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Water Heaters · 6 min read

When to repair vs. replace your water heater

A simple framework: age, repair cost, efficiency, and warranty. Run it once and the answer is usually obvious.

Standard tank water heaters last 8–12 years. Tankless units last 15–20. The hard part isn't knowing the lifespan — it's deciding what to do when the unit is at year 9 and starts acting up. Here's the framework we use on every call.

The 50% rule

If a single repair will cost more than half the price of a new unit and the heater is past 75% of its expected life, replace it. The math almost always favors replacement because the next failure is around the corner.

Step 1 — Age

Find the serial number on the label. The first four digits are usually the year and week of manufacture (e.g., "2218" = week 22 of 2018). Manufacturer-specific decoders are online if the format looks different.

  • Under 6 years: almost always worth repairing.
  • 6–10 years: depends on the failure. See step 2.
  • 10+ years: replace. The tank itself is on borrowed time.

Step 2 — What's actually broken

The failure mode tells you what's worth fixing:

  • Thermostat or heating element (electric): cheap, replace.
  • Pilot, thermocouple, or gas valve: moderate cost, usually worth it on a heater under 8 years.
  • Anode rod: always worth replacing — $30 in parts and it doubles tank life if done early.
  • Sediment causing rumbling: a flush, not a repair. Do it annually.
  • Leaking tank: game over. The tank wall has rusted through. No repair.

Step 3 — Efficiency and operating cost

A 12-year-old tank runs at 50–60% of its original efficiency. New standard tanks are 90%+. Heat-pump and tankless units are 95%+. On a household that spends $40/month heating water, a new unit can pay for the upgrade in 5–7 years on operating cost alone. If you've been thinking about going tankless, replacement time is when the math is best.

Step 4 — Warranty

Pull up your serial number on the manufacturer's site. If you're inside warranty, the tank itself is free — you're just paying labor and disposal. That changes the calculus significantly. If warranty has lapsed, you're paying everything.

Red flags that mean replace now, not later

  • Rusty water from the hot tap (not from one fixture, from all of them).
  • Visible water around the base of the tank.
  • Popping or rumbling that doesn't go away after a flush.
  • Hot water runs out faster than it used to.
  • The TPR valve is dripping.

One thing that actually extends life

Replace the anode rod every 4–5 years. It's a sacrificial metal rod that corrodes instead of your tank. Most tanks die because nobody ever changes it. A $30 part and 30 minutes of labor can buy you another 5+ years on a tank that would have failed.

Not sure where your unit stands? We do free assessments and give you the repair-or-replace number in writing — no obligation.