Water Heater Replacement Cost in Philadelphia & Suburbs (2026 Real Pricing)
Water Heater Replacement Cost in Philadelphia & Suburbs
Based on 107 water heater jobs completed by McCorry Comfort, January 2024–February 2026
Water heaters fail without much warning. When yours goes, you want to know what you're looking at — not a vague range that doesn't help you budget. Here's what we actually charged on 107 water heater jobs in the Philadelphia area.
The average came out to $1,602, but the median of $700 tells a different story. That gap is almost entirely explained by tankless installations and commercial-size units pulling the average up. If you have a standard residential tank, the median is a much better guide.
Water Heater Replacement Cost Summary
| Metric | Cost |
|---|---|
| Average | $1,602 |
| Median | $700 |
| 10th percentile | $295 |
| 25th percentile | $562 |
| 75th percentile | $2,350 |
| 90th percentile | $3,225 |
| Minimum | $150 |
| Maximum | $13,300 |
The $13,300 job was a commercial tankless installation — outside the scope of what most homeowners are dealing with. For a typical Philadelphia rowhome or suburban colonial, the realistic range for a standard tank replacement is $1,200–$2,500.
What Drives the Cost
Water heater replacement pricing breaks down into two buckets: the unit itself and the installation.
Unit Cost
- 40-gallon gas tank: $450–$800 for a quality unit (Bradford White, Rheem)
- 50-gallon gas tank: $550–$900
- 40-50 gallon electric tank: $400–$700
- Navien tankless (gas, residential): $900–$1,400
- Heat pump water heater: $1,000–$1,500
Installation Factors
- Straightforward swap: Same location, same fuel type, same venting — adds $400–$700 labor
- Location change: Moving the unit requires new water connections and potentially new gas/electric runs
- Switching from tank to tankless: May require gas line upsizing, new venting, and condensate drain — adds $500–$1,500 to installation
- Code upgrades: Older installs may need expansion tanks, seismic strapping, or updated connections to pass inspection
- Disposal: Old unit removal and disposal is typically included
Cost by Location
| Location | Jobs | Average | Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Philadelphia | 37 | $1,675 | $150–$3,890 |
| Hatboro | 2 | $2,188 | $2,125–$2,250 |
| Elkins Park | 2 | $2,288 | $1,300–$3,275 |
| North Wales | 2 | $4,214 | $3,578–$4,850 |
| Glenside | 1 | $2,250 | — |
| Jenkintown | 1 | $2,500 | — |
| Montgomery County | 3 | $1,501 | $540–$3,125 |
| Boyertown | 1 | $1,850 | — |
| Newtown | 1 | $1,072 | — |
North Wales running high is explained by the specific jobs we had there — both were tankless or larger commercial installations. Philadelphia's range is wide because we do everything from basic tank swaps in rowhomes to larger multi-family work.
Tank vs. Tankless: Which Makes Sense?
This is the question we get most often. Here's the straight answer:
Go with a tank if:
- You're replacing a failed unit and want the fastest, lowest-cost solution
- Your gas line is sized for a tank unit (most are)
- You have a utility closet that accommodates a tank
- Budget is the primary constraint
Consider tankless if:
- You're doing a planned replacement and want lower long-term operating costs
- You're adding a bathroom or otherwise increasing hot water demand
- You have space constraints (tankless units are wall-mounted)
- You're planning to stay in the house 5+ years (you'll recoup the higher upfront cost through energy savings)
Tankless units save roughly 20–30% on water heating energy costs compared to a tank. On a typical Philadelphia home, that's $100–$200/year in gas or electric savings. The math works out, but only if you're not replacing the unit in 3 years.
Bradford White vs. Navien vs. Generic — Does Brand Matter?
Yes. We install Bradford White tanks and Navien tankless units almost exclusively. Here's why that matters to you as a customer:
Bradford White is made in the US and sold through licensed contractors only — you can't buy one at Home Depot. That keeps quality consistent. Their warranty is backed through the contractor network, which means we can get parts and support quickly.
Navien makes the tankless units we trust most in this market — good service network, parts availability, and a track record in Pennsylvania's climate.
Big-box units (installed by big-box contractors) are often lower grade and have shorter warranties. If you're comparing quotes, make sure you're comparing the same equipment tier.
Signs Your Water Heater Needs Replacement (Not Repair)
- Age over 10–12 years: Repair costs typically exceed value at this point
- Rust-colored water: Internal corrosion — the tank is failing
- Pooling water around the base: Tank leak; this is not repairable
- Rumbling or banging: Sediment buildup from years of use; flush may help temporarily, but it signals end of life
- Inconsistent hot water: Could be a failed element (electric) or thermocouple (gas) — worth a diagnosis before full replacement
Permits and Inspections in PA
Water heater replacements in Pennsylvania typically require a permit. McCorry Comfort pulls the permit, handles the inspection, and makes sure everything is code-compliant. If a contractor offers to skip the permit "to save you money," that's a red flag — uninspected work can void your homeowner's insurance and create liability issues when you sell.
What a Realistic Budget Looks Like
For planning purposes:
- Standard 40–50 gallon gas tank replacement, same location: $1,200–$2,000
- Standard tank with code upgrades (expansion tank, updated connections): $1,500–$2,500
- Tankless gas installation, standard conditions: $2,500–$4,000
- Tankless with gas line upgrade or venting changes: $3,500–$5,500+
Ready to Replace Your Water Heater?
We'll give you a straight quote based on what you have and what you need — no upselling, no surprises on the invoice.
McCorry Comfort
📞 (215) 399-2056
🌐 mccorrycomfort.com
Serving Philadelphia, Bucks County, Montgomery County, Delaware County, and surrounding suburbs
