When should the plumber start on a house build?
plumber start on site should be treated as a control point in the build, not as a one-off decision. BuildIQ turns it into clear tasks, dates, documents and costs.
Owner builder guide
In practice, plumber start on site should be handled this way: usually after the house is closed and before plastering and screeds, once water points, drainage and heating are decided. Without a plan, it is easy to bring a contractor in too early, too late or without the decisions they need.
If the plumber starts without bathroom, kitchen and plant room decisions, changes appear fast. In BuildIQ, attach drawings, photos and water point checklists before work starts.
BuildIQ in practice
The strongest setup is to save the topic as a separate stage in the app, with a deadline, contractor, budget, photos and documents. Then decisions do not live only in messages or memory.
For each stage, add planned cost, real invoices and acceptance status. This creates a build history that helps with changes, warranties and settlements.
The common owner mistake
The issue is often not technical knowledge, but the lack of one place for control. When schedule, photos, invoices and notes are scattered, decisions start to slip.
BuildIQ is built for this: the owner sees the build stage by stage and can react before a delay or extra cost becomes a fact.
When should the plumber start on a house build?
- bathroom, kitchen and utility layout approved
- floor heating, radiators or mixed system selected
- plant room, heat pump and ventilation coordinated
- installation photos saved before plastering
- invoices and warranties attached in BuildIQ