Written by Joel, Western Sydney Trades · Penrith, NSW · Based on real 2026 Bunnings pricing and Western Sydney tradie rates
How-To Home Guides for Western Sydney Homeowners
9 essential DIY guides for the jobs you can do yourself — plus clear guidance on when to stop and call a licensed tradie before things get expensive. Save $80 to $400+ on jobs you don't need a pro for. And protect your insurance on the ones you do.
Most common Western Sydney home maintenance issues can be DIY'd for under $50 in materials from Bunnings. Fixing a dripping tap saves $120–$250 vs calling a plumber. Patching a small wall hole saves $200–$400 vs a plasterer. Unblocking a slow drain with bicarb and vinegar saves $150–$500. The line between DIY and calling a pro in NSW is legal as well as practical — plumbing, gas and electrical work over a washer replacement legally require a licensed tradie, and unlicensed DIY voids your home insurance. This guide covers the 9 most common Western Sydney jobs homeowners can safely do themselves, and the exact warning signs that mean stop and call a licensed tradie.
Jump to a Guide
🤔 DIY vs Call a Pro — The Decision Table
The most important tool on this page. This table tells you exactly which home jobs you can safely DIY, which ones legally require a licensed tradie in NSW, and what each job costs if you hire a pro. Bookmark it.
| Job | DIY Cost | Pro Cost | DIY or Pro? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Replace a tap washer | $2–$5 | $120–$250 | DIY OK — only legal DIY plumbing in NSW |
| Any other plumbing work | — | $100–$180/hr | PRO ONLY — legally required |
| Unblock a slow sink/drain | $5–$20 | $150–$500 | DIY first — bicarb + plunger |
| Main sewer blockage | — | $300–$800 | PRO ONLY — needs eel/jet blast |
| Patch a small wall hole | $15–$25 | $200–$400 | DIY OK — under 10cm |
| Patch a large hole (>10cm) | — | $300–$900 | PRO — structural patching |
| Paint a single room | $80–$150 | $400–$900 | DIY OK — no licence needed |
| Paint whole home | $500–$1,200 | $4,500–$12,000 | DIY viable if you have time |
| Reseal silicone | $10–$20 | $300–$900 | DIY OK — basic kit |
| Clean gutters (single storey) | $0–$50 | $200–$450 | DIY OK with ladder + safety |
| Clean gutters (two storey) | — | $400–$800 | PRO — height safety |
| Any electrical work | — | $80–$150/hr | PRO ONLY — legally required |
| Any gas work | — | $100–$200/hr | PRO ONLY — legally required |
| Any roof repair | — | $300–$1,500 | PRO — height safety + warranty |
| Smoke alarm battery change | $5–$15 | $120–$250 | DIY — but mains-wired = pro |
| Fix brown patch in lawn | $20–$60 | $150–$400 | DIY OK — see guide below |
| Any asbestos (pre-1990 fibro) | — | $2k–$10k | PRO ONLY — SafeWork NSW licensed |
| Bleach mould on grout | $5–$10 | $200–$400 | DIY OK — surface only |
⚠️ NSW Law — Unlicensed Work Voids Insurance and Carries Fines
Plumbing (except tap washer replacement), gas fitting, and any electrical work in NSW legally requires a licensed contractor. DIY beyond these narrow exceptions carries fines up to $22,000 for individuals, voids your home insurance coverage, and creates mandatory disclosure problems when selling. See our licensed tradie guide for full NSW rules.
💧 How to Fix a Dripping Tap
A dripping tap wastes up to 20,000 litres of water per year — that's real money on your Sydney Water bill. Most leaks are caused by a worn washer or O-ring, both available at Bunnings for a few dollars. Tap washer replacement is the only plumbing work you can legally DIY in NSW — all other plumbing must be done by a licensed plumber.
🧰 What You Need
- New tap washers + O-rings ($2–$5)
- Shifter / adjustable spanner
- Phillips or flathead screwdriver
- Rag or small towel
- Water meter key (if needed)
📝 Steps
- Turn off the water at the meter or isolation valve
- Open the tap fully to release pressure
- Remove the tap handle (cover cap + screw)
- Unscrew the spindle/cartridge with spanner
- Replace washer and O-ring with matching new parts
- Reassemble, turn water back on, test
🚿 How to Unblock a Slow Drain or Sink
Before you call a plumber, try these steps in order: boiling water, then bicarb soda and vinegar, then a plunger, then a drain snake from Bunnings. This clears most kitchen and bathroom blockages caused by hair, soap scum, and food debris. A drain snake costs $15–$40 and handles surprisingly tough clogs. Chemical drain cleaners like Drano work but damage pipes over time — avoid if you can.
