Plumbing Leak Detection and Slab Leak Detection: The 2026 Service Profit Center Playbook
Plumbing leak detection in 2026 is priced as a $300-$800 flat diagnostic fee with follow-on repair quoted separately. Slab leak detection specifically runs $400-$600 standard residential and $600-$900 in high-cost metros, with acoustic, thermal, helium tracer, and ground-penetrating radar as the four detection technologies. The economic case is the repair attach rate: a $500 detection call closes a $1,500-$8,000 repair 70-85% of the time, making it one of the highest-margin entry points in residential plumbing.
Key Takeaways
- Plumbing leak detection service calls run $300-$800 flat fee in 2026, with slab leak detection landing at $400-$600 for most residential markets and $600-$900 in major metros
- Acoustic leak detection gear from Fluke or SubSurface runs $3,000-$8,000 per kit; thermal cameras $400-$3,000; helium tracer setups $4,000-$10,000; ground-penetrating radar $15,000-$40,000
- Follow-on slab leak repair averages $1,500-$8,000 with reroute or epoxy lining hitting $4,000-$15,000, making detection the entry point to a 5-10x revenue capture per call
- Insurance-restoration slab leak claims drive 60-70% of leak detection volume in markets with copper-on-slab construction; the shop that documents well becomes the adjuster's preferred vendor
- Shops positioning leak detection as a flagship service line average $180,000-$320,000 in annual leak-detection revenue per truck once the tech logs 50+ jobs
Plumbing leak detection in 2026 runs $300-$800 as a flat diagnostic fee, with slab leak detection specifically landing at $400-$600 in most residential markets and $600-$900 in high-cost metros. Follow-on repair averages $1,500-$8,000. (Angi’s 2026 slab leak repair cost data and This Old House’s 2026 slab leak repair guide line up on these ranges across most US metros.)
For a plumbing shop owner, those numbers describe a flagship service line. A leak detection tech doing 4-6 calls a day at $500 detection plus 70-85% repair attach at $1,500-$8,000 generates $180,000-$320,000 in annual leak-detection revenue per truck. Gross margin runs 55-65%.
Most shops underprice the detection fee, undertrain the tech, and treat the work as a loss leader for the repair. The shops that flip that frame, charge the detection work at its real value and let the repair quote stand on its own, turn leak detection into the highest-margin entry point in residential plumbing.
The four leak detection technologies
The detection toolkit splits into four technologies, each with a defined role.
Acoustic detection. A ground microphone or correlator listens for the hiss of pressurized water escaping a pipe. The Fluke ii915 acoustic imager sits at the high end ($12,000-$18,000) for industrial work; most residential plumbers run a SubSurface Instruments LD-18 or LD-15 acoustic ground mic at $3,000-$5,000. Acoustic is the workhorse for pressurized water lines under slab; it fails when the line is depressurized, ambient noise is high, or the leak is too small to generate audible hiss.
Thermal imaging. A FLIR thermal camera shows temperature differential where a hot water leak is warming the slab above ambient or a cold leak is creating a cool spot. The FLIR C5 pocket camera runs $400-$700, the FLIR E8 Pro at $2,500-$3,500. Thermal works best on hot water slab leaks where the delta is dramatic. Most residential shops run a $400-$1,500 entry camera and upgrade once they cross 5 detections a month.
Helium or hydrogen tracer gas. Pressurize the depressurized line with a non-flammable tracer gas (typically 5% hydrogen / 95% nitrogen, or helium for medical-grade work) and use a surface sniffer to find where the gas is escaping through cracks in the slab. A complete tracer kit runs $4,000-$10,000, and tracer gas cylinders cost $60-$120 each. Tracer gas is the answer when acoustic fails because the line is dry or the leak is below acoustic threshold.
Ground-penetrating radar (GPR). A subsurface imaging unit shows moisture anomalies under concrete. GPRS-grade leak detection radar runs $15,000-$40,000 plus operator training. GPR is the specialty layer for commercial slab work and the rare residential calls where the first three technologies have failed. Most residential shops sub it out at $400-$800 per visit instead of buying.
