We locate the leak with precision testing, repair the line with minimal disruption to your floors, and back every job with the Benjamin Franklin on-time guarantee that Fort Worth, Arlington, and Mansfield homeowners have relied on since 1997.
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A warm patch on your tile, hardwood, or carpet is one of the clearest indicators that a hot water line buried in the concrete has cracked and is releasing heated water directly into the foundation of your home.
A small break in a pressurized line beneath your slab can quietly release more than two thousand gallons of water in a single day, which often shows up on your utility bill long before any visible damage appears.
If every fixture and appliance in the house is turned off and you can still hear water moving through the walls or under the floor, the source is very often a hidden leak somewhere beneath the foundation.
Moisture pushing its way up through the concrete will lift hardwood, stain grout lines, and leave carpets feeling damp days after the water has been shut off at the meter.

Non-invasive testing that pinpoints the location of the leak before your concrete gets touched, which saves your floors and saves you money.

This diagnostic testing of the drain and supply lines confirms the leak source with certainty, so the repair work begins in the right place the first time.

Complete repair of the damaged line by our licensed plumbers, with as little disruption to your home and your daily routine as the job allows.

Years of Experience
We are a family-owned Fort Worth plumbing company that has been serving homeowners across the DFW area since 2004, and slab leaks are one of the specialties our team has built its reputation on over the past two decades. Our licensed plumbers handle residential and commercial slab leak detection and repair across Fort Worth, Arlington, Mansfield, Burleson, Crowley, Kennedale, and Dalworthington Gardens, and every project is finished with the same level of care, communication, and craftsmanship that has earned us the trust of thousands of Texas families.
Homes successfully helped
Client satisfaction rate
Our licensed plumbers diagnose the leak, repair the line, and restore your home with a level of precision that keeps the work surgical rather than destructive.

They not only diagnosed the problem quickly, they also went through every possible option for getting the fix I needed.

Very clear communication and options for the solution to my hot water slab leak.

Friendly, and well trained. Highly recommend!! They did a wonderful job fixing a giant water leak.
A slab leak is a break or pinhole rupture in one of the water lines that runs beneath the concrete foundation of your home, and because those pipes are buried in the slab itself, even a small leak can release a steady stream of water directly into the ground supporting your house. Slab leaks happen on both the pressurized supply side and the drain side of your plumbing system, and the cause is usually some combination of pipe corrosion, soil movement, abrasion against the concrete, or a manufacturing flaw that has finally given out after years of pressure cycling.
The most common warning signs are a warm or damp spot on the floor, a water bill that has climbed for no obvious reason, the sound of running water when every fixture in the house is turned off, a drop in water pressure across the home, and cracks appearing in the drywall or the foundation itself. Any one of these symptoms on its own is worth investigating, and when two or three of them show up together the odds of a slab leak go up considerably.
Our team uses non-invasive electronic leak detection equipment along with pressure testing and acoustic listening tools to pinpoint the exact location of the break before any concrete is touched. The goal of the detection phase is to narrow the leak down to a small area so that the repair work stays focused on one section of the slab rather than turning into a guess that opens up half the floor.
No, and waiting it out is one of the most expensive decisions a homeowner can make in this situation, because the water pressure inside the line continues to push moisture into the soil under the foundation every hour the leak goes unrepaired. Over weeks and months that constant saturation can shift the slab, crack the concrete, warp the flooring above it, and create the kind of structural damage that costs many times more to repair than the original plumbing fix would have.
Most homeowners policies in Texas will cover the cost of accessing the leak and repairing the resulting water damage to your home, though the repair of the pipe itself is often treated as a separate item depending on your specific carrier and policy language. We are happy to provide the detailed documentation and reporting that insurance adjusters typically ask for, which makes the claims process considerably smoother on your end.
That decision depends on the age of the plumbing, the location of the break, and the overall condition of the surrounding pipe, and our plumbers will walk you through both options with the pros and cons of each laid out plainly before any work starts. A spot repair is faster and less expensive when the rest of the line is in good shape, while a reroute is often the smarter long-term choice on older homes where additional leaks are likely to surface within the next few years.
The most useful first step is to shut off the main water supply to your home and then check the water meter to see if the dial is still moving, because a meter that continues to spin with every fixture closed is a strong sign that water is escaping somewhere inside the system. Once you have done that, give our team a call and we will get a licensed plumber out to your home quickly to confirm the source and walk you through the repair options.
If you have any other questions, please contact us directly at: (817) 405-0434