🛠 Slab Leak Repair Dispatch · Williamson County · Locate first, then fix

Round Rock slab leak repair — find the break, then pick the right fix.

A pinhole in the copper under your slab doesn’t announce itself politely. It shows up as a creeping water bill, a damp baseboard in one room, or hot water that never quite gets there. The dispatch line connects you with a TSBPE-licensed Master Plumber who pinpoints the leak under your Round Rock slab-on-grade home, then lays out the three honest repair paths — spot repair, line reroute, or full repipe — with the trade-offs spelled out before anyone touches concrete.

No call center. No out-of-state routing — enter your ZIP and we’ll match you to a local Master Plumber.

✓ Leak located before any concrete✓ Spot · reroute · repipe options✓ Blackland clay + limestone savvy✓ Written repair estimate

📞 Calls free · Real diagnosis before any quote

Local NetworkMaster Plumbers in every ZIP
🛡
TSBPE LicensedEvery dispatched plumber
Under 60 minAvg emergency dispatch
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Free EstimatesOn any $500+ job

How the dispatch line works

Four steps, end to end. The call is free. The matched plumber’s estimate is free on any job over $500. You decide whether to proceed.

1

You call

The 24/7 dispatch line picks up. A real coordinator captures your ZIP, the symptom, and the urgency.

2

You get matched

Dispatch routes to the nearest TSBPE-licensed Master Plumber familiar with your ZIP and build era.

3

On-site diagnosis

The dispatched plumber walks the job, writes a line-item estimate, pulls any required permits.

4

You decide

Free written estimate on $500+ work. No obligation. Work is performed to Texas plumbing code.

Why slab leaks hit Round Rock homes the way they do

Round Rock isn’t one soil or one build era — the failure pattern changes depending on which side of town you’re on and what decade your subdivision went up. A dispatched plumber who knows Williamson County reads those clues before lifting a tool.

🧱 Two soils, one city — and the slab pays for it

Round Rock straddles a geologic seam. The east side — Paloma Lake, much of the 78665 corridor and the subdivisions toward the county line — sits on Blackland Prairie clay that swells when it’s wet and shrinks hard through a Central Texas summer. The west side, up toward Behrens Ranch and the limestone shelf, is rocky and far more stable. Homes on the clay side see the foundation and the supply lines under it move seasonally; that cyclic flex is what eventually opens a coupling or work-hardens a copper bend into a crack. The dispatched plumber asks your subdivision first because it narrows the likely failure point.

💧 Round Rock’s hard water corrodes copper from the inside

Williamson County tap water runs roughly 15 grains per gallon — genuinely hard. Inside an under-slab copper line, that mineral-heavy water scours and pits the pipe wall over years, and the spots where flow is turbulent (elbows, the underside of horizontal runs) thin first. The result is the classic Round Rock pinhole: a tiny perforation that weeps for months before anyone notices the bill. Hard-water pitting is why two identical 2003 homes on the same street can fail years apart — it tracks water chemistry and usage, not just age.

🏘 Master-planned slab-on-grade is the dominant build here

The neighborhoods that define modern Round Rock — Mayfield Ranch, Behrens Ranch, Paloma Lake, and the wave of 1990s–2010s subdivisions across 78664, 78665 and 78681 — are overwhelmingly slab-on-grade. The supply lines are cast into or run beneath a single concrete pour, with no crawlspace to inspect from below. That’s convenient to build and miserable to diagnose blind, which is exactly why a repair starts with electronic location, not a guess and a jackhammer.

🔧 Repair is a decision, not a default

Locating the leak is step one; choosing how to fix it is the part that actually saves money. A single fresh pinhole in an otherwise sound line is often a spot repair. A leak in a long horizontal run, or a second leak within a couple of years, usually argues for rerouting that line above the slab instead. And a 25-year-old home throwing its third copper leak is telling you the whole system is at end of life — a repipe ends the cycle. The dispatched plumber frames all three with Round-Rock-specific reasoning, not a one-size quote.

Here’s the part the big national outfits skip: the cheapest line item isn’t always the cheapest repair. Jackhammering open a slab to patch one pinhole feels decisive, but if that copper line is pitting from hard water, you’re likely to be back inside two years opening the floor somewhere else. On an older Round Rock home, the plumber who quotes you a reroute or partial repipe instead of a slab patch is usually the one doing you a favor.

