Pressure testing across Northeast Philadelphia’s diverse housing stock requires adaptability that most plumbing companies don’t have. A 1950s ranch in Somerton with a 60-foot underground lateral and an outdoor grill line tests differently than a 1920s Tacony row home with party wall piping and a multi-branch basement system. Precision Plus Plumbing provides certified gas line pressure testing across every NE Philly neighborhood — adapting our approach to detached singles, duplexes, and row homes. Same-day scheduling for PGW restoration emergencies.
PGW shut off your gas and won't restore until the system passes a documented pressure test. Whether you're in a Somerton detached home, a Rhawnhurst duplex, or a Mayfair row home — the requirement is the same, but our testing approach adapts to your property. Learn about PGW gas leak repair in Northeast Philadelphia
A leak was fixed — corroded pipe replaced, fitting re-sealed, lateral repaired. PGW requires a passing pressure test of the full system before reconnection. In NE Philly homes with outdoor gas connections, "full system" means testing every branch — indoor and outdoor.
Kitchen remodel in Bustleton, basement finishing in Somerton, bathroom addition in Fox Chase — any work that moves, caps, or reconnects gas piping requires a pressure test before gas flows again. Philadelphia code requires documented results to close the gas permit.
Adding a gas range, dryer, fireplace, or running a line to an outdoor grill or fire pit? Every new gas connection must be tested before use. We test the full branch line, not just the appliance connector.
Buying or selling a Northeast Philly home — especially post-war construction in Somerton, Bustleton, or Parkwood with 50-75 year old gas piping — buyers' inspectors frequently request pressure test certification. A passing test provides documented proof the system is sound and prevents deal delays.
Another company or PGW tested the system and it failed. In NE Philly, the failure cause depends on your housing type: outdoor grill lines in detached Somerton homes, shared-wall fittings in Mayfair row homes, or aging galvanized pipe in 1960s Rhawnhurst duplexes. We diagnose the failure, repair it, and retest.
South Philadelphia has one dominant housing type — row homes. West Philadelphia has Victorian multi-units. Northeast Philadelphia has everything — and the testing approach must shift from one property to the next.
NE Philly is the only part of the city where a single day of testing calls might take us from a detached Somerton ranch (long lateral, outdoor branches, 5-6 connections) to a Mayfair row home (party wall piping, multi-branch basement system) to a Rhawnhurst duplex (shared foundation, separate meters). Each requires different isolation strategy, different failure expectations, and different access planning.
In Somerton, Fox Chase, Bustleton, and Torresdale, detached homes sit on larger lots — meaning the underground gas lateral from the PGW street main to the house is significantly longer than in row home neighborhoods. A longer lateral means more pipe underground, more joints, and more exposure to soil movement, tree roots, and freeze-thaw. Testing must account for these longer runs.
NE Philly detached homes are more likely to have outdoor gas connections — grills, fire pits, pool heaters, outdoor kitchens — than any other part of the city except Chestnut Hill. These buried outdoor branches must be included in the full-system pressure test. They're also the most common failure point homeowners forget about.
The Far Northeast — Somerton, Bustleton, Parkwood, Morrell Park — was built primarily in the 1950s–1970s. The gas piping in these homes is now 50-75 years old, using galvanized and early coated steel that's approaching the end of its service life. Unlike South Philly's pre-war black iron (which fails at joints), post-war piping often develops wall-thinning corrosion along entire pipe sections — a different failure pattern that pressure testing exposes.
In the older neighborhoods of the Lower Northeast, row homes present the same testing challenges as South Philadelphia: multi-branch systems, party wall piping, concealed basement ceiling runs. If the gauge drops, isolating which branch — or which side of the party wall — has the leak requires systematic branch-by-branch isolation.
Duplexes have separate gas meters but share a foundation and center wall. A pressure test on one side may pass while the other side fails — but gas migration through the shared foundation can complicate diagnosis. We test each side independently and check for cross-contamination when results are inconsistent.
A failed pressure test means a leak exists. In NE Philly, the cause depends on your property type and the era your home was built.
Unlike pre-war black iron that fails at threaded joints, mid-century galvanized pipe develops internal corrosion that thins the pipe wall along entire sections. A pressure test stresses these thin spots beyond what normal gas flow does, exposing leaks that haven't yet become noticeable. This is the most common failure type in the Far Northeast.
