blog.category.voor-klanten

How much does a plumber (loodgieter) cost in Amsterdam? A price guide

6 min lezenAvrora.nl

A dripping tap, a blocked drain, a toilet cistern that won't stop running, or a new washing machine that needs connecting — for jobs like these you call a plumber (in Dutch, a loodgieter). And the question is almost always the same: what's this going to cost? Nobody can give you an exact figure up front, because it depends on dozens of details. But an honest ballpark for Amsterdam is absolutely possible. Here's how the pricing works and what to check so the final bill doesn't surprise you.

Two ways to charge: per hour or fixed price per job

Before you compare numbers, it helps to understand how you'll be billed. There are two broad models.

By the hour. The plumber charges a set hourly rate and bills the time actually worked. This suits jobs where the scope isn't clear up front: "take a look at where it's leaking and fix it." The downside is that the final total can run higher than expected if the problem goes deeper than it first looked.

Fixed price per job. The plumber quotes a single amount for the whole task in advance — for example, "replace the mixer tap — €X." That's easier on your budget: you know the outcome before work begins. It works well for clearly defined jobs with predictable scope.

For urgent odds and ends, hourly is more common; for standard work (replacing a tap, fitting a toilet, connecting a washing machine) many plumbers are happy to quote a fixed price. If you want certainty, simply ask for a price for the whole job.

Roughly what an hour costs in Amsterdam

A quick caveat first: the figures below are approximate. The market shifts, and the actual rate depends on the person and the job.

  • Self-employed plumber (ZZP): roughly €45–70 per hour. This is the most common arrangement for household jobs.
  • Through a company or service: usually more expensive, because of overhead, scheduling, guarantees and insurance. The rate can sit noticeably above a self-employed one.
  • Urgent call-outs, evenings or weekends: a surcharge on the normal rate is standard practice, and for a leak in the middle of the night it can be substantial.

On top of the hourly rate there are almost always one-off fees, covered below. That's why a half-hour job rarely costs half the hourly rate.

What actually drives the price

The same phrase — "it's leaking, fix it" — can come out very differently. Here are the main factors.

Type and complexity of the job. Clearing a drain and re-running a section of pipework call for different levels of skill, tools and risk. The more specialised the task, the higher the rate.

Materials. These are often billed separately from labour — a new mixer tap, flexible connectors, sealant, washers, fittings. Ask up front: are materials included or added on top, and who buys them?

Urgency. "It's flooding the neighbours below, it has to be now" is almost always pricier than "sometime this week is fine." If it isn't an emergency leak, flexibility on the date saves money.

Accessibility. Amsterdam often means narrow stairs in old canal houses, upper floors with no lift, limited parking and paid zones. If it's hard to get tools inside or there's nowhere to park, that can affect both the price and the time.

Condition of the property. An older building, pipes buried in the walls, non-standard plumbing, or a stopcock that's only reachable through the neighbours' flat — all of this makes the work trickier and potentially longer.

To get a sense of which category your job falls into, take a look at how household jobs are grouped under repairs and plumbing work — it shows what people typically ask a professional to do.

ZZP, company or marketplace — what's the difference

Where you look for a plumber is a question in itself, and the answer shapes both price and convenience.

Self-employed plumber (ZZP). Usually cheaper, you arrange things directly, and it's flexible on timing. The catch: finding and vetting them is on you — reading reviews, checking experience, noticing how clearly someone communicates.

Company / service firm. More expensive, but it handles organisation and selection, sometimes guarantees and insurance, and more often runs an out-of-hours emergency line. Good when predictability matters and you'd rather not do the searching yourself.

Marketplace. The middle ground: you describe the job once, and several plumbers respond with their own prices. That lets you compare offers and read reviews in one place. Curious how that works? There's a short walkthrough at how it works, and you can gather responses from professionals for your specific job through finding a professional. For jobs in the capital specifically, there's a dedicated page for repairs and plumbing in Amsterdam.

One-off fees: call-out charges and minimum hours

This is usually where the "surprises" on the bill hide. The two most common charges:

Call-out fee (voorrijkosten). A fixed amount for the plumber simply coming to you — it covers the trip and travel time. Charged separately from the work, and with plumbers it's often a bit higher than with a general handyman.

Minimum hours. Many professionals won't take a job for less than an hour (sometimes more), even if the actual work takes twenty minutes. So "just tighten a nut in fifteen minutes" is often billed as a full hour.

This isn't a trick — it's the basic economics of small jobs: travel and setup take time. But these are exactly the fees you want to clarify before work starts, so the final amount doesn't catch you out.

A short checklist to avoid surprises

Run through this list before you agree to anything:

  • Ask about the charging model — hourly or fixed per job — and what's included.
  • Check the call-out fee and whether minimum hours apply.
  • Sort out materials — in the price or on top, and who buys them.
  • Describe the job in detail — with photos, a short clip of the leak, measurements and the address (floor, lift, parking) so the estimate is accurate.
  • Compare several offers rather than taking the first one.
  • Read reviews and notice how clearly someone answers your questions.
  • Agree the estimate up front and ask to be told if anything turns out pricier than planned along the way.

The more precisely you describe the job, the sharper the price — a vague "something's leaking" always gets quoted with a margin for the unknown.

In short

For Amsterdam, a reasonable ballpark for a self-employed plumber is roughly €45–70 per hour, higher at companies, plus any call-out fee and minimum hours. The real figure depends on the type of job, materials, urgency and how accessible the property is. The best way to avoid overpaying is to clarify all the terms in advance and compare a few responses.

Want to price up related household services too? See our guide to cleaning prices in Amsterdam and the breakdown of what a handyman costs in Amsterdam.

And if you're a plumber yourself and want jobs in Amsterdam, you can register as a professional and respond to jobs nearby.

Klaar om te beginnen?

Sluit je aan bij Avrora en vind betrouwbare professionals

Gratis registreren