Quick Answer

Replace your hot water system if it is over 10 years old, repair costs exceed 50% of a new unit’s price, or you are experiencing repeated faults. A new storage system costs $900–$2,500 installed; heat pump systems cost $2,500–$4,500 but qualify for Victorian government rebates of up to $1,000. When in doubt, call a licensed plumber — hot water systems involve gas, electricity, and mains pressure.

The 50% Rule: When Repair Becomes False Economy

The industry benchmark is straightforward: if the repair quote exceeds 50% of what a replacement unit costs installed, replace it. A plumber’s call-out and element replacement on a 12-year-old electric storage system might cost $350–$500. A comparable new system installed runs $900–$1,400. That’s borderline — and you still have an ageing unit that will likely fail again within 2–3 years.

The 50% rule also needs to be applied against the unit’s age. A $200 thermostat repair on a 4-year-old heat pump is sensible. The same repair on a 14-year-old gas storage unit is not — the system has likely surpassed its design life anyway.

Decision Framework: Repair or Replace?

Age Repair Cost as % of Replacement Common Symptoms Verdict
Under 5 years Any Minor faults (thermostat, element, valve) Repair — unit is under or near warranty
5–8 years Under 30% Single fault, no repeated failures Repair — good remaining life
5–8 years 30–50%+ Multiple faults or internal rust Replace — consider upgrade to heat pump
8–12 years Under 20% Minor single fault only Repair cautiously — plan replacement soon
8–12 years Over 20% Any fault Replace — end of reliable life approaching
Over 12 years Any Any fault Replace — past design life for most systems

Common Faults and What They Cost to Repair

Fault Repair Cost (inc. labour) DIY? Repair vs Replace Verdict
Electric element replacement $250–$450 No — licensed plumber required Repair if unit under 10 years
Thermostat replacement $180–$350 No — licensed plumber required Repair if unit under 10 years
Pressure relief valve replacement $150–$300 No — licensed plumber required Always repair — safety device
Anode rod replacement (preventive) $150–$250 No — licensed plumber required Repair — extends tank life 5+ years
Gas valve or burner fault $300–$600 No — licensed gas fitter required Repair if unit under 8 years only
Internal tank corrosion / rust Not repairable N/A Replace immediately
Heat pump refrigerant fault $400–$900 No — licensed refrigerant technician Replace if unit over 7 years
Solar collector panel damage $500–$1,500 No — licensed installer Repair if system under 12 years
Pro tip: Ask your plumber to check the anode rod when they’re in for another repair. A corroded anode rod ($150–$250 to replace) is the single most common reason storage tanks rust from the inside out. Replacing it proactively can add 5–8 years of life.

Replacement Costs: What a New System Costs Installed

System Type Installed Cost Running Cost/Year* VIC Rebate Available
Electric storage (off-peak) 125–160L $900–$1,400 $550–$750 No
Electric storage (continuous) 125–160L $900–$1,400 $900–$1,200 No
Gas storage 135–170L $1,200–$2,000 $350–$550 No
Gas continuous flow (instantaneous) $1,400–$2,500 $300–$500 No
Heat pump 270–315L $2,500–$4,500 $180–$300 Up to $1,000 (VIC)
Solar with electric boost 300L $4,000–$6,500 $100–$200 STCs (federal)

*Running costs based on Melbourne energy tariffs. Actual costs vary with household size, tariff, and usage patterns.

Victorian Government Rebates (2026)

The Victorian Energy Upgrades (VEU) program offers rebates for households switching from gas or electric resistance hot water to a heat pump. In 2026, eligible households can receive $1,000 off a heat pump hot water system through registered VEU providers. The rebate is applied at point of sale — you don’t need to claim it after the fact.

To access the rebate, the installation must be performed by an accredited VEU installer. Most plumbers operating in the south-eastern suburbs of Melbourne (Dandenong, Berwick, Pakenham, Cranbourne, Frankston) are registered. Check the ESC accredited provider search before booking.

Pro tip: If you’re replacing an electric storage system with a heat pump, the VEU rebate plus lower running costs ($250–$450/year savings) typically means payback in 4–6 years on the price premium. Over a 15-year heat pump lifespan, you’re ahead by $2,000–$5,000.

Signs Your Hot Water System Needs Replacing

Symptom Likely Cause Action
Rusty or brown water from hot tap Internal tank corrosion Replace immediately — tank is failing
Puddle or drip under the tank (not from PRV) Tank wall perforation Replace immediately — cannot be repaired
Pressure relief valve (PRV) discharging frequently Faulty PRV or overheating Call plumber — could be PRV or thermostat
No hot water (electric system) Failed element or thermostat Repair if under 10 years, replace if older
No hot water (gas system) Pilot light, gas valve, or burner fault Call licensed gas fitter — do not DIY
Banging or rumbling sounds Sediment buildup on element Flush tank — element may need replacing soon
Running out of hot water more often Element degrading, thermostat drift Service first; replace if fault persists
Age over 10 years + any fault End of design life Replace — ongoing repairs are uneconomical

When to Repair Makes Sense

Repair is the right call when your system is relatively young (under 6–8 years), the fault is a single replaceable component (element, thermostat, valve), the repair cost is well under 30% of replacement, and there are no signs of internal corrosion.

Under Australian Consumer Law, hot water systems sold for residential use also carry statutory guarantees independent of manufacturer warranties. If your system failed well before its expected lifespan due to a manufacturing defect, you may be entitled to a free repair or replacement through the retailer or manufacturer regardless of what the warranty documentation says.

When Replacement Makes Sense

Replace when the system is over 10 years old (8 years for heat pump), the tank shows any signs of rust or leaking from the tank body, you’ve had two or more faults in the past two years, repair quotes exceed 40–50% of replacement cost, or you’re switching from gas to electric as part of home electrification.

