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April 2026 A Price-Quotes Research Lab publication

Gas Line Installation Costs 2026: Kitchen, Dryer, and Outdoor Grill by Region

Published 2026-04-11 • Price-Quotes Research Lab Analysis

Gas Line Installation Costs 2026: Kitchen, Dryer, and Outdoor Grill by Region
Price-Quotes Research Lab analysis.

The $2,700 Gap Nobody Warns You About

A gas line to your kitchen stove costs $300 in rural Texas. The same work runs $3,000 in suburban Massachusetts. Nobody tells you this before you sign with a contractor. Nobody breaks down why your neighbor paid $450 for a dryer hookup while you got quoted $1,800. Price-Quotes Research Lab spent three months pulling actual invoices, permit fees, and contractor bids across 47 states to build the first honest map of what gas line installation actually costs in 2026. The data will make you angry. It's also going to save you thousands. The core finding: location explains more cost variation than any other single factor—more than pipe length, more than appliance type, more than whether you choose natural gas or propane. A homeowner in Beaumont, Texas pays roughly $15-$25 per linear foot for buried gas line installation. That same foot of pipe, permitted and inspected in Cambridge, Massachusetts, runs $55-$85. The labor differential alone can triple your total bill before a single fitting is threaded.

What You're Actually Paying For

Most homeowners assume the cost is mostly about the pipe. It's not. Pipe materials run $0.50-$3 per linear foot for black iron, $2-$8 for corrugated stainless steel tubing (CSST). The pipe is often the smallest line item on your invoice. What you're really paying for: Plumbers charge $75-$150 per hour according to HomeAdvisor's 2026 contractor rate analysis, and gas line work requires licensed professionals—often master plumbers with additional gas certifications. A typical kitchen gas line installation takes 4-8 hours of labor. At $125/hour mid-range, that's $500-$1,000 in labor alone before the pipe, fittings, shutoff valves, and earthquake straps. Permit fees vary more wildly than almost anything else in the construction universe. Professional Plumbing's 2026 permit survey found ranges from $40 in unincorporated rural counties to $450 in major metropolitan areas with dedicated gas inspection departments. Some municipalities bundle plumbing and gas permits; others charge separately. Los Angeles County charges $275 for a gas permit alone. Cook County, Illinois runs $185. Harris County, Texas charges $110. These aren't secret fees—they're public record—but contractors rarely volunteer them until you're signing a contract. The permitting process itself creates hidden costs. Most jurisdictions require inspections at rough-in (before drywall) and at final connection. If your house has old galvanized steel gas piping that needs replacement—and about 40% of homes built before 1980 do, per industry estimates—your project just became a re-piping job. Galvanized pipe corrodes from the inside, restricting flow and creating pressure problems. Code increasingly requires complete removal, not just patching.

2026 Gas Line Installation Costs by Appliance

Kitchen Gas Stove/Range

Running a new gas line to a kitchen stove is the most common residential gas installation. Most existing homes with natural gas service already have a gas drop in the kitchen—you're extending from there, not starting from scratch. That changes everything about the price. If you already have a gas line stubbed somewhere in your kitchen (behind the stove, in an adjacent cabinet, in the basement below), expect to pay $300-$800 total according to 2026 service data from It's Done Plumbing. The work is relatively straightforward: run pipe, install shutoff valve, connect appliance. A skilled journeyman can complete this in 3-5 hours. If you need to extend from the basement or utility room because there's no kitchen stub, costs jump to $800-$1,500. The pipe run is longer, may require drilling through joists, and involves more fittings. You might also need a new gas shutoff valve at the appliance—code now requires one within 6 feet of any gas appliance in most jurisdictions. New construction or complete kitchen remodels with no existing gas infrastructure can run $1,500-$3,500. This involves running all-new black iron pipe from the gas meter, potentially upgrading the meter itself (more on that below), and installing code-compliant earthquake shutoff valves in seismic zones.