Ask the dispatched plumber two questions before you authorize anything: where exactly is the leak, and is this the first one this house has had. If they located it within a few inches and can tell you whether the line is generally sound or generally pitted, you’re getting a real diagnosis. If the answer is ‘we’ll know once we open it up,’ that’s demolition dressed up as detection.

Round Rock slab leak repair — methods and cost bands

What each repair approach costs and when it makes sense. Ranges reflect Austin-metro market data, not a quote for your home.

Slab Leak Repair Methods — Round Rock Cost BandsTypical installed range by method · the dispatched plumber writes the line-item estimateLeak location (detection)$300–$650 · located firstSpot repair (one access point)$2,000–$4,200 · single fresh leakAbove-slab line reroute$3,200–$6,200 · abandons one bad lineThrough-slab repair$3,400–$5,800 · interior accessWhole-home repipe$8,500–$15,000 · ends the cycleIllustrative Austin/Williamson County metro ranges · HomeAdvisor / Angi 2025 · not a quote
Master Plumber locating and repairing a slab leak in a Round Rock Texas home

How a Round Rock slab leak repair actually proceeds

Before any concrete is touched, the dispatched Master Plumber confirms there’s an active pressurized leak with a meter check, then isolates whether it’s on the hot or cold line by shutting the cold feed at the water heater and re-reading the meter. From there the leak is pinpointed with acoustic listening gear and a thermal scan across the slab; for a stubborn pinhole, tracer gas narrows it to within inches. Only when the spot is known does the conversation turn to how to fix it — and on a Round Rock home, the build era and which side of town you’re on shape that recommendation.

If it’s a single fresh leak in sound copper, a targeted spot repair through a small access opening restores the line with minimal disruption. If the leaking line runs a long horizontal stretch under the slab, or the home has leaked before, rerouting that line above the slab in PEX is frequently the smarter spend — it abandons the failing pipe entirely instead of chasing it. And on an aging home where the hard-water pitting has clearly run its course system-wide, the plumber will walk you through a repipe so you stop paying to open the floor every couple of years. Every path comes with a written estimate; you decide.

Related Austin services:

Round Rock slab leak signs — what they mean and how they get fixed

What you’re seeing → the likely cause under a slab-on-grade home → the typical repair path and band.

Symptom Symptom Warm patch on the floor in one spot

A hot-side under-slab line is leaking and the heat is conducting up through the concrete into the flooring. It’s the most recognizable slab leak signature in slab-on-grade homes. The plumber confirms it with a thermal camera in minutes, then decides between a spot repair and rerouting the hot line depending on how the copper looks.

Location $300–$525 · spot repair $2,000–$4,200 or hot-line reroute ·

Symptom Symptom Water bill climbing for months, no usage change

Classic Round Rock hard-water pinhole — a slow weep too small to flood but big enough to register on the meter. Common on older copper in 78664/78681 homes built in the 1990s–2000s. Detection pinpoints it; if the line is broadly pitted, reroute or partial repipe beats a patch.

Detection $300–$650 · reroute $3,200–$6,200 if line is pitted ·

Symptom Symptom Sound of running water with everything shut off

A pressurized line is leaking somewhere below grade. Acoustic gear walks the slab and localizes the hiss to within a few inches. On the Blackland clay east side, joint and coupling failures from seasonal soil movement are a frequent culprit here.

Acoustic location $300–$525 · repair scoped after pinpoint ·

Symptom Symptom Hot water takes forever or never gets fully hot

A leak on the hot supply under the slab bleeds heat and volume before it reaches the fixture. It often pairs with a warm floor spot. Repair usually means isolating and either spot-fixing or rerouting just the hot line rather than disturbing the whole system.

Location + hot-line repair $2,200–$5,000 depending on path ·

Symptom Symptom Damp baseboard, lifting tile or musty smell in one room

Moisture from an active slab leak is migrating up through the slab edge into wall and floor finishes — common where the leak sits near an exterior footing. Left active it damages subfloor and drywall on top of the plumbing. Fix the leak first, then the finishes.