The pragmatic kit for a residential shop building a leak detection service line: one acoustic mic ($3,500), one thermal camera ($1,500), and a rented helium kit until volume justifies the buy. Total entry investment $5,000-$10,000 per detection truck.
Tool investment and ROI math
The detection toolkit has the cleanest ROI math of any plumbing specialty layer.
| Equipment | Price | Payback at $500/detection |
|---|---|---|
| Acoustic ground mic (SubSurface LD-15) | $3,000-$5,000 | 6-10 calls |
| Thermal camera (FLIR C5) | $400-$700 | 1-2 calls |
| Thermal camera (FLIR E8 Pro) | $2,500-$3,500 | 5-7 calls |
| Helium tracer kit (complete) | $4,000-$10,000 | 8-20 calls |
| Pipe locator + sonde | $1,500-$3,000 | 3-6 calls |
| GPR (entry commercial) | $15,000-$40,000 | 30-80 calls |
| Full residential leak kit | $5,000-$10,000 | 10-20 calls |
The full residential leak detection kit at $7,500 pays back inside 10-20 detection calls. A tech running 4-6 calls a day hits payback inside the first 4-5 working days of the new service line, cleaner than the ProPress tool that pays back in 11 working days.
A shop owner on r/sweatystartup posted his 2025 numbers after adding leak detection: “I spent $6,800 on the acoustic mic, the FLIR, and a basic locator. First 90 days the leak detection tech ran 67 calls. Detection revenue was $34,200, repair attach was $189,000, net contribution after his salary and the truck was $112,000. The tools paid back in week one.”
Insurance restoration is the volume driver
In copper-on-slab construction markets (Phoenix, Houston, Las Vegas, Dallas, Tampa, large parts of California), 60-70% of slab leak detection volume comes through homeowner insurance claims.
The structure: homeowner notices a warm spot, an unexplained water bill jump, or actual water surfacing through the slab. They call insurance first. The carrier directs them to a plumber. The plumber runs detection, documents the leak source, and meets the adjuster on-site. Most homeowner policies cover the access and restoration cost but exclude the pipe repair itself as a maintenance item.
The plumber who masters the documentation side becomes the adjuster’s preferred vendor. One State Farm or Allstate adjuster handles 100-300 active claims at any time. Becoming the go-to leak detection vendor for two or three local adjusters drives 15-30 referred calls a month with zero marketing spend.
The documentation discipline that wins those adjusters:
- Pre-detection photos. Water stains, ceiling damage, surface evidence.
- Diagnostic report. Which technology was used, what it showed, where the leak was located within 6 inches of accuracy.
- Repair scope. Pipe section affected, recommended fix (spot repair, reroute, or epoxy lining), labor and material cost separated.
- Restoration scope. Square feet of concrete cut, drywall affected, flooring affected, mold exposure assessment.
- Photos at every stage. Pre-cut, during demo, post-repair, post-restoration.
The shop that delivers a 4-6 page documented packet on every claim becomes the adjuster’s first call. The shop that hands the homeowner a one-line invoice loses the next 15 referrals to the competitor who packets properly. This is the same documentation discipline that drives the plumbing quote template for direct-to-consumer estimates, scaled up for an insurance audience.
Pricing structure: flat fee detection plus separate repair quote
The pricing structure that funds the service line correctly:
Detection fee. Flat $400-$600 residential, $600-$900 in high-cost metros, $800-$1,200 commercial. Billed at the time of service, not waived on repair approval. Includes the diagnostic visit, acoustic and thermal scan, written report, and 1-hour on-site time.
Repair quote. Separate from detection, quoted in writing after the leak is located. Spot repair (cut concrete, repair pipe, patch) $1,500-$3,500; reroute through walls or attic $3,500-$8,000; whole-house epoxy lining $4,000-$15,000. Material and labor itemized.
Restoration quote. If the shop is doing the concrete cut and patch in-house, that is a third line at $800-$2,500. Most leak detection shops sub the drywall, flooring, and mold work to a restoration company on referral. The plumber owns the leak find and the pipe repair; the restoration partner owns the rest.
Insurance call. If the homeowner is going through insurance, the detection fee is paid out of pocket (it is the diagnostic that triggers the claim) and the restoration and access cost goes to the carrier. The plumber bills the homeowner direct for the pipe repair.
