- 05May
Best Licensed Gas Fitters in Hornsby: How to Verify and What It Costs (2026)
Unlicensed gas work in NSW carries fines of $5,500 to $25,000 under the Gas and Electricity (Consumer Safety) Act, and if anything goes wrong — a leak, an explosion, a carbon monoxide incident — your home insurance is almost always void. Insurers know this. They check. And when a claim sits on the wrong side of that licence boundary, they decline.
The hard part is that most Hornsby homeowners don’t know how to tell whether the bloke quoting to install their new BBQ, replace their hot water system, or extend a gas line is actually licensed. The van might say “plumbing & gas.” The website might mention “qualified team.” None of that is verification. Licensing is.
Here’s exactly how to verify a Hornsby gas fitter’s NSW licence in 30 seconds, what gas work legally requires one, and what each common job actually costs in the Hornsby Shire in 2026. No marketing fluff, no padded scare tactics — just the information you need to hire someone you can trust around your gas meter.
How to Verify a Gas Fitter’s NSW Licence in 30 Seconds
There’s exactly one place in NSW where licence verification lives — NSW Fair Trading’s free public lookup tool. Anyone telling you otherwise (including the gas fitter themselves) is wrong.
Step 1: Find the licence number on their van, business card, or website
A legitimate NSW gas fitter is legally required to display their licence number on:
- Their work vehicle (visible on the side, not just inside the cab)
- Their business card
- Their website footer or contact page
- Their written quote and invoice
For Rectify Plumbing the number is 488202C. It’s on the van, on the footer of every page on the website, and on every quote we issue. If you can’t find a licence number in any of those places, that’s already a red flag worth pausing on.
Step 2: Go to NSW Fair Trading’s licence check tool
Open fairtrading.nsw.gov.au — Check a licence on your phone. It’s free, no login required, takes about 10 seconds to load.
Step 3: Enter the number and match three things
Type in the licence number, hit search, and the result shows:
- The licence holder’s name (should match the person quoting you, or their business)
- The business name (should match the van or invoice)
- The status — must say “Current” and not be expired, suspended, or cancelled
- The conditions — which categories of gas work they’re allowed to do
If all three match and the status is current, you’re hiring a real licensed gas fitter. If anything doesn’t match — different name, expired status, “no record found” — you’ve just saved yourself a five-figure problem.
What “restricted” or “conditional” licences mean
Some NSW gas licences carry restrictions. The most common ones are:
- Gas Fitting (Restricted) — limited to specific appliance types or work classes
- Conditional licences — issued during training or transition periods
- Endorsement-specific licences — for niche work like LPG installation only
A fully unrestricted Plumber & Gas Fitter licence (which is what Rectify Plumbing holds at 488202C) covers all residential gas work plus the associated plumbing. If you’re getting a quote for hot water replacement that involves both gas and water connections, you want that full classification — not a restricted one.
Red flags before you even pick up the phone
You can usually spot a problem before you book:
- No licence number anywhere visible — van, website, business card, Google profile
- Generic phone number (1300/1800) with no local Hornsby Shire address
- No ABN listed anywhere (Rectify’s is 93 647 087 394 if you’re checking)
- Reviews mention “quote changed on site” or “tried to upsell”
- Refuses to write the callout fee down before arriving
7 Things Only a Licensed Gas Fitter Can Legally Do in NSW
This is a short list because the law is short. If the work touches the gas system, a licensed gas fitter must do it. There are no DIY exceptions, no “small jobs” carve-outs, and no “handyman who used to be a plumber” workarounds.
1. Install or replace any gas appliance
That includes hot water systems, gas cooktops, gas ovens, gas space heaters, BBQs that are hard-plumbed to natural gas, and pool heaters. Buying the appliance from a retailer doesn’t change the rule — only a licensed gas fitter can connect it.
2. Repair gas leaks — no exceptions
If you smell gas, the only legal path is to call the gas supplier (Jemena’s emergency line is 131 909) to isolate supply, then have a licensed gas fitter repair the leak. Tightening a fitting yourself or using sealant tape is illegal and dangerous.
3. Modify or extend gas lines
Adding a new gas outlet for an outdoor kitchen, extending a line for a fireplace, or relocating a stove all require a licensed gas fitter. Even moving the line by half a metre is regulated.
