Water heater pros in Mountain Home
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Pricing reviewed June 2026 · Local data from U.S. Census ACS
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Mountain Home water heater services
Water Heater Replacement
Water heater replacement cost depends on the unit type, size, fuel source, and what code upgrades the job triggers. A basic 40-gallon gas tank swap and a high-efficiency tankless install can sit nearly $4,000 apart.
View Mountain Home pricing →Water Heater Installation
Water heater installation cost covers the labor and parts to fit a new unit — whether it's a first-time install, a fuel switch, or a tankless conversion. The number swings with venting, gas-line work, and whether the location changes.
View Mountain Home pricing →Water Heater Repair
Water heater repair cost depends on the failing part and whether the unit is gas or electric. Most common repairs — thermostats, elements, thermocouples, valves — land between $150 and $800 including labor.
View Mountain Home pricing →Water heaters in Mountain Home
U.S. Census ACS- Households
- 6,410
- Homeowners
- 3,819
- 59% own
- Median home value
- $223,600
- Median income
- $53,108
- Median home built
- 1984
- Housing units
- 6,496
With a median home built in 1984, many Mountain Home water heaters are at or past their 8–12 year lifespan — a common reason replacements spike here.
Water heater cost in Mountain Home.
Homes in Mountain Home were built around 1984 on average — roughly 42 years ago. Because a storage water heater typically lasts 8–12 years, a large share of Mountain Home units are now at or past the point where another repair stops paying off and replacement becomes the smarter spend.
Replacing a water heater in Mountain Home follows Idaho rules under the Idaho State Plumbing Code (based on the Uniform Plumbing Code, UPC). Here’s what applies statewide:
Local labor rates and Idaho permitting shape the final number. Based on area incomes and cost tier, Mountain Home installs tend to land slightly below the national average — the cost table below is adjusted to match.
| Type / job | Typical Mountain Home cost |
|---|---|
| Tank water heater (40–50 gal), gasThe default for most US homes | $950 – $2,200 |
| Tank water heater (40–50 gal), electricNo venting required | $800 – $1,950 |
| Tankless, gasEndless hot water; often needs a larger gas line | $2,400 – $4,700+ |
| Heat pump (hybrid)Most efficient; qualifies for federal credits | $1,950 – $4,300 |
| Common repair (part + labor)Thermostat, element, valve, thermocouple | $125 – $650 |
| Permit & inspectionRequired in most jurisdictions | $40 – $275 |
Installed prices including labor. Code upgrades, relocation, and larger units move the number up.
What’s different about Mountain Home.
Generic cost pages skip the things that actually decide your price and your unit’s lifespan here — local code, water, and the money you can claim back.
Recommended unit for Mountain Home
Given Idaho’s cold semi-arid / cold northern climate and gas water heating, tank or tankless is the sensible default for most Mountain Home homes. Winter inlet water runs cold here, so recovery rate matters — size up a tankless or favor a high-recovery tank. A pro can confirm the right size and fuel for your home.
Sources: Idaho Plumbing Authority - Residential Plumbing standards · Idaho OEMR Programs & Incentives · Statista - Idaho house heating fuel share by type
What Mountain Home code requires
Replacing a water heater in Mountain Home follows Idaho rules under the Idaho State Plumbing Code (based on the Uniform Plumbing Code, UPC). Here’s what applies statewide:
- PermitRequired
Pulled by your licensed plumber; covers gas/venting and the expansion tank.
- Seismic strappingVaries by jurisdiction
Some local jurisdictions require strapping; confirm before install.
- Expansion tankRequired on closed systems
Required where a pressure regulator or backflow preventer is present.
- Plumbing codeIdaho State Plumbing Code (based on the Uniform Plumbing Code, UPC)
- Good to know—
Homeowners may pull their own plumbing permit and self-install on owner-occupied single/duplex dwellings under an owner-builder exemption, but a permit and inspection are still required.
Sources: Idaho Plumbing Authority - Residential Plumbing standards · Idaho OEMR Programs & Incentives · Statista - Idaho house heating fuel share by type
Not sure which rules and rebates apply to your home?
A licensed Mountain Home pro will walk you through code, the right unit, and what you can claim back — in one quick call.
No obligation — talk through your options.
Money back in Mountain Home
Idaho water heating is mostly gas, which shapes the money back:
- Federal30% of cost, up to $2,000Federal 25C tax credit →
For a qualifying ENERGY STAR heat pump water heater. Claimed on your federal return.
No state-funded water-heater rebate is currently active (Idaho declined to fund the federal HEAR/HOMES programs), and only utility rebates exist; the federal 25C tax credit (30%, up to $2,000 for a heat pump water heater) applies in every state.
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- 1
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- 2
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- 3
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Your pro confirms the price on-site and gets your hot water back. Most jobs done in a few hours.
Water heater FAQs — Mountain Home
In Mountain Home, a tank water heater replacement typically runs $800 – $2,200 installed, while tankless and heat-pump units run $1,950 – $4,700+. Most repairs land between $125 – $650. Prices are adjusted for local labor and shift with code upgrades.
Water heater services near Mountain Home
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