The mistake most shops make: bundling detection into the repair as a “free with approval” upsell. That trains the market to expect detection as free, kills your margin on the diagnostic side, and pressures the tech to find a leak even on inconclusive calls. Better to charge the $500 detection fee transparently and let the repair stand on its own decision. This is the same pricing logic that drives emergency plumbing service rates where the dispatch fee covers a real cost regardless of whether the job books.
A two-truck shop owner on ContractorTalk made the switch in 2025: “I used to roll detection into the repair as ‘free if you book the job.’ I stopped because I was finding leaks that needed a second opinion and felt obligated to invent one to justify the visit. Now I charge $475 flat for detection, paid before I leave. My repair close rate went from 91% to 78% but my revenue per call went up 34% because I am no longer eating the detection time on inconclusive jobs.”
Leak detection as the flagship service line
The shops compounding 25%+ residential revenue per year increasingly position leak detection as their flagship service.
The frame: leak detection is the highest-trust, highest-margin entry point in residential plumbing. The homeowner who calls about a wet spot under the carpet is in a state of fear. The plumber who shows up with $7,500 of specialized gear, runs a structured diagnostic, and hands them a written report demonstrates competence in a way no $129 drain clear ever does.
That trust translates to attached work. The leak detection customer is also your future:
- Whole-house repipe candidate (slab leaks are usually the first failure in a degraded copper system).
- Tankless water heater conversion candidate (the water shutoff to do the repair surfaces the conversation).
- Service membership candidate ($15-$30/month feels cheap against a $5,000 slab leak repair invoice).
- Referral source (the homeowner who got a clean leak find and a fair repair quote tells every neighbor).
Treating leak detection as flagship changes the marketing structure. The website’s main service-line page is “leak detection” not “drain cleaning.” The Google Ads spend prioritizes “slab leak detection [city]” over generic plumbing terms. The truck wraps say “leak detection specialists.” The intake script trains the CSR to upsell every drain call to a “while we are there, free leak check” that opens the door for paid follow-on.
This is the lever most residential shops underuse. The competitor across town is running $89 drain specials and racing to the bottom. The shop that positions leak detection as flagship competes on competence and pricing power, not on price.
Common leak detection mistakes
The patterns shop owners reverse-engineer the hard way:
- Skipping documentation. The diagnostic report is the artifact that lets you bill at $500 instead of $150. No report, no premium pricing, no adjuster preference, no referral chain.
- Untrained techs running detection. A plumber who has done two acoustic detections will misread the audio signal 30-40% of the time. Train on 20-30 supervised detections before solo deployment.
- Buying GPR before the volume. A $25,000 ground-penetrating radar unit on a truck doing 4 detections a month is a depreciating asset. Sub it out at $600 per use until you hit weekly commercial volume.
- Bundling detection into repair. Trains the market that detection is free. Kills margin. Pressures the tech to invent leaks on inconclusive calls.
- No follow-on repair process. Detection ends, the homeowner gets a written report, then radio silence for 48 hours. By the time you follow up, they have called two competitors. Detection-to-quote-to-booking needs to be the same shift, on the truck.
- Ignoring the insurance lane. In copper-on-slab markets, 60-70% of volume comes through claims. Skipping adjuster relationships leaves the majority of the market on the table.
- Underpricing in major metros. A $300 detection fee in Phoenix or Houston undercharges by 40%. Price to the metro.
This compounds with the broader plumbing sales process discipline. Shops that treat detection as a structured, documented, premium-priced service line compound revenue. Shops that treat it as a freebie hand the future of their business to whoever runs the next acoustic mic in town.
The honest take
Leak detection is the single highest-margin service line addition available to most residential plumbing shops in 2026. The equipment investment is modest ($5,000-$10,000 per truck), the payback is fast (10-20 calls), the margin is high (55-65% gross), the repair attach rate is exceptional (70-85%), the insurance lane is volume-rich, and the customer trust dividend extends to repipes, water heaters, and memberships.
The fix for shops not running it as a flagship:
- Buy the kit. $3,500 acoustic, $1,500 thermal, $400 entry locator. Rent helium until volume justifies the $6,000 purchase.