Underground gas lines to grills, fire pits, and pool heaters corrode from direct soil contact, freeze-thaw cycles, and root pressure. These lines — often copper or old black iron — were never designed for decades of direct burial. Homeowners forget they exist until the pressure test fails because of them.
Same as across Philadelphia — pipe dope on threaded joints degrades over 50-100 years. The older row home neighborhoods of the Lower Northeast have this issue just like South Philly. Joints hold under normal gas pressure but fail when stressed under test conditions.
Gas line fittings where piping passes through or along the shared party wall are the hardest to access and most likely to fail — stressed by differential settling between attached homes. These fittings are concealed behind plaster or brick and are almost never inspected until a pressure test catches them.
When gas appliances are removed during kitchen or basement renovations — common across NE Philly's active resale market — the gas line should be properly valved off. We frequently find lines "capped" with compression fittings or left open behind new drywall. Every one fails a pressure test.
Underground laterals in NE Philly's post-war subdivisions have been in the ground for 50-70 years. Decades of freeze-thaw cycles, tree root growth, and soil settling can separate joints or crack pipes — especially on larger lots where the lateral run is 30-60 feet long. The pressure test may pass on interior piping while the lateral itself is the failure source.
Real jobs completed by our expert technicians — delivering gas line pressure testing solutions for Northeast Philadelphia homes.
A detached Somerton home's full-system pressure test failed during a home sale inspection. All interior piping held through branch isolation. The failure was a 25-foot underground copper line to a backyard fire pit — two pinhole leaks from freeze-thaw damage. We replaced the outdoor section with approved direct-burial tubing, retested the full system, and passed. The home sale proceeded on schedule.
A Mayfair row home failed a PGW-required pressure test. All visible basement piping and appliance connections tested sound. Our electronic detection found the leak at a fitting concealed behind first-floor plaster where the gas riser penetrated the party wall. We accessed the fitting through a small opening, re-sealed it, and passed on retest — no major wall demolition needed.
A 1958 ranch-style home in Bustleton failed its first-ever pressure test after a new furnace installation. Our branch isolation found the failure along a 12-foot galvanized pipe section in the basement ceiling — the internal corrosion had thinned the pipe wall to the point where test pressure exceeded what the pipe could hold. We replaced the full section with Schedule 40 black steel and passed the retest.
Certified, documented, and adapted to your property type.
Before pressurizing, we assess your property: detached or attached, number of gas appliance connections, presence of outdoor gas lines, lateral access conditions. This determines our testing approach — a 6-connection Somerton ranch tests differently than a 3-connection Mayfair row home.
For South Philly row homes with multi-branch systems, we pressurize incrementally — testing the main riser first, then each branch to individual appliances. This approach identifies the failing section faster than pressurizing the entire system at once, saving time in older homes with multiple potential leak points.
Using a calibrated test gauge, we pressurize the system to code-required pressure (typically 3 PSI). For homes with post-war galvanized piping, we bring pressure up gradually to avoid shock-loading aging pipe walls.
Standard monitoring period. Stable gauge = pass. Any pressure drop = leak exists. In homes with outdoor branches, we watch for slow leaks that may take several minutes to register as a gradual gauge decline.
If the system fails, we isolate each branch systematically: interior appliance connections first, then outdoor branches, then the lateral (if suspected). This identifies which section is leaking. Once isolated, we pinpoint the exact failure with electronic detection, repair it to code-compliant standards, and retest at no additional testing fee.
Passing results documented with test pressure, hold time, gauge readings, and license number. For PGW restorations, submitted directly to PGW with full PGW coordination. For permit closings, formatted for L&I. Most PGW restorations: 24-48 hours.
PGW pressure test emergencies are prioritized. Available evenings, weekends, and holidays across every NE Philly neighborhood.
Written estimate before any work starts. Test fee quoted upfront. If repair is needed, quoted separately. Retest after repair included at no additional fee.
Row homes, duplexes, detached singles, split-levels, colonials — we adapt testing approach and isolation strategy to your property type.
We always test outdoor gas connections (grills, fire pits, pool heaters) as part of the full system — the #1 missed failure point in NE Philly.
Test results formatted for both PGW restoration and Philadelphia L&I permit closure. We submit directly on your behalf.
Serving Northeast Philadelphia since 1999. We know the housing stock, the pipe eras, and the neighborhood-specific challenges.
