Skip to main content
Emergency Guide

Slab Leak Detection in South Florida: Signs, Causes, and What to Do Next

A slab leak is a water line break beneath your concrete foundation. In South Florida, the combination of aggressive soil movement, corrosive groundwater, and aging copper pipes makes slab leaks more common than in almost any other U.S. market. Here's how to catch one early and what your repair options look like.

May 10, 20268 min readBy South FL Emergency Plumber Team
Slab Leak Detection in South Florida: Signs, Causes, and What to Do Next

Key Takeaways

  • A warm or wet spot on your floor, a spiking water bill, and the sound of running water with everything off are the three classic slab leak signs.
  • South Florida's limestone-heavy soil, high water table, and aging copper supply lines make slab leaks more common here than the national average.
  • Electronic leak detection locates the break without jackhammering — always confirm the location before any concrete work begins.
  • Repair options range from spot repair (cheapest, best for isolated breaks) to epoxy pipe lining to full repipe — cost depends on pipe age and leak count.
  • Homeowner's insurance often covers sudden slab leaks but not gradual leaks — document everything before you call the plumber, then call the plumber.

A slab leak is exactly what it sounds like: a break or pinhole in a water supply or drain line that runs through — or directly under — your concrete foundation. In South Florida, slab construction is the norm rather than the exception. Nearly every single-family home built in Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties since the 1950s sits on a poured concrete slab with copper supply lines embedded in or under it. When those lines fail, the water has nowhere to go but sideways through the ground and eventually up through the slab.

The problem is that a slab leak can run for weeks or months before it becomes obvious. Meanwhile, it's eroding the soil under your foundation, saturating your subfloor, and — in South Florida's humidity — feeding mold inside walls that you won't see until the damage is significant. Catching it early is the difference between a $2,500 spot repair and a $15,000 foundation and mold remediation project.

Why slab leaks are more common in South Florida

Several factors combine to make this region particularly susceptible. The Biscayne Aquifer sits just a few feet below the surface across most of Miami-Dade and Broward, which means the soil under your foundation is frequently wet, chemically active, and constantly shifting as the water table rises and falls with the seasons and with rain events. Copper pipe — which was the standard installation material from roughly 1950 through the mid-2000s — is vulnerable to a process called formicary corrosion in the presence of chloramines. South Florida water utilities have used chloramines as a disinfectant since the late 1990s. When chloramine-treated water contacts copper in the presence of organic material in the soil, it creates a pattern of pitting corrosion from the outside of the pipe that works its way inward until the pipe fails.

  • Homes built between 1960 and 2000 with original copper supply lines are at highest risk — the pipes are at or past their design life in this environment
  • Homes near the coast (33139, 33019, 33309, 33480, 33141) face additional electrolytic corrosion from salt-laden soil
  • Areas with expansive limestone or fill soils see more pipe stress from ground movement after heavy rain or drought
  • High-rise condos with recirculating hot water loops experience accelerated corrosion because the water is constantly moving and reheating

The warning signs of a slab leak

None of these signs confirm a slab leak on their own, but two or more together — especially with an older home — warrant a professional test.

  1. Warm or hot spot on the floor. This is the most specific sign. If a section of tile, wood, or laminate feels noticeably warmer than the surrounding area, a hot water supply line is leaking beneath it. The warmth is the first thing you'll notice — visible moisture comes later.
  2. Water bill spike with no change in usage. A slab leak on the supply side is a continuous loss running 24 hours a day. A pinhole leak losing half a gallon per minute adds up to 720 gallons a day — roughly 21,000 extra gallons per month. That will show up clearly on a South Florida Water Management bill.
  3. Sound of running water when everything is off. Turn off every fixture, close the dishwasher and ice maker valves, and stand in a quiet room. A faint hissing or running-water sound is pressurized water escaping the supply line.
  4. Wet or damp carpet or flooring with no visible source. If a room consistently feels damp and there's no plumbing fixture above it, the moisture is coming up through the slab.
  5. Cracks in floors or walls. This is a later-stage sign. As water erodes soil under the slab, the foundation settles unevenly. Diagonal cracks running from door or window corners are a common result.
  6. Mold or musty smell at floor level. South Florida mold grows within 48 hours in saturated drywall. A slab leak that's been running for weeks will produce mold in the baseboards and lower wall cavity before you see any visible water.
  7. Low water pressure at fixtures throughout the house. A significant supply-side leak reduces system pressure. If the pressure drop is recent and house-wide (not just one fixture), the break is on the main supply side.

