Water Heater Installation in Johns Island, SC
Blanton & Sons has installed water heaters across Johns Island since 1998, handling everything from tank replacements to tankless conversions. Our licensed plumbers (license #M110197) understand the salt air and hard water that shorten unit lifespan here, and we pull all required South Carolina permits on your behalf.
How Much Does Water Heater Installation Cost in Johns Island?
Most tank installations run $875–$1,750 (regional average around $1,300), and a Charleston-area all-in job with permit typically lands between $1,200–$2,200, depending on tank size, fuel type, and whether any code-related upgrades — like an expansion tank or updated venting — are needed. Switching to tankless runs higher, up to $3,500 installed, which is common for larger households or homes with limited utility closet space. Access matters too: crawl space clearance and venting runs under raised or pier-and-beam homes can shift the final number, which is why we price after an on-site look rather than a phone quote.
What’s Included in a Water Heater Installation
Free on-site assessment and sizing
A technician checks your current unit, fuel type (gas or electric), home size, and household hot water usage to size the replacement correctly — no guessing off a nameplate. This is also when we look at access: garage, closet, or crawl space under a raised home.
New unit installation with code-compliant connections
Water lines, gas or electrical connections, venting, and an expansion tank where required — all brought up to current code, not just reconnected as-is. On raised or pier-and-beam homes, this also means confirming the crawl space setup can actually accommodate the unit you’re getting.
Permit pulled where required
Charleston County requires a plumbing/mechanical permit for water heater replacement under the SC-adopted IPC/Fuel Gas Code — we handle that paperwork, not you.
Old unit removal and disposal
We haul away the old tank; you don’t have to figure out where it goes.
Upfront, written pricing
You get a firm number before any work starts, based on the tank or tankless option you choose.
Testing and walkthrough
We test for leaks, check temperature and pressure relief function, and walk you through your new unit before we leave.
How Long Does Water Heater Installation Really Take?
Most installations are finished in a single visit — typically 2–4 hours for a straightforward tank swap, a bit longer for a tankless conversion or a job with permit-related upgrades. For example, a recent Charleston-area job involved replacing a 40-gallon natural gas unit installed in an attic space: the crew filled and fired the new unit, ran a full leak test, and added a triple-guard leak detection system before wrapping up, all backed by a 6-year parts and labor warranty. We can add that same leak-detection system to most installations on request.
How Long Does a Water Heater Last in Johns Island, SC?
Tank water heaters typically last 8–12 years, and tankless units can run 15–20+ years with regular maintenance. On Johns Island specifically, coastal humidity and hard water tend to push tank lifespans toward the lower end of that range, especially for units installed in garages or crawl spaces close to the ground. Homes on private wells with iron or sulfur content also see faster tank wear from sediment buildup. If your tank is 8+ years old and you’re on well water or close to the coast, it’s worth having it checked before it fails on you.
Signs You Need a New Water Heater
Rusty or metallic-smelling hot water, a tank that’s banging or making popping sounds, water pooling at the base of the unit, inconsistent water temperature, or a unit over 10 years old are the main warning signs. On Johns Island specifically, we also see a lot of premature tank failure from sediment buildup in well-water homes and corrosion in units installed in humid, poorly ventilated crawl spaces under raised homes. If you’re seeing any of these, it’s cheaper to replace on your schedule than on an emergency call.
The right Heating service saves you money
Do I Need a Permit to Replace a Water Heater in South Carolina?
Yes, in most cases. Charleston County requires a plumbing or mechanical permit to replace a water heater — gas or electric — under the SC-adopted IPC/Fuel Gas Code. Skipping the permit can cause problems at resale or with insurance if there’s ever a water heater–related claim. Blanton & Sons pulls the permit as part of every installation, so you don’t have to deal with the county yourself. You can look up our license directly on the South Carolina Department of Labor, Licensing and Regulation contractor lookup.
Does Salt Air and Hard Water Affect Water Heaters on Johns Island?
Coastal salt air and hard water are harder on water heaters here than most homeowners realize. Salt air accelerates corrosion on tank fittings, exposed connections, and anode rods faster than it would inland, and Johns Island’s humidity makes it worse — especially in garages facing prevailing coastal winds and in crawl spaces under raised or pier-and-beam homes near the water. Add in the private wells with iron and sulfur content out toward River Road, and you’ve got two separate mechanisms working against a tank at once — salt air attacking the outside, mineral-heavy water attacking the inside. For raised and pier-and-beam homes specifically, we factor crawl space clearance and existing venting into the install itself, since that affects what tank size and configuration actually fits — something a lot of installers don’t check until they’re already under the house. This is also why we don’t give blanket lifespan numbers without seeing the actual home: a unit in a well-ventilated garage inland on the island will usually outlast one in a humid crawl space closer to the water, even with identical usage.
What Customers Say
Water heater jobs get some of our most consistent feedback, and the same themes come up again and again: clear communication, on-time arrival, and a clean work area when the crew leaves. Kyle is named specifically across several separate water heater installations, with reviewers describing him as thorough and easy to work with from the first call through completion. Other reviews single out Wesley and James for a combined water heater and faucet repair, and Mike Haltiwanger and Jason for a straightforward hot water heater swap. One customer’s tankless installer was called “very professional and knowledgeable,” and praised for making sure everything was picked up before leaving.
