What's actually causing this

Faucets drip when an internal part wears out and can no longer form a watertight seal. Which part depends on your faucet type: ball, cartridge, compression, or ceramic disc.

What you'll need

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Step-by-step fix

  1. 1

    Turn off the water supply

    Look under the sink for two oval shutoff valves. Turn them clockwise until they stop, then open the faucet to drain the line.

  2. 2

    Remove the handle

    Pry off the decorative cap on top, remove the screw underneath, and pull the handle straight up.

  3. 3

    Remove the worn part

    For cartridge faucets, grip and pull the cartridge straight up. For compression faucets, unscrew the packing nut and replace the rubber washer.

  4. 4

    Install the new part

    Match the old part exactly. Apply plumber's grease to O-rings before installing. Ensure cartridge orientation matches the original.

  5. 5

    Reassemble and test

    Reverse the disassembly order. Slowly turn the shutoff valves back on. Run the faucet several times and wait 10 minutes before confirming the fix.

What this costs in Phoenix
DIY (parts only) $15–40
Hiring a local pro $120–250
Cost of doing nothing $35–70/yr water waste
Plumbing considerations for Phoenix homeowners

In Phoenix, tap water is very hard (320–450 ppm). Phoenix has some of the hardest water in the U.S., sourced from Colorado River and groundwater. Mineral deposits are severe and visible within weeks on fixtures. Water heaters fail quickly (6–8 years). Water softeners are nearly universal among informed homeowners.

Plumbers in Phoenix typically charge $90–150/hr. Most homeowners budget $800–2,500 for common repairs like fixture replacement, drain clearing, or valve repairs.

Arizona has minimal licensing for plumbers. Cities (Phoenix) require permits. Homeowners can perform plumbing with permits.

Majority post-1990s construction. Copper is standard. PEX is increasingly used. Hard water means sediment buildup in water heaters is severe; flushing annually is essential. Slab-on-grade is common; underground pipe leaks are expensive repairs.

DIY in Phoenix: Phoenix is very DIY-friendly. Arizona's permissive licensing and culture support homeowner work. Hard water management and HVAC maintenance are common DIY focuses. Cooling system care is critical and often DIY-maintained.

Stop and call a pro if you see this
  • The shutoff valve under the sink won't fully close.
  • Water is leaking from the pipe itself, not the faucet.
  • You see corrosion or mineral buildup on the pipes.
  • It's a shower or bathtub faucet inside the wall.
Not sure what's wrong?

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