Endless hot water: tankless water heaters in Salem

Tankless water heater installation & repair in Salem, OR

Does this sound like your situation?

If any of these match what's happening at your home, call us — we can usually diagnose over the phone and tell you whether it's worth coming out same-day.

  • Running out of hot water during showers
  • Multiple fixtures can't run hot water at the same time
  • Current water heater is 10+ years old and nearing replacement
  • Waiting too long for hot water to arrive at a fixture
  • Want to reclaim floor space from a large tank
  • Looking for long-term energy savings

Most common causes

Why tankless makes sense for most Salem homes

A tankless water heater heats water on demand — when you open a hot water tap, the unit fires and produces hot water continuously for as long as you need it. There's no tank to reheat, no standby energy loss, and no running out after three showers. For families, it eliminates the 'who's last in the shower' problem.

Why proper sizing matters

The biggest tankless complaint — 'it can't keep up' — is almost always a sizing problem. An undersized unit can't deliver enough hot water for two showers plus the dishwasher. We calculate your peak demand based on fixtures and cold groundwater temperature (Salem groundwater is cold, which affects sizing) to spec a unit that comfortably handles your household.

Gas line sizing

Tankless units require significantly more gas volume than a tank. Existing 1/2" gas lines are often too small. We check gas line sizing before quoting and include any required upgrades in the estimate — not as a surprise.

Recirculation pumps for instant hot water

Tankless eliminates running out. A recirculation system eliminates waiting for hot water to arrive. Paired together, you get both endless and instant hot water. We install dedicated-return recirculation, crossover-valve retrofits, and built-in tankless recirculation depending on your plumbing.

A tankless water heater is one of those upgrades where most homeowners either love it immediately or slightly regret it — and the difference comes down to installation.

Why tankless installation is worth doing right

A correctly-sized, correctly-vented tankless unit with adequate gas supply will run for 15–20 years and deliver endless hot water without complaint. An undersized or under-fed tankless unit will frustrate you every time a second shower runs while the dishwasher is going.

We spec based on actual demand calculations:

  • Peak simultaneous hot water flow (what fixtures might run together)
  • Groundwater temperature in Salem (colder than most of the US — it affects sizing)
  • Desired output temperature at the fixture

Then we verify gas line capacity, venting run length and termination, and electrical requirements. Only then do we quote.

The recirculation pairing

Tankless solves "running out." It doesn't solve "waiting two minutes for hot water at the far bathroom." That's what a recirculation system does — a small pump keeps hot water moving near your fixtures so it arrives instantly when you turn on the tap.

For new installs or repipes, we install dedicated-return recirculation (cleanest option). For existing homes, we install crossover-valve systems that use the cold line as a return — more affordable and effective for most layouts. Some modern tankless units have built-in recirculation capability that we enable and configure during install.

Commercial tankless

We also install commercial tankless and on-demand systems for Salem-area restaurants, salons, and small businesses. Commercial applications have different sizing criteria and often require manifolded units — we handle the full design and install. Contact us for commercial consultations.

Here's how we work the job

  1. We measure your peak hot-water demand and check inlet groundwater temperature
  2. We inspect the existing gas line, venting path, and electrical
  3. We size the unit and present 2–3 options with real numbers
  4. We pull the permit, install, and handle the inspection
  5. We commission the unit and walk you through operation and maintenance

What it typically costs

Tankless installation in Salem typically ranges $3,800–$6,500 installed, depending on unit size, venting run, and gas line work. Recirculation systems add $600–$1,400. The exact number depends on your home's specifics — we quote the full job transparently.

Frequently asked questions

Will a tankless water heater pay for itself?
Over 15–20 years, usually yes — especially if you're replacing a failing tank anyway. Tankless units use 24–34% less energy than storage tanks (per Department of Energy) and last roughly twice as long. The break-even point is typically 8–12 years depending on your hot water usage.
Can I install tankless in an older Salem home?
Usually yes, but we check three things first: adequate gas supply, suitable venting path (tankless requires stainless or PVC venting, not your old B-vent), and electrical for the unit's controls. Homes built before 1985 sometimes need minor upgrades to one or more of these — we'll tell you upfront before you commit.
How long does installation take?
Most straightforward replacements take one day. If we're upgrading gas line sizing or venting, it can extend to 1.5–2 days. We'll give you a realistic timeline in the quote.
What maintenance does a tankless need?
Annual descaling is the main requirement, especially in Salem's moderately-hard water. Scale buildup on the heat exchanger is the #1 killer of tankless units. A 30-minute descaling flush each year keeps them running at peak efficiency for the full 15–20 year service life. We can schedule this as an annual maintenance visit or show you how to do it yourself.
Do you work with the Energy Trust of Oregon rebate?
Yes. Certain high-efficiency tankless units qualify for Energy Trust of Oregon rebates. We'll identify eligible units when we quote and help with the paperwork. Rebates change periodically, so we check current availability for each job.

Ready to get this fixed?

Call (503) 917-3259 for same-day service in Salem, Keizer, and the Willamette Valley.