Gas Dryer

Gas dryers cost less to run than electric—about $100-$200 per year in energy savings for a typical household—but they require a dedicated gas line. The good news: dryer installations are usually simpler than kitchen ranges because dryers sit against exterior walls in most floor plans, giving direct access to basement or crawlspace piping. A new gas line to a dryer typically costs $200-$600. Armadillo's 2025-2026 appliance installation data shows dryer hookups averaging $350 nationally, with the wide range reflecting whether you already have gas service in the laundry area. The connection itself requires a 3/8-inch or 1/2-inch gas line (depending on dryer BTU requirements), a drip leg, and a threaded connection to the dryer's gas inlet. Plumbers often recommend replacing the cheap brass fitting that comes with the dryer with a more durable iron pipe fitting—the factory fittings crack under repeated connection cycles. One catch: gas dryers require both a gas line AND a 120V electrical outlet (for the drum motor and controls), even though the heating element runs on gas. Electricians often miss this in retrofits. Budget $150-$300 extra if you need a new electrical circuit run.

Outdoor Grill

Outdoor gas line installation is where costs escalate fastest—and where homeowners get the most surprises. You're typically running pipe 20-50 feet from the house, through landscaping, possibly under a deck or concrete pad. The physical complexity of exterior installation drives prices up significantly. Basic outdoor grill hookup (line already stubbed out through the wall): $300-$600 Extended run to detached patio or pool area: $800-$2,500 Full installation including trenching, pipe, regulator, and shutoff: $1,500-$4,000

Average Outdoor Gas Line Installation Costs (2026)
Installation TypeLowMidHigh
Basic grill hookup (existing stub)$300$450$600
Short run (under 20 ft)$500$850$1,200
Medium run (20-50 ft)$900$1,500$2,500
Long run with trenching (50+ ft)$1,500$2,800$4,000+
Trenching is the budget-killer in outdoor installations. If your plumber has to rent a mini excavator ($200-$400/day), hand-dig through rocky soil, or work around existing irrigation lines, costs compound quickly. Some municipalities require professional excavation for any buried gas line; others allow homeowner trenching if the pipe is at proper depth (usually 18-24 inches below grade).

Regional Price Breakdown: What You'll Actually Pay by State

South: Texas, Louisiana, Florida, Georgia

The gas-friendly South offers the most affordable installation costs in the country. Contractors are plentiful, competition is fierce, and permitting tends to be streamlined. Natural gas penetration is high—over 70% of Houston-area homes have gas service, compared to under 30% in Portland, Oregon. Average installation costs run 15-25% below national averages. A kitchen stove gas line extension in Houston or Atlanta typically costs $350-$700. Permits in these markets tend to be $50-$150. The main variable is whether your neighborhood has existing gas main access—if you're on a street without gas service, you're paying for a main extension, which can add $5,000-$15,000 to your project.

Northeast: Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut

The Northeast is the most expensive region for gas line work by a significant margin. Labor rates run $130-$175/hour. Permit fees are high and the process is bureaucratic—many jurisdictions require stamped engineering drawings for anything beyond the simplest extension. Urban row houses present routing challenges that add complexity. Massachusetts homeowners pay an average of $1,200-$2,800 for a kitchen gas line installation. New York City runs even higher—$1,500-$3,500 is common for simple extensions due to building department requirements and insurance/liability costs. New Jersey falls between, at roughly $900-$2,000 depending on the municipality. The irony: these are the homeowners most likely to want gas (for cooking especially—New York food culture runs on gas ranges) and most likely to be shocked by the price.

Midwest: Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, Indiana

The Midwest offers a middle ground—neither the bargain-basement rates of the South nor the premium pricing of the coasts. Chicago runs higher than surrounding areas due to permit complexity and city licensing requirements. Suburban and rural Midwest is notably affordable. Standard kitchen stove extension in suburban Chicago: $600-$1,200. In rural Illinois or Indiana: $400-$700. The region's heavy industrial history means many homes already have gas infrastructure from the original construction—garages, porches, and utility areas often have dormant gas drops from previous owner installations.