For Melbourne homes in the south-east (Dandenong, Berwick, Narre Warren, Pakenham, Cranbourne), cold winters mean hot water reliability matters. A system that limps through summer often fails completely in June or July when demand peaks and ground temperatures drop.

Safety warning: Never attempt to repair or replace a gas or electric hot water system yourself. Gas work requires a licensed gas fitter; electrical connections require a licensed electrician. Improper hot water system installation can cause carbon monoxide poisoning, explosion, or electrocution. This is not a grey area — it is illegal and dangerous.

Top 10 Tips and Gotchas

  1. Find the age before calling for repair quotes. The serial number on most Australian hot water systems encodes the manufacture date. Rheem, Dux, and Rinnai all have date codes in the serial — look up your brand’s decoder online or ask the plumber.
  2. Off-peak tariffs only apply to off-peak-wired systems. If you’re replacing an off-peak electric storage unit, make sure the new system is wired to the same off-peak circuit, or your running costs will be 2–3x higher.
  3. Don’t default to like-for-like. When replacing a gas storage unit, get a heat pump quote — the VEU rebate and lower running costs often make it cheaper over 5 years despite higher upfront cost.
  4. Heat pumps need clearance. Heat pump units require 1m+ of airflow space on all sides and should not be enclosed. Many Melbourne homes have narrow side passages that won’t work. Check clearances before purchasing.
  5. Cold water inlet valve matters. When getting a new system installed, ask the plumber to check and replace the cold water isolation valve if it’s stiff or corroded. This is cheap during installation but expensive to fix later.
  6. Solar systems: check the boost element. Many Melbourne solar hot water systems rely on an electric or gas boost for cloudy days (and there are many in winter). If the boost is failing, your “solar” system isn’t delivering hot water half the year.
  7. Check if your system is recall-listed. Some Rheem, Dux, and similar products have had safety recalls. Check the Australian Product Safety website before sinking money into repairs.
  8. Insulate the first metre of hot water pipe. An uninsulated pipe from the tank to the first fitting loses significant heat. Foam pipe lagging from any hardware store costs under $20 and cuts standby losses noticeably.
  9. Set temperature correctly. 60°C storage, 50°C at the tap (via tempering valve). Any lower and Legionella becomes a risk. Any higher and scalding risk increases. Your plumber should set this at installation.
  10. Emergency replacements cost more. A Friday afternoon emergency call-out when your tank has burst will cost $200–$400 more in labour than a planned replacement. If your system is over 10 years old, budget for replacement before it fails.

Local Melbourne Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a hot water system last in Melbourne?

Electric storage systems typically last 8–12 years; gas storage 10–15 years; continuous flow gas 15–20 years; solar 15–20 years; heat pump 10–15 years. Melbourne’s water supply is relatively soft, which is easier on tanks than hard water areas, but cold winters mean systems work harder. Most plumbers recommend budgeting for replacement at 10 years regardless of type.

My hot water system is leaking from the bottom — is that the pressure relief valve?

It depends where exactly the leak is coming from. The pressure relief valve (PRV) has a drain pipe that typically exits near the base of the unit — a small amount of dripping from this pipe is normal during heating cycles. However, if water is pooling under the tank body itself or staining is running down the tank sides, that indicates tank wall failure and the unit must be replaced. Call a licensed plumber to diagnose which it is before assuming.

Is the $1,000 Victorian heat pump rebate still available in 2026?

Yes. As of 2026, the Victorian Energy Upgrades program offers rebates of around $1,000 for eligible households switching from gas or standard electric to a heat pump hot water system. The rebate is applied at the point of sale through an accredited VEU installer — you do not need to apply separately. Check the ESC website for current rebate amounts and eligible models as these can change throughout the year.

Can I get a same-day hot water replacement in Melbourne’s south-east suburbs?

Yes — most licensed plumbers covering Dandenong, Berwick, Pakenham, Cranbourne, and Frankston offer emergency same-day hot water replacement. Rheem and Dux electric storage systems are typically available from Reece plumbing supplies across the south-east. Expect to pay a $100–$200 emergency call-out premium on weekends or evenings. Heat pump systems are less readily available as stock so may take 1–2 days.

Should I replace my gas hot water with electric (heat pump)?

For most Melbourne households, switching from gas storage to a heat pump makes financial sense if you also have or plan solar panels. The combination of VEU rebate (up to $1,000), lower running costs ($180–$300/year vs $350–$550/year for gas), and the ability to run on solar export hours typically delivers payback within 4–7 years. However, if you’re staying on a gas plan anyway (for cooking), the incremental benefit reduces. Get quotes for both options when your current system fails.

What’s the most reliable hot water system brand in Australia?

Rheem and Rinnai are the most widely cited for reliability in Australian plumber surveys and forum discussions (Whirlpool forums, ProductReview.com.au). Dux is also well-regarded for storage tanks. For heat pumps, Reclaim Energy and Sanden (CO2 refrigerant) are frequently recommended by installers for Melbourne’s climate. Avoid off-brand systems sold purely on price — spare parts availability is a real problem 5–8 years after purchase.

Final Thoughts

The decision to repair or replace a hot water system is simpler than it appears once you know the unit’s age. For systems over 10 years old, the answer is almost always replace — even a successful repair typically buys 12–24 months before the next fault. For younger systems with single faults, repair and plan ahead.

If you’re replacing anyway, don’t default to like-for-like. The heat pump rebate and running cost savings make upgrading a genuinely good financial decision for most Melbourne households, especially those with solar panels or intending to add them. Talk to a VEU-accredited plumber before committing to a system type.