Outdoor Spigot Installation: What to Expect
An outdoor spigot — also called a hose bib, sillcock, or yard hydrant — is one of those small additions that quietly changes how you use your home. Easier garden watering, easier car washing, easier rinsing off a muddy dog. If you're adding one to your Nashville home, or replacing an old one that's seen better days, here's what outdoor spigot installation actually involves.
Frost-Free vs. Standard Spigots
Before anything else: in Nashville's climate, you want a frost-free spigot. Period. A frost-free hose bib has a long stem that reaches several inches inside the wall, with the actual shut-off valve located indoors where it stays above freezing. When you close the handle outside, the water stops well behind the wall, and the small amount of water in the spout drains out.
A standard hose bib has the valve right at the exterior wall, which means water sits in the line behind the wall when it's closed. In a hard freeze, that water expands and splits the pipe — usually right at the wall, often hidden until the thaw turns the inside of your wall into a waterfall. Frost-free bibs avoid that failure mode entirely, as long as you remember to disconnect hoses for the winter so the spigot can drain properly.
Where Plumbers Tie a New Spigot In
If you're adding a brand new spigot rather than replacing an old one, the first question is where the closest existing cold-water line is. The cheapest installs run a tee off an interior cold line that's already nearby — typically a laundry room wall, a basement ceiling run, or a crawlspace line. From the tee, the plumber runs a short branch through the exterior wall and lands it on the new frost-free spigot.
Longer runs to a far corner of the house are still possible, they just take more time and material. The biggest variable on cost is whether the path requires opening drywall inside finished living space or whether the plumber can route everything through unfinished spaces.
A Replacement Job, Step by Step
Replacing an old hose bib that's leaking, broken, or original to a 1960s home goes roughly like this:
- Shut off water to the house and open faucets to relieve pressure.
- Locate the existing branch line that feeds the spigot, usually inside a basement or crawlspace wall.
- Cut the old line back to clean pipe and remove the failing spigot.
- Install a new frost-free hose bib of the appropriate length (most homes need 8" or 12" stems).
- Solder, press, or crimp the new connection — copper, PEX, or a mix, depending on existing materials.
- Caulk and flash the exterior penetration so water can't sneak behind the siding.
- Restore water, check for leaks, and verify the spigot opens and closes cleanly.
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Get a Free QuoteCode Requirements in Tennessee
Tennessee plumbing code requires backflow protection on outdoor spigots — a small device built into the spigot or screwed onto the threads that prevents contaminated water from siphoning back into your home's water supply if pressure drops. Modern frost-free hose bibs come with built-in vacuum breakers that handle this automatically. If you have an older spigot without one, a plumber can either replace the spigot or add an external vacuum breaker.
What Drives the Price
The biggest cost drivers on an outdoor spigot installation:
- Distance to the nearest cold-water line. A spigot three feet from a basement laundry line is cheap. A spigot on the far side of the house thirty feet away is not.
- Wall and finish. Cutting brick or stucco takes longer than going through siding. Going through finished interior drywall adds patch work.
- Existing pipe material. If you have galvanized lines or older polybutylene, the plumber may need to transition or replace a section to make a clean tie-in.
- Crawlspace or basement access. A tight or wet crawlspace slows everything down.
Common Spigot Problems That Lead to Replacement
Calls we see often:
- The handle is stuck or strips when you turn it.
- Water drips from the spout even when fully closed (worn internal washer).
- Water leaks from around the stem when the spigot is open (worn stem packing).
- A split line behind the wall after a hard freeze — usually a non-frost-free spigot that had a hose left attached.
- Visible rust or corrosion on an original-to-the-house brass bib.
When to Call a Plumber
Replacing a hose bib is a popular DIY project, and it's reasonable for a confident homeowner with the right tools. That said, anything involving soldering, cutting into an existing wall, or routing new pipe through a frame is firmly plumber territory. So is a frozen and split line — by the time you find that one, time matters.