How professional slab leak detection works

The goal of detection is to locate the break precisely before any concrete is cut. Opening the wrong spot wastes money and leaves an additional hole to repair. There are three primary methods we use, often in combination:

  • Electronic listening equipment. A sensitive ground microphone is moved across the floor surface. Pressurized water escaping a pinhole creates a specific acoustic signature that distinguishes it from normal household noise. This is the most common first step and works well for supply-side (pressurized) leaks.
  • Thermal imaging. An infrared camera reads temperature differences at the floor surface. Hot water leaks show clearly as warm zones. This is faster than acoustic detection but requires the hot water line to be running and works best on tile or concrete — less effective through thick flooring.
  • Pressure isolation. We close valves to isolate the hot line from the cold line, then watch the pressure gauge. If pressure holds on cold but drops on hot (or vice versa), we've confirmed which line is leaking and can focus detection accordingly.
  • Tracer gas (for hard-to-locate breaks). An inert, non-toxic gas is introduced into the pipe. A surface sensor picks up where it escapes through the slab. This is used when acoustic detection is inconclusive — typically with drain-side leaks or in homes with thick flooring or extensive tiling.

Repair options and what they actually cost in South Florida (2026)

There is no single right answer — the best repair method depends on how many leaks the pipe has, how old the pipe is overall, your flooring type, and your insurance situation.

Option 1: Spot repair (jackhammer access)

The concrete above the leak is opened, the damaged section is cut out and replaced, and the slab is patched. This is the least expensive option when there is a single isolated break on a pipe that's otherwise in good condition. In South Florida, typical cost is $1,800–$3,500 including concrete patching, not including tile matching or flooring restoration. Tile matching is often the harder problem — if your flooring is a discontinued style, the patch will be visible.

Option 2: Pipe rerouting (overhead bypass)

Instead of opening the slab, the failed pipe is abandoned in place and a new line is run overhead — through walls, attic, or utility chases — to restore service. No concrete work required, which keeps the cost down and avoids flooring damage. Typical cost in this market is $2,500–$5,000 depending on the run length. The trade-off is exposed pipe or new drywall for the new route, and attic-run lines lose hot water heat faster (important for long runs in larger homes).

Option 3: Epoxy pipe lining (trenchless)

The interior of the existing pipe is cleaned and coated with a structural epoxy lining that seals pinholes and creates a new pipe surface inside the old one. This requires minimal access points and preserves the existing routing. It's most effective when the pipe has multiple small pinholes rather than a catastrophic break, and when the pipe's interior diameter is still adequate. Cost typically runs $4,000–$8,000 for a full-house hot or cold line. Not every pipe is a candidate — we assess with a camera inspection first.

Option 4: Full repipe

When a home has original copper from the 1960s through 1990s and has had more than one slab leak, the most cost-effective long-term decision is usually a full repipe. All the old copper is abandoned or removed and new PEX or CPVC lines are run overhead throughout the house. In South Florida, a full repipe on a 3/2 single-family home runs $6,000–$12,000 depending on square footage and access difficulty. You're paying more now, but you're eliminating future leak risk from the original pipe system entirely.

Insurance and slab leaks: what's usually covered

Florida homeowner's insurance policies generally cover sudden and accidental slab leaks — meaning a pipe that failed unexpectedly. They typically do not cover gradual leaks that went undetected for a long time (your policy will have language about "continuous or repeated seepage"). The distinction is often determined by the adjuster's read of how long the leak had been running, which is informed by how much damage is present.

  • Document before you repair: photograph every symptom — the wet spot, the warm floor zone, the mold, the crack — before any work starts. Your adjuster needs evidence of the sudden nature of the event.
  • Get the detection report: our written location report stating the break point and pipe condition is useful documentation for a claim.
  • Coverage for the leak itself vs. the resulting damage: most policies cover the resulting water damage (flooring, drywall, cabinetry) but not the cost of the plumbing repair itself. Read your policy's "service line" endorsement — this is what covers the pipe repair, and not all policies include it.
  • Call your carrier before authorizing major work: some insurers require a pre-authorization call before they'll cover emergency repairs above a certain dollar threshold. A quick call to your agent protects your claim.

