If you need a plumber in Lone Mountain, you're calling our home turf. Kingdom Plumbing runs two Las Vegas locations — one on W Cheyenne Ave in 89129 and one on Farm Rd in 89131 — and Lone Mountain sits minutes from both. When a water heater lets go at 2 a.m., the closest truck matters more than anything else, and ours are already in your part of the valley. See all our plumbing services in Las Vegas.
Most homes around Lone Mountain Regional Park went up in the 1990s and 2000s, and their plumbing is aging on a schedule. Many are past their first water heater already, and Las Vegas valley water — some of the hardest municipal water in the country — works on tanks, valves, and copper lines every day. Failing heaters, scaled-up tanks, and worn-out units are exactly the calls we're built to run in the northwest valley: diagnosed, repaired, or replaced with a flat price you approve first. That's why this page talks about water heaters and slab leaks more than anything else.
We're family-owned, licensed, bonded, and insured (NV Contractors License #0085422), and we back the work with a 100% satisfaction guarantee. You get a flat price before we start — you approve it, then we work. Call (702) 213-6112 any hour and a real person picks up.
What Lone Mountain's 1990s–2000s Homes Mean for Your Plumbing
Water heaters are the big one. A house built in the 90s or early 2000s is decades into its plumbing life, which means the heater working right now is probably not the original — and whatever replaced it is aging too. Hard water shortens tank life: mineral scale builds up on the bottom of the tank, makes the burner work harder, and eats at the anode rod that's supposed to protect the steel. Rumbling or popping sounds, rusty hot water, or a tank that takes longer to recover are all signs the clock is running out. We repair what's worth repairing and give you a straight answer when it isn't — with flat-rate quotes on both a like-for-like tank swap and a tankless upgrade so you can compare before deciding.
Slab leaks are the other issue worth knowing about in homes this age. Like most Las Vegas houses, Lone Mountain homes typically sit on concrete slabs with water lines running underneath, and decades of hard water can wear pinhole leaks into those lines. Warning signs: a warm spot on the floor, a water bill that jumps with no change in habits, or the sound of running water when everything is off. We use electronic leak detection to pinpoint the leak before anyone cuts concrete — then we talk through the repair options, from a spot repair to rerouting the line, before you approve anything.
The same hard water that kills heaters also scales up fixtures, spots glass, and dries out skin. In a 90s-or-2000s house that's already on its second water heater, replacement day is the natural moment to add a softener — treating the water protects the new tank you just paid for instead of letting scale start on it from day one. We install and service whole-home softeners and can test your water while we're already in the garage.
Where We Work in Lone Mountain
Our Lone Mountain service area wraps around Lone Mountain Regional Park and the Lone Mountain trail on the northwest side of the valley. Our W Cheyenne Ave shop (89129) and Farm Rd shop (89131) both sit minutes away, so whichever truck is closer takes the call.
This is the neighborhood our techs drive through between jobs, not one we reach at the end of a long dispatch list. If you can see the mountain from your street, you're minutes from both of our locations.
What Affects Plumbing Costs in Lone Mountain
| Factor in Lone Mountain | How We Handle It |
|---|---|
| Age of the original equipment — in 90s-2000s builds, a 'small repair' call often reveals a water heater, shutoff valves, or supply lines at the end of their life, and replacing beats re-repairing | Upfront flat-rate quote you approve before work starts |
| Tank vs. tankless at replacement time — a like-for-like tank swap is the simpler job; going tankless costs more up front and can involve venting and gas-line changes, but changes what you own for the next couple of decades | Upfront flat-rate quote you approve before work starts |
| Slab leak repair path — pinpointing the leak first is what keeps costs sane; a spot repair through the slab and a full reroute of the line are very different scopes, and we price both before you choose | Upfront flat-rate quote you approve before work starts |
| Scale buildup from hard water — how long it's been since a heater was flushed, and whether the home has a softener, affects how much labor a job takes | Upfront flat-rate quote you approve before work starts |
| Equipment access — garage water heaters, common in these homes, are the easiest to work on; interior closets and tight installs add time | Upfront flat-rate quote you approve before work starts |