Service Area
We install water heaters across Johns Island — the Maybank Highway corridor, the River Road corridor, neighborhoods nearer the James Island connector and Stono River Bridge, and out toward the Kiawah, Seabrook, and Bohicket Marina side of the island. Whether you’re in one of the newer subdivisions off Maybank Highway or an older property along the river, we size and install based on the home in front of us, not a generic average. If you’re just off-island, we also serve West Ashley and the surrounding service area.
Why Blanton & Sons
Blanton & Sons has installed water heaters and full plumbing systems across the Charleston Lowcountry since 1998 — we’re a family-owned company led by Aaron and Brandon Blanton, with a team of about 40 people and our name on every truck that shows up at your door. We’re a licensed Mechanical Contractor in South Carolina (license #M110197), and we carry a 4.8/5 Google rating from customers across the area. We pull permits, size equipment properly instead of guessing off the old unit’s nameplate, and walk every customer through their new system before we leave.
When one Johns Island customer’s water heater failed, our crew — Randy and John on the install, with Kyle walking the homeowner through the full gas tankless conversion — completed the job the same day, in what the customer later described as a “seamless” process. Kyle turns up by name in several other water heater reviews too, not just this one job. Beyond water heaters, we handle the full range of plumbing installation and replacement work Johns Island homes need.
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What Our Customers Say
Overall amazing experience with these guys. We did major duct work and new AC unit which they installed the next day. Guys were here for 12.5 hours working very hard to get the job finished but due to part issue bc of manufacturer they had to come back. They came back the next day with the right part and finished the job. Kyle D especially worked extremely hard – working through rain and high heat to finish the work. Give that man a raise!
Drew M.
Will Jackson and Jacob Nettles from Blanton & Sons just finished installing a new heating and ac system at my home. They were prompt, diligent, efficient, and took the time to explain everything to me. They even came back after completing the project to make sure everything was working properly. In addition to demonstrating exceptional competence at their craft, Will and Jacob were extremely polite and friendly. They showed great respect for my property and cleaned up the work area very well. I will be recommending them to everyone.
S. H.
Service Areas
Charleston is home, but our HVAC and plumbing teams are out working across all of Greater Charleston, every day.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why does my water heater smell like sulfur?
A sulfur or rotten-egg smell usually comes from bacteria reacting with the anode rod inside the tank, and it’s more common in homes on private wells with naturally occurring sulfur — which describes a lot of properties out toward River Road on Johns Island. Flushing the tank or replacing the anode rod often fixes it; if it keeps coming back, the water heater itself may need replacing.
Best water heater brands for hard water on Johns Island?
For tankless installations, we install Navien and Rinnai, both of which hold up well against hard water and coastal humidity when installed and vented correctly. Installation quality and exposure to salt air matter more for lifespan here than brand alone. See Navien’s warranty information for what’s covered on a tankless unit.
Tankless vs. tank water heater for Johns Island homes?
A traditional tank costs less upfront, running $875–$1,750 installed, and suits most households. Tankless costs more — up to $3,500 — but takes less space, which matters in the island’s newer, tighter-footprint homes, and won’t run out during back-to-back showers. Older homes with more mechanical room space often do fine with a tank instead. See our tankless water heater page for a closer look at whether it’s the right fit for your home.
Same-day water heater installation on Johns Island?
In most cases, yes. We keep tank units in stock for same-day tank-to-tank swaps and have completed same-day tankless conversions when a customer’s water heater failed without warning. Call ahead so we can confirm availability and get a technician routed to you the same day.
Emergency water heater replacement near me on Johns Island?
Yes. A failed water heater doesn’t wait for a convenient time, and we treat it that way — call us and we’ll get a technician out to assess the failure and get hot water restored as quickly as possible, including same-day replacement when the unit needs to be swapped rather than repaired.
Water heater installation near me on Johns Island?
Blanton & Sons has installed water heaters across Johns Island since 1998, and we’re based just across the water in Ravenel — close enough that same-day service is realistic for most calls. We handle tank and tankless installation, permit pulling, and removal of your old unit as part of every job.
How much does it cost to replace a water heater in South Carolina?
Statewide averages run in a similar range to what we see on Johns Island — roughly $875–$1,750 for a standard tank installation, more if a permit, code upgrade, or tankless conversion is involved. Coastal counties like Charleston sometimes run slightly higher due to permit requirements and installation conditions specific to the area.
Can I install my own water heater in South Carolina?
South Carolina requires a licensed plumbing or mechanical contractor to pull a permit for water heater replacement in most jurisdictions, including Charleston County, which effectively means DIY installation isn’t code-compliant here even if you do the physical work yourself. Skipping the permit can cause problems later at resale or with an insurance claim. We handle the permit and connections so the job is documented properly from the start.
Gas vs. electric water heater on Johns Island?
Gas water heaters cost more upfront but recover hot water faster and run cheaper monthly where gas is available. Electric units cost less to install and skip gas line work entirely, which makes them common in homes without existing gas service. Which one fits depends on your existing fuel setup and household hot water demand, both of which we check during the free assessment.
Need a water heater installed on Johns Island?
Call or request a quote online — most installs can be scheduled the same day.