4. Disconnect or reconnect gas at the meter
This includes the gas isolation work that’s needed before a renovation, demolition, or any plumbing work near the gas line. Sydney Water and other tradies will not work near a gas line that hasn’t been properly isolated by a licensed fitter.
5. Certify gas work for insurance and property sales
When you sell a Hornsby home, the buyer’s solicitor often requests a gas compliance certificate. Only a licensed gas fitter can issue one — and only after inspecting work they did themselves. If you’ve had unlicensed gas work in the past, this often surfaces at the worst possible time.
6. LPG to natural gas appliance conversions
Common when you move from a regional property to a Hornsby home, or when a previous owner installed an LPG appliance and you’ve since had natural gas connected. Conversions require correct jets, regulator changes, and pressure testing — all licensed work.
7. Test for gas leaks after a quake, tree fall, or major works
After ground movement (or after Sydney Water digs near your line for water mains work), a leak test is the only safe way to confirm your gas system is intact. Licensed gas fitter only — they have the calibrated pressure-test equipment and the legal authority to recertify the system.
What Gas Work in Hornsby Specifically Costs (2026)
Honest pricing. These are real Hornsby Shire ranges from this year’s jobs.
Standard gas leak detection callout: $200–$450
Licensed gas fitter arrives, isolates supply if needed, runs pressure test, locates the leak, gives a fixed-price quote for the repair. The callout fee covers diagnosis. Repair is quoted separately and confirmed before work starts.
Gas hot water installation: $1,200–$3,500 supplied + installed
Range depends on system type (storage, continuous flow, heat pump), brand (Rinnai, Rheem, Dux, Bosch), and any extras like new gas line length or electrical work. We carry common units on the van for same-day swaps on most Hornsby callouts. See our hot water installation page for the brand and capacity-specific pricing.
New gas appliance installation (stove, oven, heater): $250–$650
The appliance you’ve bought from Harvey Norman or Reece sits in the garage for a week because the retailer’s installer can’t get to you for ten days. We can fit a stove or oven in 60–90 minutes — but if the existing connection isn’t compliant, expect another $150–$300 in upgrades.
BBQ conversion (natural gas to LPG or vice versa): $180–$380
Includes the correct jet/orifice replacement, regulator change if needed, and pressure test. A 30-minute job for an experienced gas fitter, but absolutely not a DIY job — wrong jets cause incomplete combustion and carbon monoxide.
New gas line extension: $800–$2,500
Depending on length, access, and whether it’s running through walls, under floors, or external. Common quotes in Hornsby are for extending the line to a new outdoor kitchen, adding a gas heater in a renovated bathroom, or relocating the stove during a kitchen renovation.
Emergency after-hours gas leak: $350–$650 callout + parts
If you smell gas at 2am, you call us, we attend within 30–45 minutes across Hornsby, Waitara, Asquith, Mount Colah and Hornsby Heights. The after-hours callout is higher than business hours — that’s standard across the industry — but the repair pricing is exactly the same as daytime.
Why Hornsby Has More Gas Service Calls Than Newer Suburbs
If you’ve owned a Hornsby home for a while, you’ve probably noticed that you get more gas-related plumbing issues than friends in newer Western Sydney estates. There’s a reason.
A large share of the housing stock in Hornsby, Waitara, Asquith, Mount Colah and Hornsby Heights was built between the 1950s and the early 1980s. The original gas service pipes in those homes were typically wrought iron or early galvanised steel, designed for the appliances of the era. Sixty years on, those pipes have corroded internally, the threaded joints have worked loose with thermal cycling, and the rubber regulators at the meter have hardened.
At the same time, the appliances those homes were built around are reaching end of life — original gas hot water systems, old wall furnaces, ovens installed in the 1990s. The combination of ageing pipework and end-of-life appliances drives a constant stream of repair, replacement and compliance work.
The Energy & Water Ombudsman NSW reports that complaints related to gas appliance safety and installation defects have risen consistently across older Sydney suburbs over the past decade — the pattern matches what we see weekly across Hornsby Shire.
The honest read: if your home is older than 35 years and the gas appliances haven’t been inspected this decade, it’s not a question of if you’ll need a licensed gas fitter, it’s when.
How to Choose Between 3 Quoted Hornsby Gas Fitters
You should always get at least two quotes for any gas job over $500. Here’s how to compare them so price isn’t the only factor.
