ontario! But once you find a cause, you can fix it. To do so, let’s begin with the basics.

There are many reasons for low water pressure in the water heater or throughout your home. If the problem is due to the city's water supply, like a broken water main, you'll need to wait for the water company to fix it. However, if the issue is specific to your home, such as a leaking water pipe or a faulty pressure regulator, plumbing repairs can help fix the problem.

So you've called a plumber, and they've run a camera through your pipes and confirmed what you feared: there's a real crack, a root intrusion, or a collapsed pipe section somewhere deep underground. The next thing you hear is: "We're going to need to dig."

Wonder “Why does my house smell like sewer?”, then you’re not alone! Many homeowners notice a sewer smell in the house and don’t know what to do or why it appears in the first place. And it's probably not your toilet since the most common cause of a persistent sewage smell is a dry P-trap, a section of pipe beneath your sink, shower, or floor drain.

You may not think about your basement drain until you find yourself standing in sewage water. By then, it’s too late to apply for the sump pump rebate in Toronto, and the repair bill will be yours to pay.
