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April 23rd, 2026
3 min read
By Bob Carr
If you’ve ever walked outside, turned on your irrigation system… and nothing happened—you know how frustrating it is.
No water. No sound. No movement.
Just a system that should be working… but isn’t.
And the very next question most homeowners ask is:
“How much is this going to cost to fix?”
After more than 42 years as a home improvement contractor here in Maryland, DC, and Northern Virginia—helping thousands of homeowners (with 600+ reviews averaging 4.8 stars and an A+ Better Business Bureau rating)—I can tell you this:
👉 A sprinkler system that won’t turn on is one of the most common—and most misunderstood—problems we see
👉 And the cost to fix it depends entirely on why it’s not turning on
In this article, I’m going to walk you through this the same way I would if I were standing in your yard with you:
Let’s break it down.
Before we talk cost, you need to understand this:
👉 A sprinkler system that won’t turn on is not a single problem
👉 It’s a category of problems
There are multiple components that have to work together for your system to start:
If any one of those fails:
👉 The system won’t turn on
And that’s why costs vary so much.
Homeowners usually describe it like this:
Each of those points to a different root cause.
👉 And each cause has a different price tag
Let’s walk through what we actually find in the field.
Your controller is the “brain” of the system.
If it fails:
Typical causes:
Typical cost:
👉 $150 – $600
Sometimes the system isn’t broken—it just isn’t getting power.
Possible issues:
Typical cost:
👉 $75 – $250
Wiring connects the controller to the valves.
If it’s damaged:
👉 The signal never reaches the system
Common causes:
Typical cost:
👉 $150 – $800
Valves control water flow to each zone.
If they fail:
Typical cost:
👉 $200 – $900 per valve
The solenoid is what opens the valve.
If it fails:
👉 The valve won’t respond
Typical cost:
👉 $100 – $300
Sometimes the system turns on—but no water flows.
Possible causes:
Typical cost:
👉 $100 – $1,000+
In some cases, multiple components fail.
Typical cost:
👉 $500 – $2,500+
Let’s simplify this into realistic ranges:
👉 $75 – $300
👉 $300 – $1,200
👉 $1,200 – $3,500+
👉 Most homeowners fall in the middle range
Rockville
Problem:
Cause:
Cost: 👉 $125
Northern Virginia
Problem:
Cause:
Cost: 👉 $450
Bethesda
Problem:
Cause:
Cost: 👉 $800
Silver Spring
Problem:
Cause:
Cost: 👉 $2,100
If you ignore the issue:
👉 Small problems become expensive ones
👉 Replacing parts without diagnosing the cause
This leads to:
After 42+ years, here’s how we handle it:
👉 That’s how you fix it once
As Marcus Sheridan teaches in fileciteturn2file0, buyers today want honest, transparent answers before they ever talk to a company.
That’s why articles like this matter.
👉 When you understand the problem, you make better decisions
If your sprinkler system won’t turn on, remember this:
👉 The cost depends on the cause
👉 The right diagnosis saves you money
After more than four decades helping homeowners throughout the DMV, I can tell you this:
The biggest mistake isn’t the repair cost.
👉 It’s fixing the wrong thing first
Get the cause right—and everything gets easier from there.
Q: How much should it cost to fix a sprinkler system that won’t turn on?
A: Typically $75 – $1,200 for most issues.
Q: What’s the most common cause?
A: Controller or power problems.
Q: Can I fix it myself?
A: Minor issues, yes—but most require diagnosis.
Q: Should I replace the system?
A: Only if multiple major components have failed.
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