Compare licence numbers (cross-check each on NSW Fair Trading)
The 30-second check from Step 1 above. Three quotes, three licence numbers, three lookups. Any fitter who isn’t on the register doesn’t get a third look.
Ask: “What’s your gas work warranty?”
Standard for licensed work in NSW is 12 months on workmanship and the manufacturer’s warranty on parts. Some fitters offer longer — Rectify warranties workmanship for 25 years on continuous-flow hot water installation. A 30-day warranty is a red flag.
Ask: “Can I see your insurance certificate of currency?”
Public liability insurance for gas work is legally required — the minimum cover is $10 million. A current certificate of currency takes the fitter five minutes to send. If they hesitate or send something that doesn’t say “current” with a clear expiry date, walk away.
Ask: “Will you give me a written gas safety certificate when finished?”
For new appliance installations and major modifications, a signed gas safety certificate is your proof for insurance, council records, and future property sale. It costs nothing to provide if the work is licensed. Anyone who says “we don’t do certificates” is telling you they’re not doing licensed work.
Look at recent Google reviews — filter for gas-related jobs
Sort the fitter’s Google reviews by recent and skim for the word “gas.” Read those specific reviews. A fitter with 200 plumbing reviews and zero gas-specific reviews probably doesn’t do much gas work. You want recent, specific gas-related reviews that mention named appliances or types of work.
Common Hornsby Gas Issues We See Weekly
The same five issues account for most of our Hornsby gas callouts:
- Pilot light failure on older hot water systems — usually a worn thermocouple, occasionally a gas valve fault. Standard fix is the thermocouple replacement ($180–$280 all in)
- Gas smell at the meter after Sydney Water digs — ground movement loosens the meter-side fittings. Pressure test, retighten or replace fittings, recertify
- Leaking BBQ regulator — the small rubber diaphragm hardens over 5–8 years. Replacement is $80–$160 supplied + fitted
- Gas heater not igniting in winter — usually a pilot or ignition fault that’s been dormant since last winter. Same-day diagnosis and repair
- LPG to natural gas conversion after renovation — common when a home gets connected to natural gas mains for the first time. Jet change on every appliance plus regulator change
Need a licensed gas fitter in Hornsby today? Call Jake direct on 0400 073 180. NSW Plumber & Gas Fitter Licence 488202C — verify it in 30 seconds at NSW Fair Trading before you call. We cover Hornsby, Waitara, Asquith, Mount Colah and Hornsby Heights, 24 hours a day.
For more on what work specifically requires a licensed gas fitter in NSW, read our companion guide on gas plumbing in Sydney and what only a licensed gas fitter can legally do. If you’re in or near Hornsby and need a general plumber as well as gas work, our Hornsby plumber page covers all services across the Hornsby Shire. For any other gas-related service we offer across Sydney, see the gas plumbers hub.
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How do I verify a plumber is a licensed gas fitter in Hornsby?
Find the licence number on their van, business card, or website, then enter it into NSW Fair Trading’s free licence check tool at fairtrading.nsw.gov.au. The lookup confirms the licence holder’s name, business, current status, and any restrictions. Takes under 30 seconds. If you can’t find a licence number to check, that’s the answer — they’re not licensed.
What’s the difference between a plumber and a gas fitter in NSW?
A general plumber holds a plumbing licence which covers water supply, drainage and sanitary plumbing. A gas fitter holds a separate licence (or a combined Plumber & Gas Fitter licence) that legally authorises gas work. Some plumbers are also licensed gas fitters and some aren’t — the way to tell is the licence classification. Rectify Plumbing’s combined Plumber & Gas Fitter licence is 488202C.
How much does an emergency gas plumber cost in Hornsby?
After-hours emergency gas callout in Hornsby in 2026 is $350–$650, with repair work quoted separately on a fixed-price basis after diagnosis. Business hours callout is $200–$450. Anyone charging over $700 just for the callout, or refusing to confirm the callout fee before they arrive, is overcharging.
Do I need a licensed gas fitter to install a new BBQ?
Yes — if the BBQ connects to natural gas at any point (hard-piped or via a quick-connect outlet), a licensed gas fitter must do the connection. Free-standing LPG BBQs with portable gas bottles you can self-install, but the moment a gas line is involved, it’s licensed work in NSW. The fine for unlicensed gas work is $5,500–$25,000 and your insurance is void.
What happens if I use an unlicensed gas plumber and there’s a leak?
