Water Heater Providers

The providers published through National Water Heater Authority index licensed water heater service providers, contractors, and installation professionals operating across the United States. Each entry represents a qualified business or individual practitioner whose services fall within the residential, commercial, or industrial water heating sector. The provider network is structured to support service seekers, procurement specialists, and industry researchers who need to locate credentialed professionals within specific geographic markets. For context on how this provider network fits within the broader plumbing services reference network, see the Water Heater Provider Network Purpose and Scope page.

What each provider covers

Every provider in this network captures the professional and operational profile of a water heater service provider. Providers are organized around four primary service categories:

  1. Installation contractors — professionals who perform new system installations, including tank-type, tankless (on-demand), heat pump, and solar-assisted water heaters.
  2. Repair and maintenance specialists — technicians focused on diagnostic work, component replacement (anode rods, heating elements, thermostats, pressure relief valves), and system tune-ups.
  3. Commercial and industrial service providers — firms equipped to handle high-capacity systems, boiler-adjacent configurations, and multi-unit residential or commercial properties.
  4. Hybrid and specialty system contractors — operators credentialed for heat pump water heaters, indirect-fired systems, or condensing gas configurations that require additional technical qualification.

Each entry identifies the provider's primary service type, service area coverage, applicable licensing credentials, and any manufacturer certifications relevant to specific equipment brands or system types. Where available, providers reflect compliance with the International Plumbing Code (IPC) and the Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC), both of which establish the baseline installation and inspection standards enforced by state and local building authorities across the country.

Geographic distribution

The provider network covers all 50 states, organized by metropolitan service area and county-level coverage zones. Provider density reflects the actual distribution of licensed plumbing contractors in the United States — the Bureau of Labor Statistics Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics program identifies plumbers, pipefitters, and steamfitters as a combined occupational category numbering over 400,000 employed workers nationally, with the highest concentrations in California, Texas, Florida, New York, and Illinois.

Urban markets such as Los Angeles County, Cook County (Chicago), Harris County (Houston), and Maricopa County (Phoenix) carry the highest provider volume within the network. Rural and frontier service areas have reduced provider density, which reflects the underlying workforce geography rather than any editorial selectivity.

Providers are not limited to companies holding state-level master plumber licenses. Journeyman-licensed technicians operating under a licensed contractor of record are also indexed where their independent service offerings are verifiable. State licensing boards — such as the California Contractors State License Board (CSLB), the Texas State Board of Plumbing Examiners (TSBPE), and the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) — are the primary verification sources for credential status in their respective jurisdictions.

For guidance on navigating the provider network's search and filtering tools, the How to Use This Water Heater Resource page provides a structured reference on query methods and result interpretation.

How to read an entry

Each provider network entry follows a standardized format. The fields presented in every provider are:

Entries do not include customer reviews, ratings, or comparative performance claims. The provider network functions as a professional index, not a consumer review platform. Credential verification remains the responsibility of the inquiring party through the applicable state licensing board portal.

What providers include and exclude

Included in providers:

Excluded from providers:

The provider network does not index providers solely on the basis of self-reported information. State licensing board data serves as the foundational verification layer for credential fields. Where a license status cannot be confirmed through a publicly accessible state board database, the provider is either withheld or flagged as pending verification.

Safety-critical installations — specifically those involving Temperature and Pressure Relief (T&P) valves, gas line connections, and venting configurations governed by the International Mechanical Code (IMC) — require providers with appropriate licensing in every jurisdiction. Providers annotate gas appliance and venting specializations separately from general plumbing credentials, reflecting the distinct qualification pathways that 38 states maintain for gas work relative to water-only plumbing installations.

The full scope of provider categories and the organizational logic behind the provider network are described in the Water Heater Providers index, which serves as the canonical reference for entry classification across all regions.