- Train one tech to 20-30 supervised detections before solo deployment. Pair them with the senior plumber for the first month.
- Charge $400-$600 flat detection fee residential, paid before you leave, not bundled into repair.
- Build the documented diagnostic packet for every job: pre-photos, technology used, finding, repair quote, restoration quote.
- Pursue two or three local insurance adjusters with the packet quality. Become the go-to vendor for one State Farm and one Allstate adjuster in your zip code.
- Position the service line as flagship in marketing: website, Google Ads, truck wraps, intake scripts.
- Build the same-shift detection-to-quote-to-booking sequence so the repair does not leak to a competitor in the 48-hour gap.
A 3-truck shop running this model in a copper-on-slab metro hits $400,000-$600,000 in annual leak-detection revenue inside year one of the launch. The shop running detection as a sideline to drain cleaning hits $40,000-$80,000 and wonders why the leak detection tech keeps quitting for the specialty shop down the street.
The competitor positioning matters here too. PipelineOn helps plumbing operators recover the leak-detection-shopping homeowners who landed on their site, did not call, and would otherwise become the competitor’s repair invoice. Pair that with the in-house detection service line and the unit economics compound. Most shops are still leaving both layers on the table. The shops that close both are the ones compounding past $3M residential revenue without adding a fourth truck.
Pipeline Research Team
Frequently Asked Questions
How much should a plumber charge for leak detection in 2026?
A flat $300-$600 diagnostic fee is standard for residential leak detection, with slab leak detection landing at $400-$600 and complex commercial work at $600-$1,200. Most shops bill the detection fee separately from the repair quote and do not waive it on approval. The detection fee covers the tech's specialized training, $3,000-$10,000 of acoustic and thermal equipment, and the 60-90 minutes of structured diagnostic work.
What equipment do I need to offer slab leak detection?
Minimum kit is a $3,000-$5,000 acoustic ground microphone (Fluke or SubSurface Instruments), a $400-$1,500 thermal camera (FLIR C5 or E8), and a basic pipe locator. Add a $4,000-$10,000 helium or hydrogen tracer gas kit once volume justifies it. Ground-penetrating radar at $15,000-$40,000 is a specialty layer reserved for commercial or municipal work. Most residential shops rent the helium kit for the first 10-20 jobs before buying.
Does homeowners insurance cover slab leak repair?
Most policies cover the access and restoration costs (cutting through concrete, drywall replacement, flooring, mold remediation) but exclude the actual pipe repair as a maintenance item. The plumber who walks the homeowner through the claim, documents the leak source, and meets the adjuster on-site becomes the preferred vendor for that adjuster's whole book. Insurance-driven slab leak work is the volume driver in copper-on-slab markets like Phoenix, Houston, and Las Vegas.
What are the four leak detection technologies plumbers actually use?
Acoustic listening (ground microphones picking up the hiss of pressurized water escaping a pipe), thermal imaging (FLIR cameras showing temperature differential where a hot or cold leak is heating or cooling the slab), helium or hydrogen tracer gas (pressurizing the line with a tracer and sniffing it at the surface), and ground-penetrating radar (subsurface imaging for moisture anomalies under concrete). Acoustic plus thermal covers 85% of residential slab work; tracer gas and GPR are for the harder calls.
How profitable is leak detection as a service line?
A dedicated leak detection tech doing 4-6 calls a day at $400-$600 detection plus 70-85% repair attach at $1,500-$8,000 generates $180,000-$320,000 in annual revenue per truck once they hit 50+ jobs. Gross margin runs 55-65% because the detection fee is almost pure labor and the repair work carries standard plumbing material and overhead. Most shops underprice the detection fee and miss the second margin layer.
Should I waive the leak detection fee if the customer approves the repair?
No. The detection fee is not a sales tool, it is compensation for specialized work that has real value whether or not the repair books. Waiving it teaches the market that detection is free, then your competitor down the street has to match the giveaway. Successful shops charge the detection fee separately, document the finding in writing, and quote the repair as a distinct decision. The customer who pays $500 to find the leak almost always books the repair anyway because they have already committed financially.
Written by
Pipeline Research Team