Garbage Disposal Repair Cost — 2026 Price Guide

Garbage disposal repair costs $70-$400, with the national average at $235. A full replacement (unit plus professional installation) runs $200-$625. A DIY swap costs $75-$200 for the unit alone.

These numbers come from compiled pricing data across HomeAdvisor, Angi, HomeGuide, and NerdWallet for 2025-2026. Below, we break down costs by problem type, HP level, and brand — plus a clear framework for deciding whether to repair or replace.

For a step-by-step walkthrough of the replacement process itself, see our garbage disposal replacement guide.

garbage disposal under kitchen sink that may need repair or replacement

Repair costs by problem

The issue determines the price. A simple jam fix costs far less than diagnosing an electrical failure.

ProblemTypical CostWhat Is Involved
Clogged$70-$200Plunger, P-trap cleaning, or drain snake
Leaking (top/side)$80-$180Tighten connections, replace gaskets
Jammed / humming$75-$175Clear obstruction, free flywheel
Won’t turn on$70-$550Could be switch ($70) or burned motor ($400+)
General repair$70-$400Diagnosis + fix

The wide range on “won’t turn on” reflects the diagnostic uncertainty. A tripped reset button is a free fix. A burned motor winding means replacement — and some plumbers charge the diagnostic fee even when they recommend replacing instead of repairing.

Replacement costs (unit + installation)

When repair does not make sense, here is what replacement runs in 2026.

ComponentCost Range
Disposal unit only$75-$400
Professional installation labor$80-$200
Total (unit + install)$200-$625
Average total$300-$450
High-end (1 HP+ with pro install)$500-$950

Unit prices by horsepower

HPBudgetMid-RangePremium
1/3 HP$50-$75$75-$100
1/2 HP$75-$100$100-$150$150-$200
3/4 HP$100-$150$150-$250$250-$350
1 HP$150-$200$200-$300$300-$400+

Prices by brand

BrandEntryMid-RangePremium
InSinkErator Badger$80-$120
InSinkErator Evolution$200-$300$300-$400
Waste King$75-$100$100-$175$175-$291
Moen$100-$150$150-$250$250-$350

InSinkErator holds roughly 70% of the US residential market. Their Badger series at $80-$120 is the most commonly installed budget disposal, while the Evolution line targets homeowners who want quieter operation and stronger grinding. Waste King competes on warranty length — the L-8000 (1 HP) carries a 20-year warranty at $150-$200, making it the strongest long-term value in the market.

DIY vs Professional — Which Saves More?

DIY SwapProfessional
Unit cost$75-$400$75-$400 (or marked up $30-$50)
Labor$0 (your time: 1-2 hours)$80-$200
Total$75-$400$200-$625
SavingsYou save $80-$200 doing it yourself

DIY makes sense when:

  • You are swapping same-mount to same-mount (the most common scenario)
  • An electrical outlet already exists under the sink
  • You own basic tools (pliers, screwdriver, plumber’s putty)
  • You are comfortable working in a tight space under the sink

Hire a professional when:

  • This is a first-time installation (no existing outlet or drain setup)
  • You are switching mounting types (3-bolt to EZ Mount or vice versa)
  • The disposal is hardwired and you are not comfortable with electrical work
  • You want warranty protection on the installation work

The DIY route saves $100-$200 on labor. For a detailed walkthrough, see our DIY installation steps.

Plumbers charge $50-$120 per hour, with a minimum service call fee of $50-$100. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports median plumber wages around $60,000/year, which translates to those hourly rates after overhead and insurance. Weekend or emergency calls carry a 1.5x-2x premium — schedule during weekday hours to avoid the markup.

Repair or replace? the decision guide

This is the question we get asked most. The answer depends on three factors: age, problem type, and repair cost.

Disposal AgeRecommendationReasoning
Under 5 yearsRepair (usually)Plenty of lifespan left; most repairs cost less than $175
5-10 yearsRepair if under $150Entering the zone where another problem follows the first
Over 10 yearsReplaceAverage lifespan is 10-12 years; repair costs overlap with new-unit prices

Replace immediately — do not spend on repairs — if:

  • The disposal leaks from the bottom (internal seals have failed; this is not fixable)
  • The housing is cracked or corroded through
  • Multiple problems are occurring at once (leaking AND humming AND slow draining)
  • The motor hums but the flywheel turns freely (burned motor windings)

Repair first if:

  • The problem is a jam or tripped reset (free to fix yourself)
  • A gasket or connection is loose (under $30 in parts)
  • The unit is under 5 years old with a single issue

The average garbage disposal lasts 10-12 years with normal use. Budget models (1/3 to 1/2 HP) tend to fail closer to 8 years. Premium units with stainless steel grinding components can run 15+ years. If yours is past the 10-year mark and something breaks, replacement is almost always the better investment.

How to Save on Disposal Costs

  1. Get 2-3 quotes from plumbers before committing. Prices vary significantly by region and company.
  2. Buy the unit yourself from a hardware store or online. Some plumbers mark up the disposal $30-$50 above retail when they supply it.
  3. Choose a same-mount replacement to minimize labor time. Ask the plumber what mounting type you have before shopping.
  4. Consider Waste King for long-term value. The L-8000 (1 HP, $150-$200) includes a 20-year warranty that covers in-home service. Even if it costs $50 more upfront, the warranty pays for itself if anything goes wrong.
  5. Avoid weekend and emergency calls. That 1.5x-2x premium can add $50-$100+ to the bill.

For help picking a model, see our best garbage disposals guide with picks by budget and household size.

FAQ

How much does a plumber charge to replace a garbage disposal?

A plumber charges $150-$400 total for a garbage disposal replacement, including both the unit and labor. The labor portion runs $80-$200, with most jobs taking 1-2 hours. If you buy the disposal yourself, you pay only for labor. Total cost depends on whether the mounting type matches (simple swap) or requires flange work (more labor time).

Is it cheaper to repair or replace a garbage disposal?

Repair is cheaper if the disposal is under 8 years old and the fix costs less than $150. Beyond that threshold, replacement makes more financial sense. A new mid-range disposal costs $100-$250, and a same-mount DIY swap avoids any labor cost. When a repair quote approaches $200, you are paying nearly what a new unit costs.

How much does a garbage disposal cost at Home Depot?

Garbage disposals at Home Depot range from $75-$400. The InSinkErator Badger 5 (1/2 HP) runs $80-$100 and is their best seller. Mid-range options like the Waste King L-3200 (3/4 HP) cost $100-$150. Premium models like the InSinkErator Evolution Excel (1 HP) reach $350-$400. Online prices are typically $10-$20 lower than in-store.

Can I install a garbage disposal myself to save money?

Yes. A same-mount DIY swap requires basic tools (pliers, screwdriver, plumber’s putty) and takes 30-90 minutes. This saves $80-$200 in plumber labor. See our DIY installation steps for the full walkthrough. First-time installations where no outlet or drain setup exists should involve a professional.

How do I know if my garbage disposal needs to be replaced?

Five signs point toward replacement: the unit is over 10 years old, it leaks from the bottom (internal seal failure), the motor hums but the flywheel spins freely (burned windings), you have had multiple repairs in the past year, or it no longer grinds food effectively despite clearing all jams. A flange repair can sometimes fix a top leak without replacing the whole unit.