Google Maps is one of the most practical starting points for finding plumber leads. It shows local plumbing businesses by city, service type, rating, review count, phone number, website, business category, and other public profile details.
This guide is for agencies, SaaS teams, suppliers, sales teams, market researchers, and B2B service providers that want to find plumbing businesses as prospects. It is not a guide for plumbers trying to get homeowner calls. The goal is to build a clean, structured list of plumbing companies that may fit your offer.
Who Should Use Google Maps for Plumber Leads
Google Maps plumber leads are useful for teams that sell to local plumbing businesses.
For example, a local SEO agency may want to find plumbers with weak websites. A reputation management company may target plumbers with low ratings or few recent reviews. A CRM or scheduling software company may look for plumbing contractors with multiple service areas. A call answering provider may focus on emergency plumbers that need faster lead response.
The key is to avoid collecting random businesses. A good lead list starts with a clear target: the type of plumbing company, the location, and the business signal that makes them relevant.
Why Google Maps Is Useful for Plumbing Lead Research
Plumbing is a local service business. Customers usually search by location, urgency, and service type, such as “emergency plumber near me” or “water heater repair in Austin.” That makes Google Maps a useful data source for finding real businesses in specific local markets.
Google Business Profile allows businesses to appear on Google Search and Maps with details such as hours, photos, contact information, and other business information. Google also treats plumbers as an example of a service-area business, meaning they may visit customers directly rather than serve customers at a storefront.
For B2B prospecting, these public business details can help you understand whether a plumbing company may need your product or service. A business with no website may be a fit for web design. A business with low ratings may be a fit for review management. A company serving several cities may be a fit for operations software, dispatch tools, or call tracking.
What Plumber Lead Data Can You Collect
A plumber lead list should include more than a business name. The more context you collect, the easier it is to filter, score, and personalize outreach.
Data Field | Why It Matters |
Business name | Identifies the plumbing company |
Phone number | Useful for call-based outreach |
Website | Helps verify the company and assess online presence |
Address or service area | Supports city and territory segmentation |
Category | Helps separate plumbers from related contractors |
Rating | Shows customer reputation signals |
Review count | Indicates visibility and local activity |
Business hours | Helps time calls and follow-up |
Google Maps URL | Keeps the lead source auditable |
Available email | Useful when public and appropriate for outreach |
Status | Helps remove closed or irrelevant businesses |
CoreClaw’s Google Maps B2B Leads Generation Scraper is designed for this type of local business data collection. Instead of copying Google Maps profiles manually, teams can enter keywords and locations, collect public business records, and export structured results for review, filtering, and outreach.
How to Get Plumber Leads from Google Maps Step by Step
Step 1: Define the Plumbing Segment
Start by narrowing the market. “Plumbers in the United States” is too broad. “Emergency plumbers in Dallas with fewer than 100 reviews” is much easier to work with.
Useful plumber segments include:
Segment | Possible Offer |
Emergency plumbers | Call answering, local SEO, call tracking |
Drain cleaning companies | PPC, booking software, review management |
Water heater repair companies | Local ads, landing pages, quote tools |
Commercial plumbers | CRM, field service software, B2B partnerships |
Plumbers with no website | Web design and SEO services |
Plumbers with low ratings | Review management and customer feedback tools |
This step helps you decide which data fields matter most. A web design agency needs website data. A reputation management provider needs ratings and review counts. A software company may care about locations, categories, and service coverage.
Step 2: Choose Keywords and Locations
Next, build keyword and location combinations. Do not rely on one broad search like “plumber.” Use several relevant terms to capture different types of plumbing businesses.
Example keyword ideas:
Keyword | Location Example |
plumber | Austin |
emergency plumber | Phoenix |
plumbing contractor | Denver |
drain cleaning | Chicago |
water heater repair | Tampa |
commercial plumber | Seattle |
sewer repair | Los Angeles |
For service-area businesses, Google says service areas can be set by cities, postal codes, or other areas, and businesses can set up to 20 service areas. This makes city-level and ZIP-code-level research especially useful when building local plumbing lead lists.
Step 3: Use a Google Maps Lead Scraper
Manual research works for a small test list, but it becomes slow when you need hundreds or thousands of plumber leads across multiple cities.
With CoreClaw, users can run a ready-made Google Maps Worker without writing code. A practical workflow looks like this:
Open the Google Maps B2B Leads Generation Scraper.