Three things, all bad. First, your home insurance almost certainly won’t cover damage caused by unlicensed gas work. Second, you carry personal legal liability if anyone is injured or property is damaged. Third, NSW Fair Trading can issue penalty notices to both the unlicensed worker and the homeowner who engaged them. Always verify the licence before the work starts.
Related Articles

Gas Plumbing in Sydney: What Needs a Licensed Gas Fitter — and What Happens If You DIY
Gas Fitting Is a Licensed Trade — Separate from Plumbing
In NSW, gas fitting and plumbing are regulated separately under the Home Building Act 1989 and the Gas and Electricity (Consumer Safety) Act 2017. A plumbing licence does not automatically authorise gas fitting work. A licensed plumber who has not completed the specific gas fitting endorsement cannot legally work on your gas system — even if they're fully licensed to do everything else.
When you call a tradesperson for gas work, ask specifically whether they hold a gas fitting endorsement on their plumbing licence. A general plumbing licence alone is not sufficient. Rectify Plumbing holds both — licence number 488202C, verifiable at NSW Fair Trading — which is why we handle everything from gas line installation to appliance connection to compliance testing in a single visit.
What Counts as Gas Work Under NSW Law
The scope of what requires a licence is broader than most homeowners expect. Under Australian Standard AS/NZS 5601, which governs gas installations in Australia, licensed gas fitting work includes:
- Installing, altering, extending or repairing any gas fitting — including supply pipes, valves, flexible connectors and appliance connections
- Connecting or disconnecting any gas appliance from a fixed supply — cooktops, ovens, gas heaters, hot water systems, pool heaters, outdoor kitchen equipment
- Installing new gas points or extending existing gas lines — including outdoor BBQ points, fire pit connections and outdoor kitchen supplies
- Commissioning and pressure testing any gas installation after work is complete
- Gas leak detection and repair on fixed installations
We attended a property in Hornsby last year that had been sold six months earlier. The new owners had discovered during the sale process that the gas cooktop — installed by the previous owners as part of a kitchen renovation — had no compliance certificate. The previous owners had connected it themselves. We inspected the installation: the flexible connector was the wrong type for the appliance, the isolation valve was positioned incorrectly, and the connection had not been pressure tested. The installation had been in use for three years. We disconnected it, replaced the connector and valve, pressure tested the connection, and issued the compliance certificate. The house had been occupied for three years with a gas installation that had never been properly tested.How to Check a Gas Fitter Is Licensed in NSW
The NSW Fair Trading Licence Check
The NSW Government maintains a public licence register at www.fairtrading.nsw.gov.au. You can search by the tradesperson's name or licence number to confirm they hold a current plumbing and drainage licence with a gas fitting endorsement. Both the licence and the endorsement need to be current — a licence that has lapsed or an endorsement that was not renewed does not authorise gas fitting work.
This takes about 30 seconds and can be done from your phone. We encourage every customer to check before booking any gas tradesperson — including us. Rectify Plumbing's licence number is 488202C. Look it up. Confirm the gas fitting endorsement is current. That's exactly what you should do with anyone who works on your gas system.
What to Ask Before Work Starts
Three questions before any gas work begins on your property:
- Are you licensed for gas fitting in NSW specifically — not just general plumbing?
- Can I have your licence number to verify on Fair Trading before you start?
- Will I receive a Certificate of Compliance when the job is complete?
Our gas plumbing team handles the full range of residential and light commercial gas work across Sydney's North Shore, Hills District, Central Coast and inner west. Here's what we do regularly:
Gas Appliance Installation and Connection
Cooktops, ovens, gas heaters, pool and spa heaters, outdoor kitchen equipment. Every connection includes an appropriate isolation valve, the correct flexible connector for the appliance type, and a pressure test before the appliance is commissioned. Every job produces a compliance certificate.
Gas Hot Water System Installation and Replacement
Gas hot water is the most common gas job we handle. Storage systems, continuous flow, and heat pump-gas hybrid systems across all major brands. Our hot water installation and repair team carries common replacement units on the van for same-day installation — including emergency replacements when a system fails overnight. All hot water installations include gas commissioning and compliance certification as standard.
New Gas Lines and Outdoor Gas Points
Running a new gas supply line from your existing gas meter — for an outdoor BBQ point, a fire pit connection, an outdoor kitchen, or a new appliance location inside the home. We design the line to deliver the correct flow rate for the appliances it will supply, install isolation valves at appropriate points, and pressure test the entire installation before certifying.
