Leak detection isn’t just about finding a drip—it’s about protecting a home, saving real money, and building serious trust as a professional. In this post, I’m going to walk you through a practical, repeatable system for finding leaks—especially slab leaks—using simple checks, smart listening, and a step-by-step process that shrinks the search area until you’re confidently “in the hole.”
Why leak detection matters more than most plumbers realize
In many markets, slab leaks are common enough that a plumbing company can’t afford to ignore them. Some leaks happen under the home’s concrete slab. Others show up outside in the yard, between the meter and the house. Either way, leaks can quietly drain a customer’s wallet for weeks or months before anyone connects the dots.
Here’s the real issue: if you’re already going to a house for plumbing work and you’re not checking the system for hidden leaks, you may be leaving value on the table and leaving your customer exposed. A leak doesn’t care that you were there to replace a faucet or swap a water heater—it’s still costing them money, still eroding soil, still damaging materials, and still getting worse.
Leak detection becomes a win for everyone when it’s treated as a standard part of a professional inspection process.
The mindset shift: leak detection isn’t hard—it’s a system
A lot of plumbers think leak detection is some mysterious specialty. It’s not magic. It’s a skill built on:
- A consistent process
- The ability to establish a baseline
- The patience to narrow a problem down step by step
- The right tools used the right way
Nobody is born knowing how to pipe a water heater or set a toilet. You learn it. You practice it. You get better. Leak detection is the same.
The fastest way to gain confidence is to stop “hunting” and start “processing.” You follow the same steps every time so you don’t miss anything.
Start at the meter: confirm whether there’s flow when nothing is running
Before you ever grab specialized equipment, start where the water enters the property.
Check the meter for signs of movement
With all fixtures off, look for indicators that water is still moving. Different meters show flow differently—some have a small sweep hand, some have a triangle or star-shaped flow indicator, and some are digital with a flow rate display.
If the meter indicates flow when nothing should be using water, you’ve got an active leak or a fixture silently running.
Use the “inside vs. outside” isolation test
Most homes have a main shutoff at or near the meter. Some also have an isolation valve that separates the house from the yard line (depending on layout).
- Shut off the valve feeding the house.
- Check the meter again.
If the meter still shows flow, the leak is likely in the yard line (between meter and house, or irrigation/backflow lines).
If the meter stops, the leak is likely inside the house (including under the slab).
This is one of the most powerful “fork in the road” tests you can do, because it prevents you from chasing the wrong problem.
Add a pressure test: quick confirmation without guesswork
A listening tool is great, but pressure testing is the simplest way to confirm whether the water system is holding.
The basic idea
- Put a pressure gauge on the system (commonly at a hose bib, laundry connection, or test point).
- Shut off water at the meter or main valve.
- Observe whether pressure holds steady.
If pressure drops, you have leakage somewhere on the pressurized side.
What pressure testing does for you
Pressure testing turns a vague suspicion (“I think there’s a leak”) into a measurable condition (“the system won’t hold pressure”). It also helps you communicate clearly to a homeowner: “Your plumbing system is losing pressure with the supply shut off, which tells us water is escaping somewhere.”
Build your baseline: listen at valves and use the house to tell you the story
Once you know there’s a leak and you’ve isolated where it likely is, the next step is building an audio baseline.
Where to listen first
You want contact points that connect directly to the piping:
- Angle stops under sinks
- Valves behind the refrigerator (ice maker supply)
- Washing machine shutoffs
- Tub/shower valves (more on that in a second)
- Hose bibs around the perimeter of the home
A smart trick for shower valves
If you can’t easily touch the valve body, use the screws that hold the trim plate (escutcheon) in place. Those screws are connected to the valve assembly, and metal transfers sound. That can give you a surprisingly clear signal.
What you’re listening for
- A steady “hiss” or rushing noise can indicate active flow through a leak.
- Louder usually means closer, but it’s not the only factor—pipe material, slab density, and water pressure matter too.
The goal early on is not to pinpoint the exact spot. The goal is to understand: Which line is involved? Which direction does it run? Where does the sound grow and fade?
Follow the loud-to-quiet pattern: identify the line and direction
As you move from valve to valve, you’ll often notice a pattern:
- Some points: nothing noticeable
- Some points: faint movement
- Then: louder… louder… and suddenly one spot “screams”
That “screaming” point is a clue: you’re probably on the line feeding that area, and you’re getting closer to the leak.
Now you do something that separates pros from guessers:
Trace the logic of the plumbing layout
Most homes have a main line that comes in, then branches to different fixture groups. If one branch is much louder than others, you’re narrowing down which segment is involved.
And yes—plumbers like straight runs. Many installers take the simplest route possible. But don’t rely on assumptions alone. Use the sound and confirm with additional checks.
Line locating can be a game-changer
If you have access to a line locator/tracer (often used to trace metallic lines or tracer wires), you can map where the pipe runs. That helps you avoid unnecessary demolition and makes your repair plan cleaner.