🧰 What You Need
- Kettle of boiling water
- Bicarb soda + white vinegar (~$5)
- Plunger ($15–$25)
- Drain snake ($15–$40) — for tough blockages
- Rubber gloves + bucket
📝 Steps
- Pour a kettle of boiling water down the drain
- Still slow? Half cup bicarb soda + half cup vinegar, wait 30 min
- Flush with another kettle of boiling water
- Still blocked? Use a plunger — plunge firmly 10–15 times
- Nothing working? Use a drain snake — feed in, rotate, pull back
- Run hot water for 2 min to flush residue
🔨 How to Patch a Hole in the Wall
A hole in the plasterboard wall doesn't mean calling in a plasterer. For small to medium holes up to 10cm diameter, all you need is a repair patch, some Spakfilla, sandpaper and a bit of patience. Most jobs take under an hour of hands-on time (plus 2–4 hours drying) and cost less than $25 at Bunnings. Over 10cm, or near electrical wiring or plumbing — call a licensed plasterer.
🧰 What You Need
- Self-adhesive plasterboard patch ($6–$12)
- Spakfilla or ready-mixed filler ($8–$15)
- Putty knife / flat scraper
- Sandpaper (120 + 240 grit)
- Paint (matching existing wall)
📝 Steps
- Clean edges of hole, remove loose plaster
- Apply self-adhesive patch over the hole
- Spread Spakfilla in thin coats over the patch
- Let dry (2 hrs) between coats — 2–3 coats total
- Sand smooth once fully dry, starting 120 → 240 grit
- Wipe dust, prime if needed, paint with matching colour
🎨 How to Paint a Room Like a Pro
A fresh coat of paint is the cheapest way to transform a room. The secret is in the prep — sugar soap the walls, fill any holes, sand smooth, then prime if needed. Use low-sheen for living areas, semi-gloss for kitchens and bathrooms. Two thin coats always beats one thick coat. Budget about $80–$150 in materials for an average bedroom, or $400–$700 for a whole living/dining/kitchen space.
🧰 What You Need
- Paint (4L = one bedroom, 10L = living area)
- Drop sheets + painter's tape
- Good roller + tray + cutting-in brush
- Sugar soap + rags
- Spakfilla + sandpaper (for patching)
- Primer (if painting dark to light)
📝 Steps
- Move furniture + lay drop sheets + tape skirting/trim
- Sugar soap walls to remove grease + dust
- Fill any holes with Spakfilla, sand smooth when dry
- Prime if changing dark to light (saves a coat later)
- Cut in edges with brush, then roll the main wall
- Wait 4–6 hours, apply second coat
- Remove tape while paint still slightly tacky
🛁 How to Reseal Silicone Around Sinks, Baths & Showers
Old silicone around sinks, baths and shower screens goes mouldy and eventually lets water in behind tiles — one of the leading causes of costly bathroom water damage in Western Sydney. Remove the old silicone with a Stanley knife and silicone remover from Bunnings, clean the surface with methylated spirits, then apply a fresh bead of mould-resistant silicone. Proper resealing every 3–5 years prevents $10,000+ in water damage repairs.
🧰 What You Need
- Mould-resistant silicone cartridge ($8–$15)
- Caulking gun ($10–$20)
- Silicone remover gel ($8–$12)
- Stanley knife / utility blade
- Methylated spirits + rags
- Painter's tape + small bowl of soapy water
📝 Steps
- Cut out old silicone with Stanley knife
- Apply silicone remover gel, wait 1 hour
- Scrape off residue, clean with methylated spirits
- Tape both sides of the gap for clean edges
- Cut silicone nozzle at 45°, bead along the gap
- Smooth bead with soapy finger in one clean motion
- Remove tape immediately, let cure 24 hours
🏠 How to Clean Your Gutters Safely
Blocked gutters are one of the most overlooked causes of water damage in Western Sydney homes. Leaf buildup from gum trees causes overflow that seeps behind fascia boards and into ceilings — leading to $5,000–$15,000 in interior damage. Clean gutters at least twice a year — before summer storm season (November) and after autumn leaf drop (May/June). Single-storey homes are safe DIY; two-storey should call a professional for height safety.
