30+ Years Serving Metro Atlanta
Family-owned since 1994 with over 100,000 homes served and 8,311+ Google reviews at 4.7 stars across 40+ cities.
Your Lake City Plumbing & Septic Team
RooterPLUS has served Acworth and Cobb County since 1994, with Georgia-licensed plumbers who handle everything from city-sewer homes near historic downtown to septic systems out by Lake Allatoona. Every visit starts with a written, upfront quote, and our live dispatch picks up day or night, with no added charge for nights, weekends, or holidays.
Licensed plumbing and septic
work for Acworth and Cobb County homes. Tap any service for details, pricing,
and to schedule.
Acworth's established
subdivisions, similar to Brookstone and Bentwater, are full of tanks now well
past a decade old. Our trucks carry common parts, so most calls finish in a single
visit.
From a jammed disposal in a downtown kitchen to a leaking dishwasher hookup after a remodel, we handle the under-sink work that fails at the worst moment. We confirm everything drains clean before we leave.
A drop in pressure or a wet spot
in the yard often points to the supply line between the meter and the house. We
pinpoint the failure and handle, repairing only the
affected section where we can to save you cost.
Constant running, weak flushing,
or a wobble at the base, we take care of across older
downtown homes and newer builds alike, and test the seal before we go.
Many Acworth properties along
the lakes and out in the unincorporated edges run on private septic rather than
city sewer. Our covers pumping,
inspection, drain-field issues and lift stations, with the system walked
through for you in plain terms.
Hidden leaks behind walls, under
slabs, or in a ceiling drive up your bill and damage the home. Our finds the source with the least intrusion
possible, often a small, clean cut instead of tearing out drywall.
Verified Google reviews from RooterPLUS customers across Cobb County and the Metro Atlanta Area.
Not sure if your issue requires
a professional? Here are warning signs that it's time to call a licensed
Acworth plumber:
Weak or fading pressure often traces to a failing supply line or corroded galvanized piping common in Acworth's older downtown and mill-village homes. Left alone it can hide a slow underground leak that drives up your water bill. A pressure test pinpoints whether the problem is the line, the fixtures, or the pressure regulator.
When several drains slow at once, not just one sink, the issue is usually in the main line, not the fixture.
On Acworth's sewer-served homes that often means root intrusion or a clog deep
in the line; a camera inspection confirms it before any digging.
A persistent sulfur smell points to a sewer-line break or, on septic-served lake and edge properties, a tank or drain field that needs attention. It's both a health concern and a sign the system is overdue for service, worth a same-day look.
A sudden spike with no change in
usage almost always means a hidden leak, behind a wall, under the slab, or in
the irrigation line. Catching it early in an Acworth home protects both the
structure and the bill.
Lake-area and low-lying Acworth
properties can see groundwater overwhelm a septic system or infiltrate a
compromised sewer line, causing gurgles and backups during wet weather. That's
a signal to have the system inspected before it fails outright.
On septic-served homes near the
lakes, soggy ground or unusually green grass over the drain field signals a
saturated or failing field. The earlier it's assessed, the more likely a
treatment beats a full replacement.
Pricing depends on the job, not the hour. We diagnose the problem, then give you a written, flat price up front and start only after you approve it. There's no charge for nights, weekends, or holidays, and you can review financing options if you'd like to spread out a larger repair.
Most households need pumping every three to five years, though lake-area homes with heavier seasonal use may need it sooner. Slow drains, odors, or soggy ground over the field are signs it's overdue. Our septic inspections and pumping include a walkthrough of your system's condition so you know where you stand.
It depends where you are. Most in-town, incorporated Acworth homes are on the Cobb County sewer system, while lake-area, larger-lot, and unincorporated properties (including the Bartow, Cherokee, and Paulding edges) are commonly on private septic. We service both, so either way we can help, and we'll confirm your setup on the first visit.
In most cases yes, water heater replacements in Cobb County typically require a permit, and we handle that as part of the job so the install is code-compliant. Working with a licensed plumber keeps the work inspected and protects your home's warranty and resale.
Often the same day. We dispatch from nearby and run 24/7 live dispatch with a 30-minute heads-up call before arrival. For an active leak, backup, or no-water situation in Acworth, call (770) 888-1931 and we'll prioritize it.
Yes. Your technician diagnoses
the issue, explains it in plain English, and gives you a written estimate
before touching anything. Nothing proceeds until you approve the price, and the
work is backed by our satisfaction guarantee.
Yes, RooterPLUS! is fully licensed, bonded, and insured in Georgia, and every technician is an individually licensed plumber who is background-checked and drug-screened. We've served Metro Atlanta since 1994 with a 4.7-star rating across 8,300+ Google reviews.