← Back to Skills Marketplace
howtousehumans

Basic Home Repair

by HowToUseHumans · GitHub ↗ · v1.0.0 · MIT-0
cross-platform ✓ Security Clean
142
Downloads
0
Stars
0
Active Installs
1
Versions
Install in OpenClaw
/install basic-home-repair
Description
The 15 most common home repairs that anyone can do with basic tools. Fixes that save hundreds per call. For people who've never picked up a wrench and curren...
README (SKILL.md)

Basic Home Repair

A plumber charges $150-300 for a visit. An electrician charges $200-400. A handyman charges $75-150/hour. Most of what they do on routine calls, you can do yourself with $30 in tools and a 10-minute explanation. This skill covers the 15 most common home repairs ranked by money saved and ease of learning.

Sources & Verification

  • Family Handyman / Reader's Digest Association — decades of tested DIY repair instructions with step-by-step photography. familyhandyman.com
  • This Old House (PBS) — expert-reviewed home repair guides covering plumbing, electrical, and structural basics. thisoldhouse.com
  • HUD Healthy Homes Program (U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development) — free guidance on safe home maintenance and hazard prevention. hud.gov/program_offices/healthy_homes
  • Cooperative Extension System (USDA/Land-Grant Universities) — local extension offices publish free home maintenance guides tailored to regional conditions. extension.org
  • "The Complete Do-It-Yourself Manual" by Reader's Digest (revised edition) — the most comprehensive single-volume reference for home repair fundamentals

When to Use

  • User has a home repair issue and wants to try fixing it themselves
  • Wants to build basic maintenance skills
  • Trying to avoid paying for a professional for simple issues
  • New homeowner or first-time renter who's never done any repairs

Instructions

Step 1: Get the $30 toolkit

THE ONLY TOOLS YOU NEED TO START:

- Adjustable wrench ($8) — fits any nut or bolt
- Phillips + flathead screwdriver ($5 for both)
- Pliers ($6)
- Plunger ($8) — get a FLANGE plunger, not the flat cup kind
- Roll of plumber's tape / teflon tape ($2)
- Roll of duct tape ($3)

TOTAL: ~$30

NICE TO HAVE LATER:
- Cordless drill ($40-60) — the single most useful power tool
- Tape measure
- Level
- Stud finder ($15)
- Utility knife

Step 2: The 15 fixes ranked by money saved

PLUMBING (saves $150-400 per incident):

1. UNCLOG A DRAIN (saves $150-250)
   -> Pour boiling water down the drain first
   -> If that fails: 1/2 cup baking soda + 1/2 cup vinegar, wait 30 min, flush with hot water
   -> If that fails: use a plunger (cover overflow hole with wet rag first)
   -> If that fails: remove the P-trap under the sink (put a bucket under it first,
      unscrew the two slip nuts, clean it out, put it back)
   -> NEVER use chemical drain cleaners — they damage pipes

2. FIX A RUNNING TOILET (saves $150-300)
   -> Lift the tank lid and look inside
   -> If the flapper (rubber thing at bottom) is warped/old: replace it ($5 at hardware store,
      pulls right off, new one snaps on)
   -> If the float is too high: adjust the float arm down so water stops
      1 inch below the overflow tube
   -> These two fixes solve 90% of running toilets

3. FIX A LEAKY FAUCET (saves $150-250)
   -> Turn off water supply (valves under the sink, turn clockwise)
   -> Most leaks = worn washer or O-ring
   -> Search "[your faucet brand] [your faucet model] washer replacement"
   -> It's usually: remove handle, remove cartridge, replace rubber parts, reassemble
   -> Parts cost $5-10

WALLS AND SURFACES (saves $100-300):

4. PATCH A HOLE IN DRYWALL (saves $100-200)
   -> Small holes (nail/screw): fill with spackle, let dry, sand smooth, paint
   -> Medium holes (fist-sized): buy a drywall patch kit ($8), apply mesh patch,
      spread joint compound, let dry, sand, paint
   -> The secret: feather the edges so the patch blends into the wall

5. FIX A SQUEAKY DOOR (saves a service call)
   -> Remove hinge pin (tap up from bottom with screwdriver)
   -> Coat pin with petroleum jelly or WD-40
   -> Replace pin. Done.

6. FIX A STICKING DOOR (saves a service call)
   -> Find where it sticks (look for shiny/rubbed spots on the edge)
   -> Sand that spot with medium sandpaper
   -> If the whole door sags: tighten the top hinge screws (use longer screws
      if the holes are stripped — 3-inch screws into the door frame stud)

ELECTRICAL — SAFE STUFF ONLY (saves $200-400):

7. REPLACE A LIGHT SWITCH OR OUTLET (saves $200)
   -> Turn off the breaker for that circuit (test with a voltage tester or plug in a lamp)
   -> Remove cover plate, unscrew switch/outlet from box
   -> Take a photo of which wire goes where
   -> Disconnect wires, connect to new switch/outlet in same positions
   -> Screw back in, replace cover, turn breaker on
   NOTE: if you see aluminum wiring (silver color), STOP and call a professional

8. FIX A TRIPPED BREAKER (saves a service call)
   -> Find your electrical panel (usually basement, garage, or utility closet)
   -> Look for the breaker that's in the middle position (not fully on or off)
   -> Push it fully to OFF, then back to ON
   -> If it trips again immediately: you have an overloaded circuit or a short.
      Unplug everything on that circuit and try again. If it still trips, call an electrician.