If you suspect a slab leak right now

The right sequence is: (1) shut off the main if water is actively coming up through the floor, (2) note and photograph every symptom, (3) call a plumber for detection before calling your insurance carrier. Getting the plumber in first means you have a professional location report in hand when you file the claim — which makes the adjuster's job easier and speeds up approval.

We do slab leak detection and repair across Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach. Electronic detection, thermal imaging, and full repair options from spot repair to full PEX repipe. Call 754-707-1774 or use the contact form — we can typically get out the same day for suspected active leaks.

Need a Plumber Now?

24/7 service across Miami-Dade, Broward & Palm Beach. Same-day availability.

Frequently Asked Questions

Professional electronic slab leak detection typically runs $150–$350 for the diagnostic visit in the South Florida market. This covers acoustic listening and basic pressure isolation. If tracer gas or thermal imaging is required (usually for drain-side or hard-to-locate leaks), add $100–$200. Most contractors apply the detection fee toward the repair if you hire them for the job.

No. A slab leak is a physical breach in the pipe. Water pressure will keep water moving through that breach as long as the supply is on. The leak does not seal itself — it almost always grows larger over time as the water erodes the pipe edges. The only exception is a drain-side (non-pressurized) leak, which stops flowing when nothing is draining, but the saturated soil and foundation damage continue between uses. Turning off the water supply is the only way to stop a supply-side slab leak temporarily.

Detection alone is typically 1–3 hours. A spot repair with concrete access takes one full day. A rerouting project (running new lines overhead) is usually 1–2 days depending on the home's layout. An epoxy lining job is 1–2 days including curing time. A full repipe is typically 2–4 days. None of these timelines include flooring restoration — tile matching and installation is a separate contractor and separate schedule.

For most repairs, yes — the main water supply is typically off for a portion of the day and restored each evening. If mold remediation is also required, some rooms may need to be vacated during active remediation work. Your contractor should tell you upfront which areas and when. If the leak has been running long enough to cause structural foundation movement (visible cracking at doorframes), a structural engineer should assess the foundation before the plumbing repair proceeds.

A pipe burst is a sudden, catastrophic failure — you know immediately because water floods the space. A slab leak is typically a pinhole or stress crack in a pipe under the concrete that leaks slowly and continuously. You may not notice a slab leak for weeks. The repair methods and urgency are different: a burst pipe is an emergency requiring immediate main shutoff and same-day service; a slab leak is serious and time-sensitive but usually allows a day or two to schedule detection properly before making repair decisions.

Usually the resulting water damage (flooring, drywall, cabinetry) is covered under the standard dwelling coverage if the leak was sudden and accidental. The plumbing repair itself — cutting concrete, fixing the pipe, patching — is typically covered only if your policy includes a "service line" or "underground pipe" endorsement. This endorsement is often an add-on that costs $25–$60/year and many homeowners don't realize they're missing it. Check your declarations page, or call your agent before filing a claim.

The decision comes down to pipe age and leak history. If your home has original copper from before 2000 and this is your second or third slab leak, the rest of the pipe system is likely at similar risk — a spot repair buys you a year or two at best before the next break. A full PEX repipe eliminates the risk entirely and typically adds value at resale. If this is a first-ever leak on a home built after 2000 with copper in reasonable condition, a spot repair is a reasonable first step. We'll give you our honest assessment after the detection report — we don't have a financial incentive to push you toward a repipe if a spot repair is genuinely the right call.

You can gather strong evidence that one exists using the meter test: close every valve in the house, note the meter reading, wait 30 minutes without using any water, and check the meter again. If it moved, you have a leak somewhere in the supply system. What you can't do yourself is locate it precisely — and precise location is everything in slab work. Guessing and cutting concrete in the wrong spot costs you a concrete and tile patch plus the correct repair on top. Professional electronic detection pays for itself by eliminating that risk.

Need a Plumber Now? Call (754) 707-1774

Available 24/7 for emergency and same-day service across South Florida

Call NowWhatsApp