A pool leaking 1/4 inch per day beyond normal evaporation loses roughly 2,000 gallons per month on a standard 15,000-gallon pool — enough to fill the pool 1.6 times per year in makeup water costs. More importantly, water infiltrating into the soil around pool plumbing can erode the bedding that supports buried pipes, eventually causing further plumbing damage. Systematic leak detection identifies the source before it becomes a structural problem.
Before investigating anything, confirm the water loss isn't just evaporation. The bucket test is the standard confirmation method:
A pool losing more than 1/2 inch per day beyond the bucket is losing significant water. Less than 1/4 inch difference is within normal variation from minor observation error.
Before calling a specialist or beginning pressure testing, narrow down the leak zone with these observations:
| Condition | Implication |
|---|---|
| Leaks with pump ON and OFF | Structural leak — pool shell, skimmer body, return fittings |
| Leaks with pump ON only | Pressure-side leak — return plumbing, filter connections, equipment pad fittings |
| Leaks with pump OFF only | Suction-side check valve failure — allows drain-back through the main drain |
If water loss stops when the pool reaches a specific level, the leak is at that water level — a return fitting, a skimmer throat, or a wall crack at that depth. The water stops dropping when the leak point is above the water surface.
Inspect everything visible before testing anything not visible:
Dye testing is the first active diagnostic tool for suspected structural leaks. It works by injecting a concentrated tracer dye near the suspected leak point while the pump is off. If a crack or gap exists at that location, the suction created by the water attempting to exit pulls the dye visibly toward it.
Dye test procedure:
Dye testing requires calm water and pump-off conditions to work. Red food coloring works in a pinch, but purpose-made tracer dye is more concentrated and visible. Work systematically — dye-test each fitting, crack, and skimmer one at a time rather than squirting dye everywhere and trying to interpret a cloud of color.
If the leak is in buried plumbing (suspected from the pump-on-only pattern, or from failing to find anything in the visual and dye tests), pressure testing isolates the specific line:
For underground leaks confirmed by pressure drop: a professional leak detection specialist uses acoustic methods (hydrophone listening) to locate the exact position of the leak along the buried line, avoiding unnecessary excavation.
Refer to a specialist when:
Log all leak investigation steps, findings, and outcomes in SplashLens. When you hand off a leak to a specialist or a plumber, your documented investigation prevents repeating work that's already been done.
Log bucket test results, visual inspection findings, dye test outcomes, and pressure test results per account. Build the documented case before calling a specialist — and have the history when the repair is done to verify it held.
Open SplashLens Free →Use the bucket test: fill a bucket with pool water, place it on the pool step, and mark both water levels. Check after 24 hours. If the pool has lost more water than the bucket (which only loses to evaporation), the difference is from a leak.
In order of frequency: (1) equipment pad fittings and connections; (2) return fittings and skimmer faceplate at the pool wall; (3) underground plumbing at elbows and tee joints; (4) the pool shell — cracks in plaster, around lights, and at the main drain area.
Pressure testing plugs all pool-side fittings, then pressurizes individual plumbing lines from the equipment pad with compressed air to 15–20 psi. If a line holds pressure, it's intact. If pressure drops, the line has a breach that requires further investigation to locate.
Dye testing involves injecting red tracer dye near a suspected leak location while the pump is off. If there's a crack or gap, the dye streams into it, revealing the exact leak location. It's most useful for skimmer faceplates, return fittings, plaster cracks, and light niches.