Slab leaks are one of the most serious and expensive plumbing issues a homeowner can face — and Metro Atlanta is one of the highest-risk areas in the entire South for them. Understanding what a slab leak is, why they happen so frequently here, and how to catch one early could save you tens of thousands of dollars.
A slab leak is a break or pinhole leak that develops in the water supply or drain lines that run underneath the concrete slab that your house is built on. Because these pipes are buried beneath solid concrete, even a slowly dripping leak can go completely undetected for months — all while water is saturating the surrounding soil, seeping up through the slab, and potentially causing foundation shifts, mold growth, and flooring damage.
Georgia’s red clay soil is the root cause. Clay is notorious for two behaviors that stress underground plumbing:
Additionally, a large percentage of Metro Atlanta homes — particularly in Marietta, Smyrna, Kennesaw, and Sandy Springs — were built between the 1960s and 1990s using copper piping. Copper is durable, but it reacts to the slightly acidic groundwater common in Georgia. Over 30–50 years, this reaction creates microscopic pitting on the pipe walls, eventually leading to pinhole leaks from the inside out.
Because the leak is hidden beneath concrete, your home will speak to you indirectly. Watch closely for these signals:
If you feel a noticeably warm area on your tile or hardwood floor, it may be a hot-water supply line leaking beneath the slab — often even before you see any visible moisture.
A slow slab leak can waste thousands of gallons per month. If your Cobb County or Fulton County water bill rises without explanation, take it seriously.
Hardwood floors warping from the bottom up, or carpet that always feels slightly damp, is a textbook sign of moisture rising through a slab crack or leak below.
Hearing water running somewhere in the house even when all fixtures are turned off is one of the clearest indicators that pressurized water is escaping a pipe beneath the slab.
Here’s a simple, free test you can perform yourself to check for hidden leaks:
Unaddressed slab leaks progress through predictable and increasingly expensive stages:
Georgia’s humid climate accelerates mold growth dramatically compared to drier states. In Atlanta’s summer heat, a chronically wet area beneath flooring can harbor active mold colonies in under 48 hours once moisture reaches the surface.
Modern leak detection does not require jackhammering your entire floor. Professional plumbers use several advanced diagnostic methods:
Once the leak is precisely located, repair options range from minimal-footprint spot repairs (cutting a small opening directly over the leak) to epoxy pipe lining, or in cases of widespread pipe corrosion, full re-routing of the line through the walls rather than the slab.