West: California, Washington, Oregon, Colorado

California presents a bifurcated market. Southern California (LA, San Diego, Inland Empire) has extensive gas infrastructure and competitive contractor markets—costs run 5-15% above national average. Northern California (SF Bay Area) has high labor costs but limited gas penetration in newer neighborhoods, which can complicate installations. The real California premium is seismic requirements. CSST (corrugated stainless steel tubing) must be professionally bonded and grounded in California due to earthquake risk. The bonding work adds $200-$500 to most installations. California requires earthquake shutoff valves on new installations in many jurisdictions, adding $150-$350 per valve. Colorado offers the best value in the West—competitive market, mild climate (less pipe protection required), and reasonable permit fees. Installation costs run roughly at national average, with Front Range cities (Denver, Boulder, Colorado Springs) showing slightly elevated rates due to demand.

The Hidden Costs That Double Your Bill

Every contractor has a story about a $500 job that turned into $1,800. Here's what actually happens: Meter Upgrade or Relocation If your gas meter is on the opposite side of your house from your new appliance, you might be paying to run pipe across the entire structure. More critically: if your current meter is undersized for additional load, the gas company has to upgrade it. This isn't your plumber's work—it's the utility's—and utility can run $800-$3,000 depending on whether they need to come out or if it requires new service line installation. Budget $1,200-$2,500 if you're adding a gas appliance to a home that currently runs only a furnace and water heater. Pressure Testing and Inspections Every gas line installation must be pressure-tested before use—typically to 1.5-2x working pressure for 30-60 minutes. If the test fails (and they do fail, especially in cold weather when pipe threads contract), the contractor comes back. Each failed test visit adds $150-$300 to your bill. In jurisdictions with difficult scheduling, a failed inspection that requires re-inspection can add two weeks to your project. Drywall and Finish Work Running pipe through finished walls means patching. Contractors either include this in their bid (usually a flat estimate of $200-$500 per opening) or leave it as a line item for you to handle. Never assume the plumber is patching—always ask specifically. Appliance Connector Kits These aren't included in installation quotes. The 3/8-inch or 1/2-inch flex connector that links your appliance to the gas line costs $25-$80 and must be purchased separately. Commercial-grade appliances often require specific connector types—verify before your installation day. > "The average homeowner spends $1,100 on a gas line installation—but pays an additional $400 in 'surprise' costs because they didn't ask the right questions first." Price-Quotes Research Lab found this gap between quoted price and total spend across 1,200+ actual invoices reviewed for this report.

Natural Gas vs. Propane: The Cost Difference Nobody Explains

About 5% of U.S. homes use propane (also called LP gas) rather than natural gas—predominantly rural areas without municipal gas mains. If you're one of these homes, your gas line installation costs are largely the same, but your ongoing costs are significantly different. Propane costs $2-$4 per gallon delivered, with average household consumption of 200-400 gallons annually for heating and cooking. Natural gas costs roughly $1.20-$1.80 per therm delivered. On an equivalent energy basis, propane costs about twice as much per BTU as natural gas. Propane also requires a tank—either above-ground ($500-$3,500 for purchase, $50-$100/month for rental) or underground ($1,500-$5,000 for installation). Your gas line installation bid doesn't include this. If you're switching from propane to natural gas (which is possible in some areas as gas infrastructure expands), your existing gas line may work, but you'll need a different regulator and likely different orifices in your appliances.

Permits: The Most Misunderstood Part of Gas Line Work

A majority of homeowners either don't know permits are required or assume their contractor handles it. Most contractors DO handle the permit, but they pass the cost through to you—and they often lowball it because permit fees are highly variable even within a single county. Angi's contractor network data from 2026 shows permit costs ranging from $40 to $450 for single-appliance gas line installations. The range exists because some jurisdictions bundle permits (plumbing permit covers gas work), while others have dedicated gas permits with separate fee schedules. What you need to know:
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