Leak Detection & Repair in Liberty Hill
Liberty Hill is growing fast along the hill-country edge, with large lots and long pipe runs where a buried leak can sit far from the house. We travel from Georgetown to find it.
A community growing fast on large lots
Liberty Hill has become one of the fastest-growing communities in the Austin metro, expanding rapidly along the hill-country edge west of Georgetown. Its newer developments sit on larger lots than most suburban subdivisions, with water and irrigation lines running long distances, and the rocky hill-country terrain brings its own character to buried pipe. That combination, newer construction, generous lots, and hill-country ground, shapes the leaks we are called for here.
We make the short drive from Georgetown to Liberty Hill regularly, and the distance does not change how we work: locate precisely before opening or digging, match the repair to what we find, and explain it plainly.
Long runs on bigger lots
On a large Liberty Hill lot, the water service line and the irrigation runs can travel a long distance from the road to the house, and a leak out on one of those runs can sit well away from any fixture, showing only as fading pressure and a climbing bill long before any wet spot appears on the surface. The rocky soil on the hill-country edge also drains fast, so surface water may never pool visibly even when a buried line is losing steadily.
We trace the buried line's actual path and use acoustic correlation to pinpoint a break even far from the house, so the repair is one targeted dig rather than a search across a large lot.
Newer construction with modern plumbing
Liberty Hill's newer homes run PEX supply and PVC drains, so their leaks start at the connections: a fitting under-made during construction, a slab penetration, or a drain joint that never fully set. Owners of recently built homes are sometimes surprised by a leak, but a single poorly made joint can sit quietly until the conditions are right for it to show, years after move-in.
The irrigation these larger lots carry is the other frequent source, where a buried lateral break or a valve that will not seal wastes water underground across a wide yard.
Hill-country terrain and hard water
The thin, rocky soil common in the Liberty Hill area carries buried pipe differently from the urban ground closer to Georgetown's core. Water in a buried leak can travel along rock faces and emerge away from the break, making the wet spot a less reliable guide to the source. And the very-hard water that runs across Williamson County still scales water heaters and fouls fixtures even in the newest Liberty Hill home.
We account for the terrain when we locate a buried leak here, following the line rather than the surface.
How we serve Liberty Hill
We travel from Georgetown to Liberty Hill for leak detection and repair, bringing line-tracing and correlation equipment suited to the larger lots and longer runs. We locate before digging, match the repair to the pipe and the ground, and test the system before leaving. Same-day and around-the-clock response is available when a leak needs immediate attention.
If your Liberty Hill property has a climbing bill, fading pressure, a soggy patch out on the lot, or a drip at a fitting, we will find the source and fix it.
The leaks we are called for most here
Leak detection in Liberty Hill
Do you serve Liberty Hill from Georgetown?
Why is a leak harder to find on a large Liberty Hill lot?
My new Liberty Hill home has a leak. Is that possible?
Leak on your Liberty Hill property?
We travel from Georgetown and trace the long run to the spot. Call to get started.
☎ (512) 737-6168