Every week, Florida homeowners pull permits for re-pipes, water heater installs, and renovation projects that need plumbing work. Most plumbers find out when the homeowner already picked someone else. PermitMap sends you every plumbing permit in your county the Monday after it clears.
See re-pipes, bathroom additions, and new construction projects before your competitors hear about them. No shared leads. Just public permit data, delivered first.
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Real permit data from the past week. Updated every Monday.
Identify whole-house re-pipe permits before homeowners finalize their contractor choice.
See bathroom additions, kitchen remodels, and other projects that need plumbing subs.
Connect with builders on new home projects before they finalize plumbing subcontractors.
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Monday morning, a Tampa-area plumbing shop opens its PermitMap feed for Hillsborough County. The week's plumbing permits are already filtered and scored: eight whole-house re-pipes, a dozen water-heater replacements, three bathroom additions, and a $24,000 commercial rough-in. The owner sorts by value, sends the commercial job to the estimator, and assigns the re-pipes to the rep who closes residential work.
By Tuesday, postcards are out to the re-pipe addresses and the rep is calling the water-heater list before those homeowners book anyone. The bathroom additions — renovation permits that quietly need a licensed plumber — go to a sequence aimed at the general contractors who pulled them. None of these are shared leads bought from a platform; they're public permits the shop reached first. By Friday the crew's next two weeks are booked, and the only cost was the time it took to read Monday's list. The same routine repeats every week, so the shop never goes back to buying shared leads — the next batch of committed plumbing projects is always waiting in Monday's feed.
We include all residential and commercial plumbing permits: re-pipes, water heater installations, bathroom additions, kitchen remodels, sewer line repairs, and new construction plumbing. Each permit includes the address, scope of work, and estimated value when available.
Most plumbers use the data to identify homeowners doing renovations that need plumbing work, reach out to re-pipe jobs before competitors, and connect with GCs on new construction projects. Some also track permit volume to identify high-activity neighborhoods.
Yes. We include renovation permits that involve plumbing work like bathroom additions, kitchen remodels, and pool house builds. These projects often need licensed plumbers even if the main permit is not labeled as plumbing.
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