Enter plumbing-related keywords.
Add target cities, ZIP codes, or regions.
Run the task.
Review the structured output.
Export results to CSV, Excel, JSON, or API.
This approach helps sales and marketing teams avoid repetitive copy-paste work. It also gives them a cleaner dataset that can be filtered before being imported into a spreadsheet, CRM, or outreach tool.
Step 4: Clean and Filter the Data
Raw lead data is rarely ready for outreach. A useful plumber lead workflow should remove duplicates, closed businesses, irrelevant categories, and poor-fit locations.
Then filter the list based on your campaign goal.
For example:
Filter | Best For |
Missing website | Web design and SEO outreach |
Low rating | Review management outreach |
High review count | Established companies with visible demand |
Emergency plumber keyword | Call handling and response-time offers |
Multiple service areas | CRM, scheduling, and operations software |
Available email | Email-based outreach workflows |
CoreClaw helps teams work with cleaned and filtered structured data rather than raw page content. That means users can review organized fields, remove poor-fit records, and export a more usable list. For important business decisions, teams should still sample-check records before launching a campaign.
Step 5: Export the List for Outreach
Once the plumber leads are cleaned, export the list in the right format.
CSV and Excel are best for business users who want to review, filter, tag, and deduplicate the data in spreadsheets. JSON is useful for developers. API access is better for recurring workflows, CRM syncing, enrichment, or internal dashboards.
Before outreach, add columns such as:
Column | Purpose |
City | Local segmentation |
Service type | Campaign personalization |
Lead score | Prioritization |
Reason for outreach | Better sales messaging |
Source URL | Data audit trail |
Last checked date | Data freshness |
This turns a basic Google Maps export into a practical sales workflow.
How to Prioritize Plumber Leads
The best plumber leads are not always the biggest companies. They are the companies where your offer matches a visible business need.
A web design agency could prioritize plumbers with no website. A local SEO agency could focus on companies with weak review profiles in competitive cities. A call answering provider could prioritize emergency plumbers with long business hours. A field service software company could target plumbing contractors with several service areas or multiple locations.
Use the data to personalize outreach. Instead of saying, “We help plumbers get more leads,” a better message would be: “We noticed your plumbing company serves several nearby cities, but your Google profile has fewer reviews than many competitors in the area. We help local service businesses improve review collection and follow-up.”
Specific outreach is easier to trust than generic outreach.
Responsible Use of Public Business Data
Google Maps lead generation should focus on public business information and responsible B2B outreach. Avoid private, sensitive, login-only, or restricted data. Collect only the fields needed for your business purpose.
Google’s Business Profile guidelines say phone numbers should be under the direct control of the business and URLs should not redirect users to unrelated landing pages or phone numbers. These rules are useful when checking whether plumber lead records look legitimate and whether a profile represents a real business.
Responsible outreach also means verifying important contact details, avoiding spam, personalizing messages, and giving recipients a clear way to opt out of commercial communication.
Final Thoughts
Getting plumber leads from Google Maps in 2026 works best when it is treated as a structured data workflow, not a manual copy-paste task.
Start with a clear plumbing segment, choose the right keywords and locations, collect public business data, clean and filter the results, then export the list for review and outreach. This gives sales and marketing teams a more focused prospect list than generic lead databases.
With CoreClaw, teams can use ready-made Workers such as the Google Maps B2B Leads Generation Scraper to collect structured lo cal business data without coding. Results can be exported to CSV, Excel, JSON, or API, and CoreClaw’s pay-only-for-successful-results model helps teams focus on usable data. For niche directories or custom plumbing data sources, teams can also request a custom Worker.
Frequently Asked Questions
Lena Kovalenko researches how modern software systems expose and organize information online. Her writing focuses on the interaction between APIs, web platforms, and automated data workflows. When exploring a topic she typically compares multiple tools to understand their design assumptions. These comparisons often lead to articles that help readers see how different technical approaches influence reliability and efficiency.
查看作者资料 →免责声明:CoreClaw 博客上的所有信息均按“原样”提供,仅供参考。对于因您使用 CoreClaw 博客上发布的信息(或通过链接跳转至的任何第三方网站上的信息)而产生的任何后果,CoreClaw 不作任何陈述,亦不承担任何责任。在进行任何数据抓取活动之前,请务必咨询法律顾问,查阅目标网站的服务条款,并在必要时获取许可。