EVERYTHING ELSE:

9. TIGHTEN A LOOSE HANDLE/KNOB (saves frustration)
   -> Look for a set screw on the base (tiny screw on the side or bottom)
   -> Tighten it. That's literally it.

10. FIX A STUCK WINDOW (saves $100-200)
    -> Score the paint seal with a utility knife along the edges
    -> Spray silicone lubricant in the tracks
    -> Tap the frame gently with a rubber mallet or your palm

11. STOP A DRAFTY WINDOW/DOOR (saves $50-200/year in heating)
    -> Buy adhesive weatherstripping ($5-10)
    -> Clean the surface, apply the strip along the gap
    -> For windows: shrink-wrap window insulation kits ($15 for 5 windows)

12. RECAULK A BATHTUB/SHOWER (saves $150-250)
    -> Remove old caulk with a utility knife
    -> Clean the gap with rubbing alcohol
    -> Apply new silicone caulk (cut tip at 45 degrees, steady line)
    -> Smooth with a wet finger. Let cure 24 hours.

13. FIX A GARBAGE DISPOSAL (saves $150-200)
    -> If it hums but doesn't spin: turn it off, look underneath for a hex key hole,
       insert the hex wrench (usually comes with the unit), turn back and forth to free the jam
    -> If it does nothing: press the reset button on the bottom of the unit
    -> NEVER put your hand inside a disposal

14. UNCLOG A SHOWERHEAD (saves a service call)
    -> Unscrew showerhead
    -> Soak in white vinegar overnight
    -> Scrub holes with old toothbrush
    -> Reattach with new teflon tape on threads

15. HANG SOMETHING HEAVY ON A WALL (prevents damage)
    -> Find the stud (knock on wall — hollow = no stud, solid = stud)
    -> Or use a stud finder ($15)
    -> Drill into the stud. It will hold 50+ lbs easily.
    -> No stud available: use toggle bolts ($5), NOT plastic anchors for heavy items.

If This Fails

  • Call 211 or search "free home repair assistance [your county]" — many communities have volunteer repair programs for low-income homeowners (Habitat for Humanity Repair Corps, Rebuilding Together)
  • Ask your hardware store — staff at independent hardware stores will often walk you through a repair for free. Bring the broken part and a photo of the setup.
  • Try a local handyman school or community college — many offer free or low-cost Saturday repair workshops where you can bring your own project
  • Cross-reference: Start a Micro-Business skill — if you're paying for repairs you can't afford, learning repair skills can also become income (handyman services: $40-80/hr)
  • For renters: document and request — if a DIY fix isn't working, your landlord is legally responsible for habitability repairs. Submit requests in writing and know your tenant rights (search "[your state] tenant rights repairs")

Rules

  • Always mention safety: turn off water before plumbing, turn off breaker before electrical
  • If it involves gas lines, main electrical panels, or structural work: tell the user to call a professional
  • Start with the simplest diagnosis before suggesting complex fixes
  • Renting vs owning matters: renters should notify landlord for major issues but can fix minor things

Tips

  • YouTube is the best repair teacher. Search your exact problem + your exact model number. Someone has filmed the fix.
  • Take photos before you take anything apart. You'll thank yourself when reassembling.
  • Hardware store employees are usually the most helpful people on earth. Bring the broken part with you and ask.
  • "Righty tighty, lefty loosey" — the universal rule for screws, bolts, and most fittings.
  • If water is actively spraying: your first job is finding the shutoff valve, not fixing the pipe. Main shutoff is usually near the water meter.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill Name: basic-home-repair Version: 1.0.0 The skill bundle provides legitimate, safety-conscious instructions for common home repairs (plumbing, electrical, and general maintenance). There is no evidence of malicious code, data exfiltration, or prompt injection; the requested 'filesystem' permission appears unused by the provided text-based instructions in SKILL.md.
How to Use
  1. Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
  2. Run the install command in chat: /install basic-home-repair
  3. After installation, invoke the skill by name or use /basic-home-repair
  4. Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Basic Home Repair v1.0.0 - Initial release providing a step-by-step guide to the 15 most common home repairs anyone can perform with basic tools. - Includes instructions and money-saving tips for plumbing, electrical, wall repairs, and more. - Features a recommended starter toolkit for beginners. - Offers trusted sources, troubleshooting guidance, and advice on seeking free or community help. - No prior repair experience required; ideal for new homeowners or renters looking to do basic fixes themselves.
Metadata
Slug basic-home-repair
Version 1.0.0
License MIT-0
All-time Installs 0
Active Installs 0
Total Versions 1
Frequently Asked Questions

What is Basic Home Repair?

The 15 most common home repairs that anyone can do with basic tools. Fixes that save hundreds per call. For people who've never picked up a wrench and curren... It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 142 downloads so far.

How do I install Basic Home Repair?

Run "/install basic-home-repair" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.

Is Basic Home Repair free?

Yes, Basic Home Repair is completely free, licensed under MIT-0. You can download, install and use it at no cost.

Which platforms does Basic Home Repair support?

Basic Home Repair is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).

Who created Basic Home Repair?

It is built and maintained by HowToUseHumans (@howtousehumans); the current version is v1.0.0.

💬 Comments