Gas Leak Detection and Repair
If you can smell gas — even faintly, even intermittently — treat it seriously and call us. We use gas detection equipment to locate leaks in supply lines, at appliance connections, and at meter fittings. We do not try to locate leaks by smell alone or by turning appliances on and off. Detection equipment finds small leaks that haven't yet reached a concentration you can detect reliably.
Compliance Inspections for Property Sales and Renovations
If you're selling a property and need compliance documentation for existing gas installations, or if you're buying a property and want the gas system inspected before settlement, we carry out compliance inspections and issue certificates for installations that meet the standard. A preventative maintenance inspection that includes the gas system is something we recommend for any home over 15 years old — gas flexible connectors have a service life that most homeowners are unaware of.
Suburbs We Service for Gas Work
Our gas fitting team based in Berowra and Berowra Heights services the North Shore, Upper North Shore and Hills District as our home ground — Hornsby, Waitara, Asquith, Mount Colah, Turramurra, St Ives, Pymble, Gordon, Castle Hill, Dural, Epping, Carlingford, Chatswood, and surrounding suburbs. We also cover the Central Coast and inner west. If you're not sure whether we service your area, call us — the answer is almost certainly yes.
Get the Gas Work Done Right — First Time
Gas plumbing is not an area where cutting corners saves money. The short-term saving of not paying a licensed gas fitter is routinely outweighed by insurance complications, compliance issues at property sale, and in the worst cases, outcomes that no amount of money can fix.
Rectify Plumbing holds a current gas fitting licence — number 488202C, verifiable at NSW Fair Trading in 30 seconds. Every gas job we complete includes a pressure test and a Certificate of Compliance as a matter of course. We work across Berowra, Berowra Heights, Hornsby, Castle Hill, Epping, Carlingford, Chatswood and wider Sydney — 24 hours a day for gas emergencies.
Browse our full range of gas plumbing and general plumbing services or call Jake directly on 0400 073 180 any time. If you can smell gas right now, get outside first and call from there.
Request a Quote or Make an Enquiry → rectifyplumbing.com.au
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Gas Plumbing in Sydney: What Only a Licensed Gas Fitter Can Do — and Why It Matters
What Is Licensed Gas Work and Why Can't Anyone Just Do It?
Gas Fitting Is a Separate Licence in NSWIn NSW, plumbing and gas fitting are related but separate licences. A licensed plumber is not automatically licensed to do gas work — they need specific gas fitting qualifications on top of their plumbing licence. When you're hiring someone for gas work, it's worth specifically asking whether they hold a gas fitting licence, not just a plumbing licence.
Rectify Plumbing holds both. All gas work we complete is carried out by licensed gas fitters and comes with the required compliance certificate. That certificate matters — for insurance, for your safety, and if you ever sell the property. Take a look at our dedicated gas plumbing services page if you want to understand the full scope of what we cover.
What the Law Says Homeowners Can and Cannot DoIn NSW, homeowners can do some minor plumbing work themselves — replacing tap washers, for example. Gas is different. There is almost nothing gas-related that a homeowner can legally do without a licence. You cannot install, alter, extend, or repair any gas fitting or appliance. You cannot connect or disconnect gas appliances from the supply.
Even something as apparently simple as moving a gas cooktop a few centimetres to fit a new benchtop technically requires a licensed gas fitter to disconnect and reconnect it. We're not saying this to generate work — we're saying it because people get caught out, and more importantly, because gas work done incorrectly is dangerous in a way that a poorly fitted tap washer simply isn't.
What a Gas Compliance Certificate Actually MeansWhen a licensed gas fitter completes work on your property, they issue a Certificate of Compliance for gas fitting work. This document records what was done, confirms it was inspected and meets Australian Standard AS/NZS 5601, and is held on record with NSW Fair Trading.
If you ever have a gas incident on your property and the work wasn't certified, your insurer may decline the claim. If you're selling the property and a buyer asks for evidence of compliance on the gas installation, uncertified work is a problem. The certificate isn't just a piece of paper — it has real, practical value.
Quick tip: Before any gas work starts on your property, ask the tradesperson for their gas fitting licence number and confirm they will issue a compliance certificate on completion. Any legitimate gas fitter will have both and won't hesitate to provide them.
