Water meters don't lie. If the dial is moving and every faucet in the house is off, you have a leak — and in South Florida's climate, it's getting worse, not better. South Florida homes lose millions of gallons annually to irrigation valve failures, running toilets, and slow slab drips that go undetected for months. This guide shows you exactly how to find your meter, read it correctly, and run a 60-minute test that reveals whether you have a hidden leak anywhere on your property.
Where to Find Your Water Meter in South Florida
- Single-family homes (most common): At the front curb in a round or rectangular plastic lid near the street edge of your property. Lids are usually labeled 'Water' or marked with a 'W.' Bring a flathead screwdriver to pry it open.
- Newer homes and HOA communities: Often at the side of the structure or in a small concrete vault near the street. Some HOA communities have master meters with individual sub-meters at each unit.
- Condos and apartments: Most condo units do not have their own meter — the building uses a master meter. Individual units typically have a shutoff valve near the water heater or under the kitchen sink, but no separate meter to read.
How to Read the Meter Face
- Lift the lid with a flathead screwdriver. Wipe the face clean with a dry rag if dirty.
- Find the flow indicator — a small red or blue triangle, star-shaped dial, or sweep hand. If it rotates with all fixtures off, water is actively moving right now.
- On an analog meter, read the odometer-style number wheels left to right. These show cumulative total usage in gallons or cubic feet (labeled on the face).
- On a digital meter, wait for the display to cycle. One screen shows total usage; another shows current flow rate. Some models have a drip or faucet icon that illuminates when continuous flow is detected.
- Write down the reading or photograph it — you will compare it to a second reading in the test below.
The 60-Minute Leak Test
- Turn off every water-using device: all faucets, the ice maker supply line, the washing machine, the dishwasher, outdoor hose bibs, and — critically — your irrigation system timer. If you have a pool auto-fill valve, shut it at the line.
- Return to the meter. Record the exact reading and check whether the flow indicator is already moving. If it spins now, you have an active leak.
- Go back inside and touch nothing that uses water for exactly 60 minutes.
- Return to the meter and read again. Subtract the first reading from the second to get gallons consumed.
- Use the scale below to interpret the result. Zero movement means no detectable active leak; any movement confirms one.
- 0 gallons moved: No active leak detected. Still possible to have an intermittent one — run the test again at different times if your bill seems elevated.
- 1-10 gallons in 60 minutes: Small, slow leak — typically a running toilet flapper, dripping faucet, or weeping irrigation emitter. Fix it this week.
- 10-100 gallons in 60 minutes: Significant loss. Likely a stuck irrigation zone valve, failing pressure-reducing valve, or early slab leak. Schedule a plumber.
- More than 100 gallons in 60 minutes: Serious leak. Could be a broken irrigation main, cracked supply line, or active slab leak. Shut the main off and call immediately.
Isolating Where the Leak Is
- Locate your main house shutoff valve (usually near the foundation or inside a utility closet). Turn it fully clockwise to close.
- Return to the meter and watch the flow indicator for 2-3 minutes.
- If the meter stops completely: the leak is inside your house — in the plumbing, an appliance, or a fixture. Begin checking toilets, under sinks, and the water heater.
- If the meter is still moving after closing the main valve: the leak is in the buried supply line between the meter and your house shutoff. This is buried pipe — usually copper or CPVC — and requires a plumber with leak detection equipment, not DIY.
Checking Toilets for Silent Running
Toilets account for roughly 30% of indoor water use, and a running toilet can waste 200 gallons a day without making any obvious sound. Quick test: drop 5-6 drops of food coloring into the toilet tank (not the bowl). Wait 10 minutes without flushing. If color appears in the bowl, the flapper is leaking. In South Florida's hard water, flapper valves degrade faster than in softer-water markets — we typically see them fail every 3-5 years in Miami-Dade and Broward homes.
When to Stop and Call a Plumber
- Meter shows more than 30 gallons per hour of unexplained loss after isolating irrigation and toilets.
- You can hear running water inside walls or floors with all fixtures off.
- You notice warm spots on tile, softness in hardwood floors, or buckling near a slab seam.
- You see water staining on ceilings, walls, or along the base of exterior walls.
- Your isolation test showed the meter still running with the main valve fully closed — that is a buried supply line leak.
Slab leaks are especially common in South Florida homes built in the 1970s-1990s on concrete pads with copper supply lines. Florida's slightly alkaline soil accelerates copper corrosion — lines that would last 50 years in drier markets can fail in 20-25 years here. Slab leaks require acoustic and thermal detection equipment and usually involve rerouting the line rather than jackhammering the slab. If you suspect one, call 754-707-1774. We serve Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties and carry the equipment to locate leaks without unnecessary floor damage.
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