Leaks & urgent repairs
GOODWATERPLUMBING
Plumbing for real life Auckland-wide concept
From the drip you can hear to the pipes you can’t see, a good website should make getting help feel simple.
Drag gently to look around
A better first conversation
Most people don’t know which valve, trap or pipe is causing the problem—and they shouldn’t have to. Start with what you can see, hear or feel. A real plumber does the diagnosis.
Find the closest problem ↓Problems we help with
Service choices written in the customer’s language—not a catalogue of trade terminology.
Leaks & urgent repairs
Hot water
Drains & waste
Bathrooms & upgrades
If water is moving now
A real emergency page should give calm, appropriate guidance, make calling obvious and ask only the details that help route the response.
Keep clear of electrical hazards and unsafe areas.
Only isolate water if it is safe and you know how.
Share the room, symptom and whether water is still moving.
How a good enquiry works
Choose the room or outside area where you notice the problem.
Describe what you can see, hear or smell in everyday language.
Say whether it is happening now or if you are planning ahead.
Try the enquiry journey
This fictional form asks for no contact details and sends nothing. It demonstrates how a real plumbing site can gather a useful first brief without overwhelming someone.
No name, phone, email, address or photos are requested.
Your demo brief
On a real site, the next step could add contact details and optional photos taken safely. This concept stores and sends nothing.
Trust should be specific
This concept deliberately invents no reviews, licences, service areas, warranties or customer results.
Use the client’s actual registrations and memberships.
Show real work with permission and useful context.
Say exactly where the team goes and what it handles.
Use genuine feedback that customers can verify.
For plumbing businesses ready to look established
A fast, focused website that shows the right proof, answers the questions customers actually have, and turns a vague message into a useful job brief.