Leaks & Emergency

Florida Slab Leak Repair & Reroute Cost Guide

FL Slab Leak Repair & Reroute Cost Guide

Under-slab repair, epoxy lining & reroute costs — FL-specific pricing & insurance tips.

What Is a Slab Leak? (FL Context)

A slab leak is a leak in the copper water supply or drain lines that run through or beneath the concrete foundation (slab) of your home. In Florida, virtually all homes built before 2000 on slab-on-grade foundations have copper supply lines running under the slab. Unlike states with basements, FL homes have no easy access to these pipes — repairs require cutting concrete or running new lines through walls and ceilings.

Why FL Homes Are at High Risk — 6 Factors

  1. Home Age — Homes built 1970–1995 with original copper are in the peak risk window in FL. These pipes are 30–55 years old.
  2. Chloramine Damage — FL municipalities switched to chloramine disinfection (chlorine + ammonia). It pits copper from the inside 2–5× faster than chlorine alone.
  3. Soil Movement — FL's sandy soil shifts with water table changes, especially near the coast. This creates stress fractures at buried pipe joints.
  4. Hard Water — FL hard water (150–350 mg/L) deposits calcium inside copper pipes, restricting flow and increasing pressure stress.
  5. High Water Pressure — FL homes on municipal water often run 80–100 PSI. FL code max is 80 PSI. High pressure accelerates pinhole formation.
  6. Older Solder Joints — Pre-1985 copper used lead-tin solder at joints — these corrode faster than modern lead-free solder.

Repair Method Comparison

Method Cost Invasiveness Lifespan
Spot repair under slab $1,500–4,500 High (jack-hammer) Temporary if pipes failing
Epoxy pipe lining (CIPP) $3,000–8,000 None 35–50 years
Reroute above slab $2,500–8,000 Low (drywall only) 50+ years (PEX)
Full under-slab repipe $8,000–25,000+ Very high 50+ years (PEX)
Hydrostatic test only $250–500 None Diagnostic only

How Electronic Leak Detection Works

Licensed technicians use acoustic listening devices, thermal imaging, and pressure testing to locate the exact leak point before any demolition. This costs $250–500 and is ALWAYS worth it. Avoid plumbers who skip leak detection — digging in the wrong spot adds $500–1,500 to the job.

Why Above-Slab Rerouting is the #1 FL Solution

Most FL plumbers recommend rerouting over spot repair because: (1) It permanently removes corroding copper from service. (2) New PEX is immune to chloramine damage. (3) Costs less than full under-slab repipe. (4) Only requires minor drywall patching, not concrete demolition. (5) Modern PEX carries a 25-year warranty vs. repaired copper that may leak again in 1–3 years.

8-Point Repair Decision Guide

  • First-time single leak, pipes less than 25 years old → Spot repair is reasonable
  • First-time leak, pipes 25+ years old or chloramine-era (post-1995) → Reroute strongly preferred
  • Second leak in same home → Reroute or full repipe — more leaks are coming
  • Multiple simultaneous pinhole leaks → Epoxy lining or full repipe depending on pipe condition
  • Unknown leak location → Hydrostatic test first, THEN choose repair method
  • Polybutylene ("gray PB") pipe under slab → Full repipe required — PB cannot be repaired
  • High-value flooring (wood/marble) throughout home → Epoxy lining or reroute to avoid slab cutting
  • Planning to sell in 2–5 years → Reroute or full repipe; buyers and inspectors flag unrepaired slab leaks

FL Homeowners Insurance Coverage

Item Covered? Notes
Plumbing repair under slab No "Wear and tear" exclusion — the repair itself is your cost
Mold remediation Usually If reported within 14 days — FL's mold reporting window
Flooring restoration Usually Tile, wood, carpet damaged by the water leak
Drywall / wall repair Usually Water damage to walls from the leak
Temporary housing Check policy Only if home is declared uninhabitable during repair
Second / recurring leaks May be denied Insurers can deny "maintenance failure" claims
Above-slab reroute labor No The repair itself is always excluded

FL Assignment of Benefits (AOB) Warning — FS 627.7152

FL FS 627.7152 governs AOB agreements. While you have the right to assign your insurance claim to a contractor, never sign an AOB under pressure or before getting your own independent estimate. FL courts have seen widespread AOB abuse over the past decade. An AOB assigns YOUR legal rights to the contractor — not just payment authorization. Read every clause before signing.

Post-Repair Mold Prevention

FL's humidity (avg 70–80% year-round) means any moisture event can lead to mold within 24–48 hours. After a slab leak: (1) Run dehumidifiers immediately. (2) Open walls if moisture meter readings are elevated. (3) Get a licensed mold inspection before closing any walls. (4) Document everything with timestamped photos for your insurance claim.

10-Step Slab Leak Response Checklist

  1. Shut off water at main shutoff immediately — stops active damage
  2. Do NOT run hot water if the leak is on the hot side — keeps adding water to the slab
  3. Document all damage with timestamped photos before any cleanup or repairs
  4. Call your insurance company — open a claim BEFORE any repair begins (required in most FL policies)
  5. Hire an independent electronic leak detection specialist — separate from the repair plumber
  6. Get 2–3 written bids for the repair method — prices vary significantly
  7. Ask each plumber: "Do you recommend spot repair or reroute, and why?"
  8. Do NOT sign an AOB without reading all terms and consulting your adjuster
  9. Request before/after pressure test documentation from your plumber
  10. Schedule a licensed mold inspection if any wet drywall or flooring was exposed over 24 hours
Get your home's numbers

Use the free interactive calculator for this topic — instant Florida cost range, no signup required.

Open the calculator →

Get the free Florida homeowner guide pack

8 plain-English mini-guides (water heaters, leaks, permits, septic & more) — delivered to your inbox. No spam.

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe anytime.