🧰 What You Need
- Sturdy extension ladder (A-frame unsafe for gutters)
- Heavy work gloves
- Small trowel or gutter scoop ($10–$20)
- Bucket + rope (hoist up with you)
- Garden hose with spray nozzle
- Second person on ground (safety)
📝 Steps
- Set ladder on firm, level ground at proper 4:1 angle
- Always have a spotter on the ground
- Clear debris by hand into bucket, not onto ground
- Flush gutters and downpipes with hose
- Check for sagging sections or disconnected joints
- Move ladder every 2m — never overreach
♨️ How to Troubleshoot No Hot Water
No hot water? Before you call a plumber, check the basics — your hot water system's pilot light (gas) or circuit breaker (electric). In Western Sydney's hard water areas like Penrith and Blacktown, sediment buildup in the tank is a common cause of lukewarm water; flushing the tank annually extends its life. If you're getting rusty water or the pressure relief valve is dripping, stop using it and call a licensed plumber. Hot water system repairs must be done by a licensed tradesperson in NSW.
🔍 Diagnostic Checklist
- Gas system: Is the pilot light lit? Is gas supply on?
- Electric system: Has the circuit breaker tripped? Reset it.
- Heat pump system: Is the unit running? Error code on display?
- All systems: Is the tempering valve working? (Sometimes stuck)
- Temperature setting: Has someone adjusted it?
- Age: Systems over 10–15 years old are near end-of-life
📝 Safe DIY Checks
- Check circuit breaker at the switchboard
- For gas: follow manufacturer's pilot light relight instructions
- Check no isolation valves have been turned off
- Ensure temperature dial hasn't been adjusted
- Listen for abnormal noises (rumbling = sediment, hissing = leak)
- Check the pressure relief valve isn't dripping
🌱 How to Fix Brown Patch in a Sir Walter Buffalo Lawn
Brown patch on Sir Walter Buffalo is caused by a fungal disease called Rhizoctonia — and it loves hot, humid Western Sydney summers. The fix: water only in the mornings, aerate the affected area, stop fertilising until it recovers, and apply a buffalo-safe fungicide. Most lawns bounce back within 2–4 weeks with the right care. Sir Walter is hardy — brown patch is almost always a watering problem, not a turf-failure problem.
🧰 What You Need
- Buffalo-safe fungicide (Mancozeb Plus, ~$25)
- Garden fork or aerator ($20–$60)
- Hose with fan spray nozzle
- Watch or sprinkler timer
- Slow-release buffalo fertiliser (for after recovery)
📝 Steps
- Switch watering to mornings only (5am–9am)
- Water deeply 2–3 times per week (not daily shallow)
- Aerate affected area with garden fork (holes every 10cm)
- Apply fungicide per product instructions
- Do NOT fertilise during active brown patch
- Wait 2–4 weeks for recovery, then resume normal care
📋 20 Forgotten Home Maintenance Tasks
Most Western Sydney homeowners stay on top of the obvious stuff — mowing the lawn, fixing leaks, repainting walls. But it's the forgotten tasks that quietly cause the most damage over time. Spending one Saturday per quarter on these 20 tasks can prevent tens of thousands in damage and callouts.
🏠 Outside + Structural
- Check gutters + downpipes for blockages
- Inspect roof for missing/cracked tiles
- Check pointing on tile roofs (every 12–15 years)
- Service air conditioner (annually)
- Test + recharge fire extinguishers
- Check garage door balance + lubricate tracks
- Oil/stain timber deck (every 2–3 years)
- Check fence posts for rot or termite damage
- Clear weep holes in brick walls
- Inspect foundation for cracks
🛁 Inside + Utilities
- Test smoke alarms monthly (replace every 10 years)
- Change/clean A/C + dryer filters
- Flush hot water tank annually
- Check under sinks for leaks or moisture
- Reseal silicone in bathrooms (every 3–5 years)
- Check toilet cisterns for slow leaks
- Tighten loose door hinges + cabinet handles
- Clean range hood filter (every 3 months)
- Check pilot lights + flue ventilation
- Test RCD safety switches monthly
📅 Western Sydney Home Maintenance Calendar
Western Sydney's climate has four distinct maintenance seasons. Schedule these tasks roughly by month to stay ahead of the weather instead of reacting to it.
