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Bloomington is one of Indiana’s most active cities, home to a large university population, a dense mix of rental properties, and established neighborhoods with homes spanning more than a century of construction history. Complete Comfort Heating, Air & Plumbing brings skilled, reliable plumbing service to Bloomington homeowners and property owners who need a team they can count on.
We handle plumbing of all kinds, from quick fixture repairs to complex diagnostic work, and we always lead with honesty about what we find.
Complete Comfort handles the full spectrum of plumbing needs across Bloomington. Our most common service calls in the area cover the following.
Whether you own a single-family home or manage multiple rental units, we’re set up to serve you efficiently and reliably.
Monroe County sits on a karst limestone foundation, and Bloomington’s hilly topography means water moves through and around properties in ways that put ongoing pressure on plumbing systems. Basement seepage, shifting soil after heavy rains, and root intrusion from mature trees in older neighborhoods are all repair triggers we see regularly here.
The city’s housing stock ranges from historic homes near campus to mid-century neighborhoods and newer developments on the outskirts. Each presents different repair challenges. Properties with decades of deferred maintenance are especially common in high-turnover rental areas, and our technicians are skilled at quickly identifying the priority issues without overwhelming homeowners or landlords with unnecessary work.
Bloomington’s renovation activity is constant, driven by homeowners updating older properties and investors improving rental units. New water heater installations, bathroom additions, and full repiping projects are all regular parts of our work in this city.
We bring the same standards to a simple fixture swap as we do to a major install. All work is permitted where required, completed to code, and tested before we leave. For landlords managing multiple properties, we can coordinate efficiently to minimize downtime and disruption to tenants.
We got a call last fall from a homeowner named Patricia in the Elm Heights neighborhood, one of Bloomington’s older residential areas close to campus. She had a toilet that rocked slightly when sat on and had noticed a faint musty odor near the bathroom floor for several weeks.
Our technician found that the wax ring seal had failed and moisture had been seeping under the floor for some time. The subfloor had softened in a small area but was still structurally sound. We replaced the wax ring, reset the toilet with a new flange, and let Patricia know what to watch for going forward. Catching it when she did kept a simple repair from becoming a major subfloor replacement. That kind of early intervention is exactly what we talk about when we recommend regular plumbing checkups.
Bloomington’s diverse housing market demands a plumbing team that’s genuinely adaptable. We’ve worked in homes from every era in this city and know what each one typically needs. Here’s what we bring to every call.
We’re committed to serving Bloomington homeowners and property managers with the reliability and honesty this community deserves.
A musty basement odor without visible moisture can point to a slow plumbing leak behind a wall, a dried-out floor drain trap, or minor seepage through the foundation. A plumber can inspect your drain lines and fixtures to rule out a plumbing source.
Most internal toilet components can be repaired affordably. Replacement makes more sense when the porcelain is cracked, the toilet runs constantly despite repeated repairs, or it’s an older low-efficiency model that wastes a lot of water.
Banging or hammering sounds often indicate water hammer, which is a pressure surge when flow stops abruptly. Squealing sounds may point to a worn washer or high water pressure. Both are worth having a plumber evaluate to prevent pipe damage over time.
A faucet dripping once per second can waste more than 3,000 gallons of water per year. Even small leaks add up quickly on your utility bill and can lead to mineral staining or surface damage around the fixture.
Frequent use of chemical drain cleaners can corrode older pipes over time, especially cast iron or older PVC. For recurring clogs, a professional drain cleaning is a safer and more effective long-term solution.