The “three-coin” method: simple markers that help you triangulate
I love simple tools that make you better, and a few coins (or any small markers) can help you stay organized when you’re narrowing down a leak location.
How it works
Think of it like this:
- You place two markers to represent the line you believe the pipe is running along.
- Then you use a third marker as your “moving point” while you listen and compare.
You’re not actually “finding the leak with coins.” You’re using them to keep your path straight and your decision-making disciplined.
Why it matters
When you’re working on a slab, you can drift without realizing it. A marker line gives you a reference so you can:
- Re-check the same points consistently
- Compare loudness from one spot to another
- Adjust your path in small, controlled movements
This is one of those little habits that makes your results repeatable.
When water sound isn’t enough: induce air to make the leak talk louder
Sometimes water flow noise is subtle—especially if the leak is small, the slab is thick, or the environment is noisy. That’s when inducing air can help.
The concept
Air behaves differently than water. When air is pushed through a leaking line, it often creates a distinct bubbling or rumbling sound at the leak point. That sound can be easier to distinguish than smooth water movement.
A safe, practical approach
- Isolate the water supply so you’re not pushing air back toward the meter.
- Introduce air into the system using a compressor and a regulated setup.
- Use controlled pressure—you do not need extreme PSI to get results.
A common professional preference is to keep pressure modest for control and safety. The goal isn’t brute force. The goal is creating a clear acoustic signature.
Listen for the “rumble”
When air is escaping at the leak, you’ll often pick up a low rumbling, fizzing, or bubbling sound in the background. The “best” spot is where that sound is strongest and most consistent.
If you lose pressure quickly, that’s also a clue: the leak may be substantial, or the system may be more open than you thought.
Shrink the search area: “hay bale to a quarter”
This is one of the best mental models for leak detection:
You’re not trying to find a needle in a haystack.
You’re trying to turn the hay bale into a quarter.
That happens through structured narrowing:
- Confirm there’s flow when there shouldn’t be.
- Isolate inside vs. outside.
- Identify which branch or zone is loudest.
- Use comparative listening to pick a direction.
- Switch to air if needed to sharpen the signal.
- Mark and re-check until you’re confident.
Every step reduces the amount of slab you’re “responsible” for. That’s how you go from general suspicion to a precise mark on the floor.
Practical listening strategy: where pros gain an advantage
A consistent listening routine makes you faster and more accurate.
Start outside, then work in
Outside points often tell you what you need to know early:
- The meter area
- Hose bibs
- Any irrigation/backflow branches
Leaks near the edge of the house can fool people. You might assume it’s deep under the slab, but it could be right under the front edge where a line turns or transitions.
Inside, hit every accessible valve quickly
You don’t need to camp out on each valve for 30 seconds. A few seconds per point is enough to compare relative loudness—especially once you’ve built your baseline.
Isolate hot vs. cold if needed
If the leak is inside the house and you suspect it may be on hot water, isolate the water heater supply and re-check conditions. Narrowing hot vs. cold early can save a lot of time.
Marking for repair: what “in the hole” really means
Leak detection isn’t about being perfect to the millimeter. It’s about being accurate enough that your repair plan is efficient.
If you’re cutting a slab to access a line, you’re not cutting a hole the size of a dime. You’re usually opening a workable area—often something like 2’x2’ or larger depending on conditions.
If you can mark the leak within an inch or two, you’re in great shape. That’s “in the hole.”
And for tunneling approaches (common in some regions), a precise mark tells you where to aim your tunnel so you hit the right spot quickly.
Make leak detection part of your company’s standard procedure
From a business standpoint, leak detection should not be a random add-on. It should be part of your operating system.
Why it’s good for the customer
- Prevents long-term damage
- Reduces surprise costs
- Builds confidence in your professionalism
- Creates clear options for repair
Why it’s good for the plumbing company
- Adds a high-value service line
- Keeps work in-house instead of outsourcing
- Builds technician skill and pride
- Reduces “guess-and-demo” time
The real secret: repeatable systems
The best techs aren’t the ones with “lucky instincts.” They’re the ones who follow the same steps every time. Leak detection rewards consistency.
Write it down. Train it. Practice it. Improve it.
Conclusion
Leak detection becomes straightforward when you stop treating it like a mystery and start treating it like a process. Begin at the meter, isolate inside vs. outside, confirm pressure loss, build an audio baseline at key valves, and follow loud-to-quiet comparisons to identify the line and direction. When water noise isn’t clear enough, introducing controlled air can make the leak stand out with a distinct bubbling rumble. Use simple markers—like the “three-coin” method—to stay aligned and organized as you narrow the location.
Most importantly, approach every job with systems and procedures. When leak detection is built into your routine, you protect customers, raise your professionalism, and create a service your company can be proud to offer.