A garbage disposal is one of the cheaper plumbing fixtures to replace, and one of the more DIY-friendly – which is exactly why it pays to know the numbers before a plumber quotes you. As a licensed plumber, here is what replacing a disposal actually costs in 2026, and when it is worth doing yourself.
Cost to replace a garbage disposal in 2026
Expect $150 to $550 installed, depending mostly on the unit you choose and whether you DIY the labor. The disposal itself is the swing factor.
| Item | Typical cost |
|---|---|
| Budget 1/3-1/2 HP disposal (unit only) | $60 – $120 |
| Mid-range 3/4 HP disposal (unit only) | $120 – $220 |
| Premium 1 HP disposal (unit only) | $220 – $400 |
| Plumber labor (install only) | $100 – $250 |
| Total, DIY unit + your labor | $60 – $400 |
| Total, pro install | $200 – $550 |
What drives the price
- Horsepower. 1/3-1/2 HP is fine for light use; 3/4 HP is the sweet spot for most homes; 1 HP for heavy use or hard scraps. More power costs more but jams less.
- Matching the old mounting. If your new unit uses the same mounting collar as the old one (many do), install is fast. A different mount adds time.
- Electrical and plumbing condition. A corroded outlet, a bad switch, or a brittle drain trap can add small costs.
Should you replace it yourself?
For most people, yes – if the unit you are replacing already exists (so the wiring and drain are in place), a swap is a 1-2 hour job with a wrench and a screwdriver. The trick is matching the mount and supporting the unit while you twist it on. Before you buy, make sure the disposal is actually dead and not just jammed or tripped – many “broken” disposals are fixed free in five minutes. Work through garbage disposal not working first.
When to call a pro
Call a plumber if there is no existing disposal (adding one needs new wiring and a switch), if the under-sink plumbing is corroded, or if you are not comfortable working in the electrical. For shopping, see best garbage disposal and splash guards; for the broader call, see how much a plumber costs and when to DIY vs call a plumber.
Frequently asked questions
Is it cheaper to replace a garbage disposal myself?
Usually, yes. If you already have a disposal, the wiring and drain connections are in place, so a swap is a 1-2 hour DIY job needing only a wrench and screwdriver. Doing it yourself saves the $100-$250 labor charge, so your total can be just the cost of the unit. The main trick is matching the mounting collar.
How much does a plumber charge to install a garbage disposal?
For a straight replacement of an existing unit, plumber labor typically runs $100 to $250, on top of the disposal itself. A full pro install with a mid-range unit usually totals $200 to $550. Adding a disposal where none existed costs more because it needs new wiring and a switch.
How long does a garbage disposal last?
Most disposals last about 8 to 12 years. Cheaper 1/3 HP units tend to fail sooner; better-built 3/4 and 1 HP units run longer. If yours is in that age range and jamming or leaking from the body, replacement is usually smarter than repair – but confirm it is not just a reset or jam first.
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