If your home was built between the 1960s and 1980s anywhere in Oceanside, Carlsbad, Vista or San Marcos, odds are the original hot and cold water lines run in soft copper underneath your concrete slab. After 40–60 years in our soil, that copper develops pinhole leaks — and because it's under concrete, you never see the water. You see the side effects.
The seven signs
1. A water bill that jumped for no reason
The most common first clue. A pinhole leak can quietly run hundreds of gallons a day. If your bill climbed 20–50% and nothing about your household changed, take it seriously.
2. Warm spots on the floor
The classic. Hot-line slab leaks warm the concrete above them. If the dog has a favorite new spot on the tile, or you notice a warm patch under bare feet, that's not cozy — that's your water heater running money into the dirt.
3. The sound of water when everything is off
A faint hiss or rush behind the walls at night with every fixture off. Houses aren't supposed to whisper.
4. A spinning meter with the house shut down
The free DIY test: turn off every fixture and appliance that uses water, then watch your meter (usually at the sidewalk). The small triangle or star dial is a leak indicator — if it's turning with the house off, water is going somewhere.
5. Cracks in floors or wet baseboards
Water under a slab has to go somewhere. Hairline floor cracks that grow, tile grout darkening, baseboards swelling or the laminate cupping near one wall — the slab is telling you what's underneath it.
6. Musty smells or mildew you can't find
Constant moisture wicking up through concrete feeds mold you can smell before you can see — often in carpet pad or under furniture.
7. Low hot-water pressure only
If cold pressure is fine but hot has gotten weak, the hot line (the most common slab-leak victim — hot water is harder on copper) may be bleeding off pressure underground.
Caught one? Here's the honest playbook
Step 1 — confirm and locate. We isolate the leak with pressure testing before touching anything. Good detection means one clean repair, not exploratory demolition.
Step 2 — pick the right fix, not the biggest one. Your options, in ascending order: a spot repair (open the slab at the leak), a reroute (abandon the failed under-slab line, run a new one overhead — usually our recommendation), or a repipe if this is leak two or three. Here's what each really costs.
Step 3 — stop the next one. A smart auto-shutoff valve (we install Moen Flo) watches your usage 24/7 and kills the water main automatically when a burst starts — even when you're away. After one slab leak, it's the best few hundred dollars of prevention money can buy.
Think you're hearing one of these signs?
Don't wait for the flooring to prove it. Call or text (760) 980-4843 — free assessment, straight answer, and if it's nothing, we'll happily tell you it's nothing.
Call (760) 980-4843 Leak detection details