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Leak detection

Leak detection in Palm Coast, FL

Some leaks are easy to see. Others hide for days behind a wall, under flooring, or below the slab — quietly damaging wood, drywall, and trim. We find the source of hidden leaks, limit unnecessary damage, and explain the repair options clearly.

Think you have a leak?

A high water bill, a warm floor spot, damp drywall, or the sound of running water can all point to a hidden leak. The sooner it’s found, the less it damages.

(386) 353-9386

Find the leak before it gets worse

A pipe may leak behind a wall. Water may collect under flooring. A hot water line may leak below the slab. A small drip under a cabinet may slowly damage wood, drywall, trim, and flooring. We help find the source of hidden leaks, slab leaks, pipe leaks, water-line leaks, fixture leaks, and unexplained water use.

The goal is simple: find the leak, limit unnecessary damage, and explain the repair options clearly. If you think you have a water leak, call (386) 353-9386.

Warning signs

Signs you may have a hidden leak

A hidden leak usually leaves small clues before it becomes a bigger problem. Catching them early reduces water damage and repair costs.

Your water bill jumped

A higher bill with no change in use is one of the most common signs. Even a small steady leak wastes a surprising amount of water over time.

Wet spots or stains

Wet drywall, ceiling stains, damp flooring, or moisture under cabinets point to a nearby leak — though the wet spot is rarely where it started.

A floor spot feels warm

A warm floor area can mean a leaking hot-water line under the slab — especially paired with low pressure, high use, or damp flooring.

You hear running water

If every fixture is off but you still hear water moving, a hidden pipe leak may be the cause — often easiest to hear when the house is quiet.

Water pressure drops

A leak can reduce pressure at sinks, showers, or toilets. A sudden drop, paired with wet spots or a high bill, makes a leak more likely.

You smell mold or mildew

A musty smell usually means trapped moisture — from a slow leak behind a wall, under flooring, or near a fixture. The humid climate hides it.

Flooring starts to change

Warped flooring, loose tiles, bubbling laminate, soft spots, or damp carpet may point to a leak below or nearby with no known spill.

What we find

Leak problems we find

Leaks happen in many parts of a plumbing system. Some are visible; others stay hidden until the damage shows.

Slab leaks

A water line leaking under or inside a concrete slab. Signs include warm floor spots, damp flooring, low pressure, higher bills, and moisture near baseboards.

See Slab Leak Repair →

Water-line leaks

Leaks in main, branch, or fixture lines — showing as wet soil, damp walls, stains, or pressure changes. They keep running even when fixtures are off.

See Pipe Repair & Repiping →

Pipe leaks

Leaks at joints, cracks, or fittings weakened by corrosion, age, movement, or pressure. One spot may be a repair; several may mean repiping.

See Pipe Repair & Repiping →

Fixture leaks

Leaks around toilets, faucets, sinks, showers, tubs, appliances, or shut-off valves. Small, but they damage cabinets, floors, and trim over time.

See Faucet Repair →

Wall & ceiling leaks

Stains on drywall or ceilings from plumbing lines above or behind the surface — near a bath, kitchen, laundry, water heater, or upstairs fixture.

Water heater leaks

Water near a heater may come from a valve, fitting, drain connection, supply line, or the tank itself. A tank leak is often more serious.

See Water Heater Repair →
How it works

How leak detection works

It shouldn’t start with tearing open walls. A careful process narrows down the source with as little disruption as possible.

01

Listen to the signs

We start with what you noticed — a high bill, warm floor, damp drywall, low pressure, or running water. Each clue points a different way.

02

Check the system

We look at visible plumbing and affected areas — fixtures, valves, heater connections, supply lines, walls, and floors — plus moisture patterns.

03

Narrow the area

We narrow down the part of the system most likely involved — hot or cold, a fixture, a wall line, a slab area, or the main line.

04

Pinpoint the source

We use the right detection approach for the situation. Accuracy matters — opening the wrong wall or floor only creates extra repair work.

05

Explain options

Once found, we explain what we found and the next step. Some leaks repair in place; some slabs or aging systems need a broader fix.

Local conditions

Palm Coast slab & water-line issues

Local conditions can make hidden leaks more stressful and harder to spot here.

Slab foundations hide leaks

Many homes sit on concrete slabs with water lines running below. Instead of a visible drip, you get warm spots, damp flooring, low pressure, or higher use.

Sandy soil shifts lines

The sandy soil common to Florida can shift over time, stressing underground water lines and joints and contributing to small leaks in older piping.

Humidity hides moisture

A warm, humid climate can make moisture feel normal, so slow leaks are easy to miss. A musty smell or damp baseboard still matters.

Older pipes are vulnerable

Older fittings, valves, and connections wear, corrode, loosen, or crack. If leaks keep happening, repiping may be worth discussing.

Coastal & waterfront wear

Properties near canals or the Intracoastal deal with more moisture, salt air, and corrosion on outdoor plumbing, hose bibs, and exposed valves.

Next step

What happens after we find the leak

Finding the leak is the first step. The repair depends on where it is and what caused it.

Small fixture & valve leaks

A worn supply line, loose connection, faucet part, toilet seal, or shut-off valve — usually a more direct repair.

Pipe leaks

A section repaired or replaced. If the pipe failed from age, corrosion, or repeated issues, we explain whether a larger plan makes sense.

Slab leaks

Targeted repair, rerouting, or another solution depending on location and condition. We explain the options clearly before work begins.

Water heater leaks

A fitting, valve, or connection may be repairable; a leaking tank may need replacement. The plan matches the cause, not just the symptom.

Related services

Leak detection often connects to other repairs

FAQ

Leak detection questions

How do I know if I have a hidden leak?

Common signs include a high water bill, wet spots, warm flooring, low water pressure, musty odors, water stains, soft drywall, or the sound of running water when fixtures are off. If several show up together, schedule leak detection.

Can a leak raise my water bill?

Yes. A hidden leak can run day and night, even when you are not using water. If your bill rises without a clear reason, a leak may be the cause.

What causes wet spots on floors?

Wet spots may come from a leaking water line, slab leak, fixture leak, appliance connection, or a pipe inside a nearby wall. The visible spot is not always the source, so detection helps locate the real problem.

Do slab leaks show obvious signs?

Not always. Slab leaks can be subtle — warm floor spots, damp flooring, lower pressure, a musty smell, higher use, or running water. Some stay hidden until damage becomes visible.

Is leak detection messy?

The goal is to keep disruption low. We narrow down the likely area before opening anything. Some repairs still need access, but careful detection avoids unnecessary damage.

What should I do if water is actively leaking?

If water is spreading, shut off the main valve if you can do it safely, and stay away from water near electricity. Then call (386) 353-9386 for urgent help.

Can a water heater leak look like a plumbing leak?

Yes. Water near a heater may come from the tank, a valve, a fitting, a drain line, or a nearby pipe. We check the source before recommending a repair.

Do you provide leak detection for businesses?

Yes. We help Palm Coast businesses, offices, shops, rental properties, and property managers identify leaks and plan the next repair step.

Find your leak in Palm Coast

A hidden leak won’t fix itself — the longer it runs, the more it wastes and damages. If you see wet drywall, a warm floor, low pressure, or a water bill that doesn’t add up, call.

(386) 353-9386