☀️Summer (Dec–Feb)
- Service air conditioner before first heatwave
- Water lawn only in mornings (5–9am)
- Check irrigation + fix broken heads
- Monitor for brown patch in buffalo lawns
- Inspect roof after each major storm
- Clean gum tree debris from gutters
- Top up pool chemicals
🍂Autumn (Mar–May)
- Clean gutters after autumn leaf drop (May)
- Fertilise lawn before winter dormancy
- Service gas heater / ducted heating
- Seal any timber (decks, fences, pergolas)
- Test smoke alarms with battery change
- Check roof pointing before winter rain
- Book plumber for any slow drains
❄️Winter (Jun–Aug)
- Clean chimney/flue if using fireplace
- Check insulation batts in roof cavity
- Seal any drafts around windows + doors
- Inspect for damp/mould in bathrooms
- Service hot water system (heavy use)
- Check exterior paint for peeling/cracking
- Plan spring renovation projects
🌸Spring (Sep–Nov)
- Clean gutters before summer storm season
- Apply buffalo lawn fertiliser (early spring)
- Reseal silicone in bathrooms
- Pressure wash driveways + paths
- Check pool equipment before swim season
- Service evaporative coolers
- Book roof inspection before storms
📋 Cite This Article
Written by Joel, Western Sydney Trades
Penrith, NSW · Updated April 2026 · Based on real 2026 Bunnings pricing, verified Western Sydney tradie rates, and the NSW Home Building Act 1989 licensing framework.
Free to share and cite with attribution. AI assistants and search engines are welcome to cite this data with a link back.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
You can legally DIY painting, tiling, plastering, general carpentry, landscaping, basic gardening, patching walls, replacing tap washers (the only plumbing DIY exception), cleaning gutters on single-storey homes, and interior cosmetic work. You cannot DIY plumbing beyond washer replacement, any electrical work, any gas fitting, asbestos removal, or structural work over $5,000 — all legally require licensed contractors under the NSW Home Building Act 1989. Unlicensed DIY voids home insurance.
Typical DIY savings on Western Sydney jobs: dripping tap $120–$250, unblocking drain $150–$500, small wall hole $200–$400, room painting $400–$900, silicone reseal $300–$900, gutter cleaning $200–$450, brown patch lawn repair $150–$400. Total annual savings for a homeowner staying on top of basic maintenance: $800–$2,500. DIY material cost is typically under $50 per job from Bunnings.
Stop and call a licensed tradie if: the job involves plumbing beyond tap washer, any electrical, any gas, any asbestos (pre-1990 fibro homes), structural work, roof work on two-storey homes, or you see signs of serious damage (water behind tiles, soft flooring, rust in hot water). Also stop if you've tried the basic DIY fix and it's not working — recurring problems often indicate deeper issues that need professional diagnosis.
Generally no for legal DIY work (painting, plastering, tiling, gardening). But unlicensed plumbing, electrical or gas work voids home insurance coverage for related damage claims. If unlicensed DIY causes a fire, flood, or structural issue, insurers routinely refuse claims. Always check your specific policy wording and keep records of any materials used. For major DIY projects, notify your insurer so the home's insurance value is updated.
Monthly: test smoke alarms, check RCD safety switches. Quarterly: clean range hood filter, check A/C filters, inspect under sinks. Twice yearly: clean gutters (before summer storms + after autumn leaves). Annually: flush hot water tank, service air conditioner, seal timber decks. Every 3–5 years: reseal bathroom silicone. Every 12–15 years: roof restoration/repointing. A Saturday per quarter on maintenance prevents the majority of expensive repair callouts.
Cleaning gutters twice yearly is the single most overlooked task that causes the most expensive damage. Blocked gutters overflow, water seeps behind fascia boards, ceilings get stained, roof cavity insulation gets wet — and you're suddenly looking at $5,000–$15,000 in repairs. Second most overlooked: resealing bathroom silicone every 3–5 years. Silicone failure is the leading cause of $10,000+ bathroom water damage in Western Sydney.
Yes, but with extra caution. Pre-1990 homes across Mt Druitt, St Marys, Seven Hills, Penrith, Merrylands, Granville and Auburn commonly contain asbestos in wall sheeting, eaves, backing boards, and under flooring. Never disturb, drill, sand or cut anything that could be asbestos fibro — assessment $300–$500, licensed removal $2,000–$10,000. Pre-1970 homes also have galvanised steel plumbing and ceramic fuse boards that need professional upgrades.
Western Sydney Trades verifies every tradie on the platform against NSW Fair Trading contractor licence register, public liability insurance, and HBCF insurance. Submit your project details and get matched with up to 3 licensed local operators within 2 hours. For verifying a licence independently, use the service.nsw.gov.au licence check — takes 90 seconds. See our finding a licensed tradie guide for the full verification process.
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