American Leak Detection Sacramento
Residential · Leak Detection

High water bill in the Greater Sacramento Area?

If your bill has spiked, your meter keeps moving, or your district has flagged unusual usage, we find the source before anyone opens up a hole, underground or in a wall.

Coverage
Sacramento, Placer, El Dorado, Yolo, Sutter, Yuba, Butte, Nevada, Sierra
Overview
An unusually high water bill is often the first sign that something is wrong. Sometimes the cause is simple: a running toilet, a sprinkler timer that changed. Other times the bill is the only visible clue that water is escaping behind a wall, under a slab, or somewhere between the meter and the building. We find the source without unnecessary demolition or digging.

A high bill does not always mean a hidden leak.

Water bills can rise for ordinary reasons. In the Greater Sacramento Area, outdoor watering, irrigation timers, pools, guests, and dry-season use all push consumption higher. A flapper that no longer seals, a leaking hose bib, or a water softener cycling too often can waste water quietly.

The question is whether the usage makes sense. If your bill suddenly jumps, keeps climbing month after month, or looks more like summer usage during a low-use season, it is worth checking for a leak.

A self-check

What to check before you schedule service.

Five quick observations that often locate the source without a visit, or sharpen the inspection if one is needed.

  1. ACompare the current bill to the same month last year.
  2. BConfirm irrigation timers, pool fill valves, hose bibs, and outdoor faucets are off when they should be.
  3. CListen for running toilets or fixtures that cycle after no one has used them.
  4. DLook for damp soil, unusually green grass, pooling water, warm flooring, musty odors, or staining on walls and ceilings.
  5. ERun a 30-minute meter test with no water in use. If the leak indicator continues to move, water is still flowing somewhere.

If shutting the toilet valves stops the movement, the culprit is likely a toilet. If the meter continues moving after fixtures are isolated, it is time for a professional inspection.

Why a high water bill can point to a hidden leak.

A short topic video for homeowners trying to understand whether a sudden bill spike is normal usage, a fixture issue, or a hidden leak.

200K+
leaks found without destroying the property
1983
Serving the Sacramento territory since
9cos
Northern California counties covered today

Hidden leaks that drive bills higher.

Some leaks never show on the surface. A pressurized line can run under a slab, underground, behind cabinets, or below landscaping for days or weeks before any visible damage appears.

  1. 01Underground service lines between the meter and the building
  2. 02Slab leaks below concrete foundations or finished floors
  3. 03Irrigation valves and lateral lines
  4. 04Pool, spa, fountain, and water-feature plumbing
  5. 05Toilet leaks that run intermittently or with no audible signal
  6. 06Aging pipes, fittings, valves, and connections
  7. 07Tree-root damage or ground movement around buried lines
  8. 08Plumbing affected by remodeling or prior repair work

The important thing is to locate the leak before repair work begins. Guessing leads to unnecessary holes in drywall, flooring, landscaping, or concrete.

Method

How we pinpoint the problem.

Every job starts with diagnosis. The technician reviews the symptoms, verifies the usage concern, isolates the likely system, and uses non-invasive methods to narrow the location.

Depending on the property, that may include acoustic listening, line tracing, pressure testing, thermal imaging, meter observation, or fixture isolation. The goal is to find the most likely location with as little disruption as possible, then explain the repair options clearly.

That diagnostic-first approach matters. A high water bill can point to a plumbing leak, an irrigation leak, a pool leak, a service-line issue, or a fixture problem. The right repair depends on knowing which system is actually losing water.


Tools on hand
Acoustic ground mics, thermal cameras, line tracers, pressure gauges
Visit pricing
Priced by test type, not by the clock

When to call a leak detection specialist.

If any of the following describe your situation, the next step is a diagnostic visit.

  1. 01Your bill spiked and normal usage did not change
  2. 02Your meter moves when no water is in use
  3. 03You received a notice from a water district or utility
  4. 04You hear water running but cannot find the source
  5. 05You see wet soil, damp flooring, stains, or warped materials
  6. 06Your pool, spa, or water feature needs frequent refilling
  7. 07Your irrigation system may be leaking underground
  8. 08The leak needs to be located before repair starts
Common questions

Questions we hear most.

Short, plain answers to the questions homeowners, property managers, and water-district customers ask before scheduling a visit.

01

Why is my water bill suddenly so high?

A sudden high bill can come from increased usage, irrigation, pools, guests, running toilets, leaking fixtures, or hidden leaks. If your usage habits haven't changed, check whether water is still moving through the meter when everything should be off.

02

Can a hidden leak raise a bill without visible water damage?

Yes. Leaks can run behind walls, under floors, beneath slabs, underground, or below landscaping without immediately creating visible water. The bill may rise before you see stains, damp flooring, or pooling.

03

How do I know if my water meter shows a leak?

Stop all water use on the property and watch the meter. If the reading changes or the leak indicator keeps moving, water is still flowing somewhere. A meter test confirms a leak exists; it does not locate it.

04

Should I call a plumber or a leak detection company?

If the source is obvious, such as a running toilet or a dripping fixture, a repair professional may be the right first call. If it's hidden, underground, under a slab, in irrigation, or unclear, leak detection should come first so the repair stays small.

05

Can irrigation leaks cause high water bills?

Yes. Stuck valves, broken laterals, and timer issues can waste water quickly, especially in dry months. Some irrigation leaks only show up when the system runs, so the meter may not move during a basic no-use test.

06

Can a pool leak raise my water bill?

Yes. Frequent refilling can come from evaporation, plumbing leakage, shell cracks, or equipment issues. A bucket test separates normal evaporation loss from a leak; if the pool is losing more than evaporation accounts for, a pool leak test finds the source.

07

What if my water district says I may have a leak?

Check your meter, review recent usage, look for irrigation or fixture problems, and call a specialist if the source isn't clear. We work with homeowners, property managers, and water-district customers across the region.

Why it matters

A high bill can be the early warning.

A high water bill is not just a billing problem. It can be an early sign that water is moving somewhere it shouldn't. The faster the source is found, the easier it is to limit waste, property damage, tenant disruption, and unnecessary exploratory repair work.

Request service

When the usage doesn't add up, the leak usually does.

Call
(916) 331-6443

Mon–Fri · 8a–5p · CA Lic. #393393 · Bonded & insured

Or have a specialist reach out.