Warning Signs of a Gas Leak — What to Do and What Not to DoThis is the section to read carefully, because the response to a suspected gas leak is different from almost any other home problem. Getting it wrong can cause serious harm.
The Signs That Something Is WrongThe smell is the most obvious one — natural gas has a distinctive rotten egg or sulphur smell added to it specifically so leaks can be detected. If you can smell that anywhere in your home, near your appliances, or around your gas meter, treat it as a leak until confirmed otherwise.
Other signs are subtler: a hissing sound near a gas appliance or pipe, an unexplained dead patch in the garden directly above where a gas line runs underground, or a gas bill that's noticeably higher than usual without a change in usage. Underground gas lines can also be damaged by the same tree root intrusion that causes blocked drains and pipe damage — roots don't discriminate between a drainage pipe and a gas line when they're looking for a path through the soil.
What to Do If You Suspect a Gas LeakDo not turn any lights or switches on or off. Do not use your phone inside the house. Do not try to find the leak yourself or turn appliances on to test them. Open doors and windows as you leave to ventilate, get everyone out of the house including pets, and call from outside.
Call your gas network provider's emergency line first — in NSW that's Jemena on 131 909 for natural gas. They will isolate the gas supply to your property. Once the supply is isolated and the area is safe, call a licensed gas fitter to find and repair the source of the leak before gas is restored.
After a Suspected Leak — Don't Just Reset and Move OnWe've attended jobs where a homeowner has had the gas turned off due to a suspected leak, the smell has cleared, and they've turned the gas back on themselves assuming it sorted itself out. It doesn't sort itself out. A gas leak doesn't seal itself. If there was a leak, it's still there — it just isn't at a detectable concentration at that moment.
If you've had a gas incident at your property, have a licensed gas fitter inspect the installation — and if needed, run a CCTV inspection of any underground gas pipework — before the gas supply is restored. Our gas team covers Berowra, Berowra Heights, the North Shore and wider Sydney for gas inspections and leak repairs.
We were called to a property in Berowra Heights where the homeowner had noticed a faint gas smell near the hot water system for about two weeks. She'd mentioned it to a family member who told her it was probably just the pilot light and not to worry about it. When we arrived and tested the connections, we found a slow leak at a corroded fitting on the gas supply line to the unit — it had been leaking at a low level for some time. The fitting was replaced, the installation was tested and certified, and that was the end of it. If she'd left it another few weeks, particularly with the warmer weather coming and windows being closed more often, the concentration could have built to a dangerous level. The lesson is simple: if you can smell gas, even faintly, even occasionally, get it checked.
Common Gas Plumbing Jobs We Do Across Sydney and the North Shore
Gas Hot Water System Installation and Replacement
This is the most common gas job we handle. Whether it's replacing an ageing gas storage system, upgrading to a continuous flow unit, or installing gas hot water in a home that's switching from electric, the job involves more than just swapping one unit for another. The gas supply line has to deliver sufficient flow rate for the new appliance, the flue has to be correctly positioned and terminated, and the installation has to be commissioned and tested before we sign it off.
If you're considering switching to gas hot water or upgrading your existing system, our hot water installation and repair team can assess your current gas supply and advise on what's involved before you commit to anything.
Gas Cooktop and Oven ConnectionsConnecting a new gas cooktop or oven — or reconnecting an existing one after a kitchen renovation — is one of the most common gas jobs in residential properties. It's also one of the most commonly done incorrectly, often by people who assume it's as simple as screwing a flexible hose onto the appliance and turning the gas back on.
The correct process involves checking the gas supply pressure is appropriate for the appliance, installing an isolation valve in the right location, using the correct flexible connector for the appliance type, and pressure testing the connection before the appliance is commissioned. All of this has to be done by a licensed gas fitter and documented with a compliance certificate.
Outdoor Gas Lines — BBQs, Fire Pits, Outdoor KitchensRunning a permanent gas line to an outdoor entertaining area is something a lot of Sydney homeowners want, and it's a job we do regularly across Berowra, Berowra Heights and the North Shore. A permanent gas point for a BBQ or outdoor kitchen eliminates the hassle of swapping gas bottles and gives you a consistent, controlled flame.
The work involves running a gas supply line from your existing gas meter, installing isolation valves, fitting the outdoor connection point, and pressure testing the entire installation. Done properly with the right materials, an outdoor gas line is very reliable. Done with the wrong pipe type or fittings — which we've seen — it's a slow leak waiting to happen.