Detection $300–$525 · repair $2,000–$5,800 by method ·

Symptom Symptom Second slab leak within a couple of years

On a 20–25-year-old Round Rock home, a repeat leak means the hard-water pitting is system-wide, not a one-off. Spot-patching is throwing good money after bad. This is the textbook case where a whole-home repipe ends the cycle for good.

Repipe $8,500–$15,000 · usually beats repeat spot repairs ·

Slab leak under a Round Rock home? Locate it before you break concrete.

Detection first · spot, reroute, or repipe · TSBPE Master Plumbers · written estimate

What you can check before the plumber arrives — and what to leave alone

Three quick checks that help the dispatched plumber start ahead, plus the hard line you should never cross.

✓ Run the meter test yourself

Shut off every fixture in the house — no running taps, no ice maker, hold off on flushing. Find your Round Rock water meter at the street box and note the leak-indicator dial or the last digits. Wait 20 minutes and read it again. Any movement with everything off means an active pressurized leak. Telling the dispatcher you’ve already confirmed an active leak lets the plumber arrive ready to locate rather than start from zero.

STOP if: the meter box is full of water, frozen, or you can’t safely open it — the dispatched plumber carries their own test gear.

✓ Watch your home pressure and protect the copper

If you have a hose-bib pressure gauge, check static pressure. Round Rock supply pressure can run high, and high pressure accelerates the hard-water pitting that causes under-slab pinholes in the first place. A pressure reading and a note of whether you have a softener or a PRV both help the plumber judge whether your copper is likely pitted system-wide or just locally failed.

STOP if: pressure reads above 80 psi — that’s a regulator issue worth flagging, not something to adjust by trial and error on a pressurized line.

✓ Find and test the main and water-heater shutoffs

Locate your main shutoff (often near the meter or where the line enters the garage) and the cold-inlet valve on top of the water heater, and confirm they actually turn. Knowing these work means the plumber can isolate hot from cold immediately and you can stop active damage fast if the leak worsens. Sketch or photograph where the dampness or warm spot is so the scan starts in the right room.

STOP if: a valve is seized or weeping — don’t force it. Note it for the plumber and shut the main only as far as it moves freely.

⚠ DO NOT DIY: Never let anyone open your slab before the leak is electronically located to within a few inches. ‘We’ll find it once we break the concrete’ is demolition, not detection — and on a hard-water-pitted Round Rock line it often means you re-open the floor again within a year or two. Insist on acoustic, thermal, or tracer-gas location and a written diagnosis before any concrete is cut, and get a second opinion if a plumber refuses to locate first.

Round Rock slab leak repair — typical pricing

Market data, not promises. The dispatched plumber writes the line-item estimate for your job.

Source: HomeAdvisor / Angi Austin metro median pricing, 2025

Service / dispatch call
$79–$150
Often credited toward the work if you proceed
Leak detection / location
$300–$650
Acoustic + thermal · pinpoints before any cut
Tracer-gas pinpoint add-on
$200–$450
For stubborn under-slab pinholes
Spot repair (single leak)
$2,000–$4,200
One access point · fresh leak in sound copper
Through-slab repair
$3,400–$5,800
Interior jackhammer access · flooring impact
Above-slab line reroute
$3,200–$6,200
New PEX run · abandons one failing line
Whole-home repipe
$8,500–$15,000
Ends repeat leaks on aging copper
Post-repair leak-detection re-test
$150–$300
Confirms the slab is dry after the fix

Calls are free. The Master Plumbers dispatched through this line provide free written estimates on any job over $500.

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Round Rock slab leak repair — straight answers

What Williamson County homeowners actually ask the dispatch line about fixing a slab leak.

