Why Every Family Should Know Basic Home Repairs
Calling a handyman for a leaky faucet costs $75 to $150 for a 15-minute job. Replacing a clogged garbage disposal costs $200 installed when the part itself is $30. Most home repairs that families pay someone else to handle are learnable in an afternoon with a YouTube video and $20 in supplies.
- Why Every Family Should Know Basic Home Repairs
- Fix 1: Running or Leaking Toilet
- Fix 2: Leaky Faucet
- Fix 3: Patching Drywall Holes
- Fix 4: Painting Walls and Trim
- Fix 5: Unclogging Drains Without Chemicals
- Fix 6: Replacing Light Switches and Outlets
- Fix 7: Weatherstripping Doors and Windows
- The Tools Every Family Needs
- Know When to Call a Professional
This is not about becoming your own contractor. It is about building enough knowledge to handle the repairs that come up every year in every home, and to know when something actually requires a professional.
Fix 1: Running or Leaking Toilet
A running toilet wastes up to 200 gallons of water per day. That is $30 to $70 on your water bill every month for a problem that a $10 flapper replacement fixes in 10 minutes. Turn off the water supply valve behind the toilet, flush to drain the tank, swap the flapper, and turn it back on. Done.
If the toilet rocks, it is usually loose bolts at the base. Tighten them. If the toilet still moves, the wax ring may be compromised, which is a $20 fix that takes an hour and requires pulling the toilet. More involved, but still DIY-able.
Fix 2: Leaky Faucet
Dripping faucets are almost always a worn washer or O-ring. Shut off the water under the sink, take off the handle (usually one screw under a decorative cap), and you will see the cartridge or seat washer. Replace it. Parts cost $5 to $15 at any hardware store. The repair takes 20 minutes once you have done it once.
Fix 3: Patching Drywall Holes
Door handles, furniture, and kids create holes in drywall. For holes under 4 inches, a mesh patch kit from the hardware store takes 30 minutes and dries overnight. Sand it smooth, prime it, and paint. For larger holes, you cut a clean square, cut a patch from a scrap piece, and use backing boards to hold it. More steps, but nothing that requires professional skill.
Fix 4: Painting Walls and Trim
Professional painters charge $2 to $6 per square foot. A bedroom painted yourself costs $30 in paint and 4 hours of a Saturday. The secret is prep: fill nail holes, clean the walls, use painter’s tape on trim, and cut in edges before rolling. The work itself is slow and meditative, not technically difficult.
Fix 5: Unclogging Drains Without Chemicals
Liquid drain cleaners corrode pipes over time and rarely solve the underlying problem. A drain snake from the hardware store costs $20 and clears 90% of clogs in 5 minutes. For bathroom sinks, pull out the popup stopper first. It is usually hair wrapped around the rod. You do not need tools or chemicals. You need your hands and paper towels.
Fix 6: Replacing Light Switches and Outlets
A faulty outlet or a switch that crackles is a $4 part and a 15-minute job. Turn off the breaker for that circuit, verify the power is off with a non-contact voltage tester ($15, essential tool), unscrew the old outlet, match the wires to the same terminals on the new one, and screw it back in. This is middle-school science class. Do not pay an electrician $95 for this.
Fix 7: Weatherstripping Doors and Windows
A door that lets in cold air in winter adds $15 to $40 to your heating bill every month. Foam weatherstripping is self-adhesive, costs $4 a roll, and takes 10 minutes per door. V-strip metal weatherstripping lasts longer and costs $8. Either one pays for itself in the first month.
The Tools Every Family Needs
You do not need a full workshop. You need seven things: a cordless drill, a set of screwdrivers, a hammer, needle-nose pliers, a utility knife, a tape measure, and a non-contact voltage tester. Everything above is done with these tools. Total cost under $150, and they last for decades.
Know When to Call a Professional
Anything involving the main electrical panel, gas lines, structural walls, or a roof that is actively leaking in multiple spots requires a licensed professional. The risk-to-savings ratio does not work in your favor on those jobs. Everything else, try it yourself first.
Home repairs are part of owning a home. So is managing the cost of homeownership. If you are working on reducing overall household spending, the Family Budget Reset guide pairs well with home maintenance planning and helps you build a realistic emergency fund for the repairs you cannot DIY.
