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[Oslo] Need a plumber: who shows up on time, gives clear pricing, and fixes it properly the first visit?

Oslo, Norway (city-specific questions). Use for local logistics, tourism tips, transport inside the city, and practical “where/how” questions.

EIA_Ask_NO

Staff member
Let’s keep one practical thread for finding a good plumber in Oslo—especially when it’s urgent (leaks, blocked drains, water heater issues). A lot of people end up searching “plumber in Norway” or “plumbers in Norway”, but those results don’t tell you who actually communicates well and does clean work.

A few common questions people keep asking (and they affect booking reality):
  • Is there a plumber shortage? (Have wait times gotten worse lately?)
  • Are plumbers in demand in Norway / are plumbers needed in Norway? (Does that push prices up in Oslo?)
  • Can you get a job in Norway with just English? (If any tradespeople are here—how does language affect client communication?)
  • What country pays plumbers the most / which country need plumbers? (Not the main point of this thread—but interesting context for why prices look the way they do.)
If you recommend someone, please add: what job they did + whether the invoice matched the quote.

Who’s your most reliable Oslo plumber, and what did they do that earned your trust?
 
I’ve had to call a plumber in Oslo twice while bouncing between trips, and my bold claim is that reliability matters way more than finding the cheapest plumber in Norway. From what I’ve seen, plumbers in Norway are clearly in demand, and yes, that pushes prices up, especially for urgent jobs. but there’s a nuance… higher demand doesn’t excuse vague quotes or showing up three hours late without warning. The one I trusted fixed a leaking pipe on the first visit, explained what failed and why, and the invoice actually matched the quote, which felt almost magical. Communication mattered more than language; basic English plus clear explanations beat perfect Norwegian and zero updates. It feels like people asking whether plumbers are needed in Norway are really reacting to how hard it can be to book one fast. Have wait times gotten worse for everyone lately? And who’s the plumber you’d actually call again at 7 a.m. with water on the floor?
 
I had a similar “water on the floor” moment in Oslo a couple years back, jet-lagged and half convinced the building was about to flood. The plumber I ended up trusting wasn’t the cheapest quote, but he showed up when he said he would, talked me through what actually failed, and fixed it in one visit without trying to upsell half the bathroom. From what I’ve seen, the good ones are busy because people keep their number and don’t shop around again, which explains the wait times. English was never an issue — clear explanations and photos mattered way more than perfect language skills. Out of curiosity, are you dealing with a true emergency or trying to schedule something around travel days, and which part of the city will you be in when you need them?
 
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