What Is PEX Plumbing?
If you've walked through a new build in Nashville lately, you've probably seen a wall full of red and blue plastic tubing instead of the copper pipes you remember from older homes. That's PEX, and it's been quietly taking over residential plumbing in the United States for two decades. Here's a plain-English explanation of what PEX plumbing is, the different types, where it shines, where it has limits, and how it stacks up against copper.
The Basics
PEX stands for cross-linked polyethylene. The "cross-linked" part refers to a chemical or radiation process that bonds the long polymer chains in the plastic together, giving the material much better strength and heat resistance than ordinary polyethylene. The result is a flexible plastic tubing that can handle hot and cold water under pressure and bends easily around corners.
You'll usually see it color-coded: red for hot water lines, blue for cold, and white for either. The color is purely a labeling convenience — there's no functional difference between the colors.
The Three Types: A, B, and C
PEX comes in three manufacturing types, identified by letter:
- PEX-A is made with the most uniform cross-linking and has the best flexibility, the best freeze tolerance, and the highest burst pressure. It's also typically the most expensive. PEX-A can be expanded with a special tool and shrunk back over a fitting for a very strong joint.
- PEX-B is the most common type in residential plumbing. It's slightly stiffer and a bit less freeze-tolerant than PEX-A, but it's well proven and significantly cheaper. It uses crimp or press fittings.
- PEX-C is the least cross-linked of the three. It's used less often and tends to be the budget option in pre-cut applications.
For typical residential plumbing in Nashville, both PEX-A and PEX-B are excellent choices. Most plumbers default to PEX-B for its strong cost-performance balance.
Why PEX Took Over
There are several real reasons PEX has displaced copper in so many new homes:
- Speed of installation. A plumber can run PEX in a fraction of the time it takes to solder copper. Fewer fittings, fewer joints, and snake-able through wall cavities.
- Fewer joints. PEX can flex around corners, so where copper needed three elbows and three soldered joints, PEX often needs none.
- Freeze tolerance. PEX expands when water inside it freezes and usually springs back when it thaws. Copper splits. (PEX still can fail in extreme freezes — it's not magic — but it survives a lot of what would destroy copper.)
- Quiet. Water moving through PEX doesn't hammer or whistle the way it can in rigid copper.
- Lower material cost. The tubing itself and the fittings cost less than copper.
- Manifold systems. PEX makes "home-run" systems easy — every fixture gets its own dedicated line from a central manifold, which improves pressure consistency.
Thinking about PEX for a repipe or remodel?
Your local plumber in Nashville can walk you through the options and quote your home. We'll be in touch soon.
Get a Free QuoteThe Downsides
PEX isn't perfect. The honest list of weaknesses:
- UV sensitivity. PEX degrades when exposed to sunlight for extended periods. It can't be run outside or in unprotected exterior locations.
- Rodents. Mice and rats sometimes chew through PEX. In rural or attic-heavy applications, this matters.
- Permeability. PEX is slightly permeable to certain chemicals, so it shouldn't be run through contaminated soil without a sleeve.
- Heat limits. PEX has a service temperature limit. The first short section coming off a water heater is usually copper or a metallic transition fitting, not PEX directly.
- It's still plastic. Some buyers and inspectors prefer copper for resale or aesthetic reasons.
How PEX Joints Are Made
There are three main connection methods:
- Crimp. A copper ring is slid over the tubing and squeezed onto a barbed fitting with a crimp tool. Inexpensive and reliable.
- Cinch (clamp). Similar idea, with a stainless cinch ring tightened by a different tool.
- Expansion. Used with PEX-A. The tubing and a special ring are expanded, the fitting slid in, and the tubing shrinks back over it. Very strong joints.
- Push-fit. A push-to-connect fitting (often branded SharkBite) grips the tubing internally. Fast and reliable for repairs and DIY.
PEX in Existing Nashville Homes
If you live in an older Nashville home with copper that's developing pinhole leaks, or galvanized that's narrowed to nothing, a partial or whole-house repipe to PEX is one of the most common projects we do. The flexibility of PEX is a real advantage in occupied homes — runs can often be fished through existing walls and ceilings without opening as much drywall as a copper repipe would require.
For new construction and major remodels, PEX is now the default unless there's a specific reason to use copper. For repairs to an existing copper system, transition fittings make it easy to splice in a PEX section without rebuilding everything.
Bottom Line
PEX is a mature, well-understood material that has earned its place as the workhorse of modern residential plumbing. It's not a replacement for copper in every situation, but for most supply line work inside a Nashville home, it's hard to beat.