Gas Leak Detection and Pipe RepairsFinding a gas leak isn't always as simple as following your nose. Slow leaks in underground lines or inside wall cavities can be present for some time before they reach a concentration you can detect by smell. We use pressure testing and gas detection equipment to locate leaks accurately rather than guessing. Underground lines can also be damaged by ground movement, corrosion, or accidental impact — in the same way that a burst pipe can go undetected inside a wall until the damage is already done. Once located, the repair is straightforward — but finding it precisely first is what makes the repair reliable.
Gas vs Electric — Is It Worth Switching in a Sydney Home?
The Running Cost ArgumentGas has traditionally been cheaper to run than electricity for heating and cooking in NSW, but this comparison has become more complicated in recent years as energy prices have shifted. The honest answer is that it depends on your usage, your current tariffs, and whether you're comparing gas to standard electricity or to solar-assisted electricity.
For hot water in a household with moderate to high demand, gas — particularly continuous flow — tends to still offer a running cost advantage over standard electric storage. For cooking, most people who cook seriously prefer gas for the control it gives over heat, independent of cost.
Natural Gas vs LPGProperties connected to the natural gas network — which includes most of Berowra, Berowra Heights and the North Shore — pay reticulated gas rates, which are generally more economical than LPG. Properties not connected to the network have to use LPG bottles or bulk tanks, which have higher per-unit fuel costs. If you're on LPG and considering switching to natural gas, the first step is checking whether your property is within reach of the network — contact Jemena to confirm availability at your address.
When Gas Makes Clear SenseIf your existing gas infrastructure is already in place — gas meter, supply lines to the areas you need — then adding or upgrading gas appliances is usually cost-effective. The infrastructure cost has already been paid. If you're starting from scratch, the cost of running a new gas supply line from the street needs to be factored in. We can assess your existing setup and give you a realistic picture of what any changes would involve. Browse our full plumbing and gas services for more on what we cover.
Gas Appliance Servicing — Something Most People Skip Entirely
Gas Appliances Need Periodic ChecksMost homeowners service their car but never think about servicing their gas appliances. Burners accumulate debris and carbon buildup over time, which affects combustion efficiency and can cause incomplete burning — producing carbon monoxide rather than carbon dioxide. Flexible connectors have a service life and should be replaced periodically. Flues can become blocked or develop leaks at joints.
None of this is dramatic, but a gas appliance that's running poorly or has a deteriorated connection is a safety concern as much as an efficiency one. A periodic check — particularly for hot water systems, which run constantly — is worth including in a regular home maintenance inspection schedule.
How Old Is Your Gas Hot Water System?If you don't know how old your gas hot water system is, it's worth finding out. The age is usually encoded in the serial number — call us and we can help you decode it from the unit's data plate. Gas storage systems have an expected lifespan of around 10 to 12 years. Continuous flow units last longer — often 15 to 20 years with good maintenance — but the gas valve and burner assembly do wear over time.
A system that's approaching end of life and starting to have issues — slow recovery, pilot light problems, unusual smells — is worth replacing proactively rather than waiting for it to fail completely. We cover hot water system replacement as part of our hot water installation and repair service — same-day service available across Berowra, the North Shore and wider Sydney.
Quick tip: If your gas hot water system is over 10 years old and hasn't been serviced, it's worth a quick inspection. A service visit costs a fraction of an emergency replacement and often extends the life of the unit significantly.
Gas Work Done Right — From Berowra to the CBD
Gas plumbing isn't complicated when it's done properly by someone who knows what they're doing. What makes it different from other trades is that the margin for error is narrower — a gas installation that's 95% right is not good enough. It has to be right, it has to be tested, and it has to be certified.
Rectify Plumbing's gas fitting team works across Berowra, Berowra Heights, the North Shore, and wider Sydney. We're licensed, we test everything before we leave, and every gas job comes with a compliance certificate as a matter of course — not as an optional extra. Whether it's a gas leak you need investigated today, a hot water system you need replaced, or an outdoor gas line you've been meaning to get installed for years, we're the team to call.
Take a look at our full range of plumbing and gas services or get in touch directly. We'll give you a straight answer on what's involved before any work starts.
Request a Quote or Make an Enquiry -> rectifyplumbing.com.au [service_faqs]