Should I spot-repair, reroute, or repipe my slab leak?
It comes down to three things: how many leaks the home has had, the age and condition of the copper, and where the leaking line runs. A single fresh pinhole in otherwise sound copper is often a straightforward spot repair ($2,000–$4,200). A leak in a long horizontal under-slab run, or a second leak within a couple of years, usually favors an above-slab reroute that abandons the bad line ($3,200–$6,200). And an older Round Rock home throwing repeat leaks from hard-water pitting is the case where a whole-home repipe ($8,500–$15,000) ends the cycle. The dispatched plumber locates the leak first, then frames all three for your specific home.
Why do slab leaks seem so common in Round Rock?
Two local factors stack up. First, water chemistry: Williamson County tap water runs around 15 grains per gallon, and that hardness pits under-slab copper from the inside over the years until a pinhole opens. Second, soil: the east side of town sits on Blackland Prairie clay that swells and shrinks seasonally, flexing the slab and the lines beneath it, while the west side near the limestone shelf is more stable. Add a housing stock that’s overwhelmingly slab-on-grade from the 1990s–2010s and you get a predictable pattern of aging copper failing under concrete.
Do I have to jackhammer my floor to fix it?
Not necessarily, and you shouldn’t assume so. Once the leak is located precisely, there are usually three paths: a spot repair through a small access opening, a through-slab repair where the interior is opened at one point, or an above-slab reroute that runs a new PEX line through walls or the attic and abandons the slab line entirely — no concrete cut at all. On many Round Rock homes the reroute avoids breaking the floor while also being the more durable fix. The plumber walks you through which applies.
How does the plumber find the leak without opening the slab?
Electronic location. After a meter test confirms an active leak and a hot/cold isolation narrows which line it’s on, the dispatched plumber uses acoustic listening equipment to hear the pressurized leak through the concrete and a thermal camera to see the temperature signature. For a stubborn pinhole, tracer gas injected into the line narrows the spot to within a few inches. The whole point is to know exactly where the leak is before any concrete is cut.
Is a reroute or repipe really better than just patching it?
On an older, hard-water-pitted Round Rock home, frequently yes. A spot patch fixes the one hole you found, but if the copper is pitting system-wide from years of hard water, the next pinhole is already forming somewhere else. Rerouting the affected line in PEX abandons the failing pipe; a full repipe replaces the system. The math often favors the bigger fix once a home has had a second leak — you stop paying to open the floor repeatedly. The plumber will tell you honestly whether your copper looks locally failed or broadly worn.
Will my homeowners insurance cover the repair?
It depends on your policy and the cause. Many Texas policies help with the resulting damage — soaked drywall, flooring, mitigation — when the leak is sudden and accidental, but commonly exclude the cost of accessing and repairing the slab pipe itself, and gradual seepage is often excluded entirely. Some policies offer a slab-leak rider for extra premium. The dispatched plumber’s written diagnosis documenting the cause is what your adjuster needs, so keep it. Read your specific policy for the slab-leak language.
Does which Round Rock neighborhood I’m in change anything?
It changes the likely cause and the plumber’s starting point. A home in Paloma Lake or the east-side 78665 subdivisions over Blackland clay is more prone to seasonal-movement joint and coupling failures, so the plumber listens at fittings first. A home up toward Behrens Ranch or Mayfield Ranch on the more stable limestone side is more often a straightforward hard-water pinhole in a copper run. Build era matters too — knowing your subdivision and roughly when it went up helps the dispatched plumber narrow the search faster.
How long does the repair take and will I lose water?
It varies by method. A located spot repair is often a single day with a water-off window of a few hours. An above-slab reroute typically runs most of a day as new line is run and tied in. Through-slab work adds jackhammering and a concrete patch, so plan on the affected room being out of use and dusty for a day. A whole-home repipe is usually a multi-day job. The dispatched plumber schedules the shutoff window with you, and water is normally restored the same day on smaller repairs.
What happens if I just leave a small slab leak alone?
It gets more expensive, not less. A slow pinhole keeps your meter running and your bill climbing, and the moisture migrates into the slab edge, subfloor, and walls — turning a plumbing repair into a plumbing-plus-drywall-plus-flooring repair. On the Blackland clay east side, a persistent under-slab leak can also keep one zone of soil saturated, which doesn’t help an already-moving foundation. Locating and fixing it early is almost always the cheaper outcome.
How fast can the dispatch line get someone to my Round Rock home?
Same-day is the norm for non-emergencies, and the dispatch line targets under an hour for true emergencies where water is actively flowing and causing damage. Most slab leaks are urgent but not a flood-in-progress, so they fit comfortably in a same-day or next-morning visit. When you call, give your ZIP — 78664, 78665, or 78681 — and the symptoms, and dispatch routes the nearest TSBPE-licensed Master Plumber who knows Williamson County builds.

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