Most McKinney homeowners only think about their sprinkler system when something breaks — a brown patch in the lawn, a soaked spot near a flower bed, a system that won’t turn on. By the time you call us, the question is always the same: how much is this going to cost?
I run a Collin County install crew, and we get sprinkler repair calls weekly across McKinney, Allen, Prosper, and Celina. Here’s the real breakdown of what repairs actually cost and what drives the price.
Why sprinkler repair pricing varies so much
Two yards next door to each other can have wildly different repair quotes. The variables that drive cost:
- What’s broken: A cracked spray head is $30. A blown valve under a flower bed is $200+.
- How accessible the problem is: Heads in the open lawn are quick. Valves buried under shrubs or near the foundation take time to expose.
- Age of the system: Pre-2010 systems often have parts that aren’t sold anymore. Substitution adds labor.
- Whether anything else is wrong: A leak you can see often signals other leaks you can’t. Sometimes we find 3-4 issues on what was supposed to be a single repair.
Typical sprinkler repair costs in McKinney
Rough pricing for the common stuff, McKinney service area, 2026:
Spray and rotor head replacements
The most common repair. A spray head that’s broken at the riser, cracked from a lawn mower, or simply worn out. Cost is mostly labor — the part is cheap. Multiple heads in the same trip cost less per head because the truck and travel time are already absorbed.
Valve replacements
A valve that won’t open, won’t close, or leaks at the diaphragm. Bigger job because we have to dig down to the valve box (or hand-locate it if the cover is buried), pull the bad valve, and install the replacement. Pricing varies based on whether the valve box is accessible or buried under landscaping.
Controller and timer replacements
Old Rain Bird and Hunter controllers from the 90s and early 2000s start failing the relays and zone outputs. We replace with current Hunter X-Core or Pro-C controllers in most cases. Smart controllers (Hunter Hydrawise, Rain Bird ESP-TM2 with WiFi) add cost but cut water bills 15-25% in McKinney’s clay soil.
Mainline and lateral line repairs
This is where it gets expensive. A buried mainline leak — usually in the section between the meter and the first valve — can require excavating 10-30 feet of trench. Lateral line leaks (the pipes between valves and heads) are usually shorter digs.
Backflow preventer service or replacement
Most McKinney systems have a pressure vacuum breaker. They fail from freezing damage or just age. Replacement is straightforward if the existing PVB is accessible.
Full system audit and tune-up
If you’re not sure what’s wrong, we run a full system test — every zone, every head, controller test, coverage check. Often turns up 3-5 small issues we fix in the same visit, which is cheaper than separate trip charges.
What makes McKinney sprinkler repairs expensive
Older Stonebridge Ranch and Eldorado systems
Some of the early-2000s subdivisions north of McKinney installed cheaper systems that are now hitting end-of-life. We see whole zones failing simultaneously. The right call is often a partial rebuild — replace one zone’s worth of heads and valves while we’re already on site — rather than chasing single-head repairs every few months.
Blackland clay soil
Collin County clay shifts seasonally. That shifting cracks pipe fittings over years. So you’ll find that one part of the system starts leaking, you fix it, and 18 months later a different fitting cracks. There’s no permanent fix — it’s the soil. Best you can do is use schedule-40 PVC and good glue joints to slow the cycle.
System redesigns
If a yard has been re-landscaped since the original install — new flower beds, removed trees, expanded patios — the original sprinkler layout often no longer matches what needs water. That means moving heads, capping lines, or adding zones. Not technically a repair, but it shows up in repair calls.
How to keep repair costs down
Three habits cut McKinney sprinkler repair costs in half over the long run:
- Run the system monthly even in winter. One full cycle on each zone, even when grass is dormant. It flushes the lines and you spot small leaks before they become big ones.
- Winterize properly. Drain the system before the first hard freeze. Frozen water in the backflow preventer or above-ground pipe is the #1 cause of expensive spring repairs.
- Fix small problems immediately. A broken spray head that’s leaking is wasting water AND eroding soil around the valve. Putting it off doesn’t save money — it usually compounds the damage.
When repair stops making sense
If a system is 25+ years old, has the original galvanized mainline, and we’re fixing something every 6-12 months — you’re throwing good money after bad. At that point a full rebuild is cheaper over five years than chronic repairs.
Same calculus on smart controllers: if you’re running an old Rain Bird ESP-12 and getting $300 monthly summer water bills, a $400 smart controller upgrade pays for itself within two summers.
Frequently asked questions
How do I know if I have a sprinkler leak?
Three signs: water bill spikes (especially May-September), wet spots in the lawn that don’t dry out, and zones that take longer than usual to cover. Any of those means call for a system check.
Can I run my system if one zone is broken?
Yes. Just skip that zone in the controller schedule. But don’t leave it permanently broken — adjacent zones are usually working harder to compensate, which stresses those heads and valves.
Do you handle sprinkler repair in Allen and Prosper, too?
Yes. See our Allen sprinkler repair and Prosper sprinkler repair pages for what’s included by city. Same crew, same pricing approach.
What’s the difference between repair and a full system replacement?
Repair is fixing what’s broken on an existing layout. Replacement is pulling out the old system and installing new. We do both. For systems under 15 years old we lean repair. For 25+ year old systems with chronic problems, replacement is usually the better long-term call.
Do you install smart controllers?
Yes. Most of our 2026 installs use Hunter Hydrawise or Rain Bird ESP-TM2 with WiFi. Smart controllers track local weather, skip cycles after rain, and let you adjust zones from your phone. They cut water usage 15-25% on McKinney clay.
Get a real quote on your sprinkler repair
Every sprinkler system is different. The only way to give a real number is to look at what’s actually wrong. We do free assessments across McKinney and the rest of Collin County. Call (903) 462-0316 or request a quote online.