Saxon DaveTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Great service, very professiona,l on time, cleaned up afterwards, very respectable. I would definitely be calling him for all my needs. Before I go to anybody else for anything, i will call Precision Plus first. Five out of five stars for me Mary WorthyTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Precision Plus Plumbing came out the next day and quickly got to work. They showed real care for our children’s well-being and handled everything with professionalism and compassion. Highly recommend! Keisha Jackson-SmithTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Derrick was very efficient and professional. He explained what needed to be done in detail and completed the job in a timely manner. I am very pleased with the result. Brian FeasterTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Derrick from Precision Plumbing, performed mold testing, was quick, professional and efficient! Beverly BoldenTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Derrick was quick assessing my issues problem solved in no time great job thanks so much Wayne TuckerTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. QUALITY 5 STARS Dave WatsonTrustindex verifies that the original source of the review is Google. Great experience! Quick turnaround on a Saturday. Fixed the issue and was a pleasure to work with.
We provide certified pressure testing across every Northest Philadelphia neighborhood:
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Whether your pressure test is for a PGW restoration on a Mayfair row home, a permit closing on a Somerton renovation, or a home sale inspection on a Bustleton ranch — Precision Plus provides same-day certified testing across all of Northeast Philadelphia. For a full overview of our gas services, visit our Northeast Philadelphia gas leak detection page.
Precision Plus Plumbing provides certified pressure testing across every zip code in Northeast Philadelphia — 19111, 19114, 19115, 19116, 19136, 19152, 19154. From 1920s row homes in Tacony to 1970s ranches in Somerton — we bring the right testing approach for your property type.
Founder & Master Plumber
Since opening our doors in 1999, Precision Plus Plumbing has had one goal in mind: save busy homeowners time and frustration.
When you hire Precision Plus, you’re benefiting from a proven local business that knows your home, is familiar with older plumbing, and will educate you on what caused your problem — while discussing options on how to prevent them from happening again.
“We made the decision to provide clients with a unique experience that busy homeowners would be proud of. Our techs show up on time, do not smell like the sewer, and can resolve most problems on the initial service call.”
What started as a commitment to better service has grown into the area’s most trusted name for emergency plumbing, water damage restoration, and mold services — serving Pennsylvania, Delaware, and New Jersey.
Yes. Every gas connection on your property — indoor and outdoor — must be part of the pressure test. Outdoor connections are the most common failure point in NE Philly because underground lines are exposed to freeze-thaw, root pressure, and soil corrosion that indoor pipes aren’t.
For a straightforward test with no leaks: 45 minutes to 1 hour (slightly longer than row homes due to more connections and outdoor branches). If the test fails and branch isolation is needed: 2-4 hours. If outdoor line repair is needed: add excavation time. Most are completed same-day.
Standard residential test (3-4 connections): $150–$350. Homes with 5-6+ connections including outdoor lines: $250–$450. If the test fails and repair is needed, repair is quoted separately. Retest after repair included at no additional fee.
Yes — especially for Far Northeast homes in Somerton, Bustleton, and Parkwood. The galvanized and coated steel piping in these post-war homes is now 50-75 years old and approaching end of life. A proactive pressure test catches deteriorating pipe before it fails and triggers a PGW shutoff.
This happens regularly in NE Philly. We identify every gas connection on your property during our pre-test assessment, including outdoor branches to grills, fire pits, and pool heaters. If an outdoor line fails, we quote the repair separately and retest after repair at no additional fee.
Yes — each side of a duplex has its own meter, so we test each side independently. However, if one side fails and we suspect gas migration through the shared foundation, we may recommend testing both sides to rule out cross-contamination.
Yes. We submit passing documentation directly to PGW and follow up to schedule your meter reconnection. For the full PGW restoration process, see our Northeast Philadelphia PGW gas leak repair page. Most restorations happen within 24-48 hours.
Smart move — especially for post-war homes with original piping. A passing test gives buyers documented proof the gas system is sound, prevents inspection delays, and can avoid deal-breaking surprises. Some buyers’ inspectors will specifically request one for homes over 40 years old.
Gas line pressure testing is just one of the gas services we provide across Northeast Philadelphia. Explore our other specialized services below.
PGW shut off your gas? We repair the leak, pass the pressure test, and coordinate restoration.
Corroded, damaged, or aging gas pipes? Licensed repair and replacement for every NE Philly housing type.
Gas furnace not firing, boiler down, or radiators cold? Same-day diagnosis and repair.
No hot water? Pilot light out? Gas water heater diagnosis and repair.
Element failure, thermostat problems, or tripped breakers. Same-day service.
PGW compliance, permit inspections, and new installations — every NE Philly housing type since 1999.