Washer & Appliance Lines in Miami Beach
A rubber washing machine hose under constant pressure isn't a question of if — it's a question of when. We replace washer lines, seized valves, and washer boxes, and hook up dishwashers and ice makers across Miami Beach — at a price you approve before we start.
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- $175 flat diagnosis
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- 100% callback guarantee
In a Miami Beach condo, a burst hose doesn't stop at your unit
Burst washing machine hoses are one of the most common causes of catastrophic water damage in homes anywhere. In a Miami Beach condo, the math is worse: a supply hose that lets go while you're at work pushes water at full line pressure, hour after hour, down through the unit below you — and the one below that. The hose itself is a cheap part. The claim it triggers, the drywall, the flooring, the neighbor's ceiling, is not.
That's why we treat appliance lines as the prevention job they are. A plumber comes out, checks your hoses, valves, and connections for a flat $175, and gives you the complete price — parts and labor itemized — before anything is touched. You pay when the work is done. No billing.
What we handle
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Washer supply line replacement
Braided stainless steel lines that can't balloon and burst the way old rubber hoses do.
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Washer box & valve replacement
Seized, dripping, or original-to-the-building boxes swapped for modern quarter-turn valves.
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Dishwasher hookup
Supply and drain connections done right, tested under pressure before we leave.
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Refrigerator & ice maker lines
Proper supply lines and shutoffs instead of the thin saddle-valve tubing that loves to leak behind cabinets.
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Dryer hookup coordination where gas is involved
Coordinated dryer hookup when a gas connection is part of the job.
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Shutoff valve upgrades
Quarter-turn ball valves at every appliance, so you can kill the water in one second instead of hunting for the building main.
The cheap part that prevents the expensive claim
Almost nothing else in plumbing has this ratio. A braided stainless supply line and a quarter-turn shutoff valve are among the cheapest parts we install — and the failure they prevent is one of the most expensive things that can happen to a condo. Insurance adjusters know burst washer hoses by name. If your machine is still running on the rubber hoses it shipped with, replacing them is the rare upgrade where the smart move and the cheap move are the same move.
Frequently asked questions
Diagnosis is a flat $175 — we check your hoses, valves, and connections and give you the complete price before any work starts. Emergency angle stop valves run from $175 each; line and hookup labor is quoted upfront. Parts are separate. You approve the full price first and pay on completion.
The common rule of thumb is every five years for rubber hoses — sooner if you see bulging, cracking, or rust at the fittings. The better answer is to replace them once with braided stainless steel: the braid contains the rubber core so the hose can't balloon and let go. Slightly more money, far longer life.
The recessed panel in the wall behind your machine that holds the hot and cold shutoff valves and the drain connection. When the valves inside seize or drip, the box is often replaced as a unit — and a modern one with quarter-turn valves lets you cut the water in one second when a hose lets go.
Yes. Supply line, drain with the high loop or air gap it needs, and a leak check under pressure before we leave. If the shutoff under the sink is old or seized, we'll quote replacing it at the same visit.
Yes. A seized valve means that when a hose bursts, you can't stop the water at the machine — you're sprinting for the building main while your floor floods. Valves that won't turn, weep at the stem, or don't fully stop flow should be replaced before the day you need them — a quick, single-visit swap.