What Is a Slab Leak?
A slab leak happens when a water line running underneath your home's concrete foundation cracks or corrodes and starts leaking into the slab itself. In Bakersfield, this is common. The soil shifts. Homes built in the 60s, 70s, and 80s have aging copper lines. The hard water here accelerates corrosion. We see slab leaks regularly in older neighborhoods across southwest Bakersfield, Oildale, and East Bakersfield.
Signs You Have Slab Leak Water Damage
- Warm spots on tile or hardwood floor
- Sound of running water when every faucet is off
- Water bill that jumped without explanation
- Wet carpet, soft subfloor, or warped hardwood near baseboards
- New cracks in flooring or drywall
- Musty or mildew smell at floor level
Any one of these can mean something else. Two or more at the same time — call a plumber and a restoration contractor the same day.
What To Do in the First 60 Minutes
1. Shut off your main water supply. The shutoff is typically at the street meter or in your garage near the water heater. Don't wait to locate the source — shut off the whole house.
2. Don't run fans or open windows yet. Improper airflow pushes moisture further into wall cavities. Let a professional assess ventilation first.
3. Document everything before touching it. Photos and video of every wet surface, every affected room, every piece of damaged property. Don't move furniture or pull up rugs first. This documentation is your claim evidence.
4. Call a restoration contractor before calling your plumber. Mitigation — stopping the spread of moisture — starts first. The plumber fixes the pipe. We stop the damage from spreading into walls, subfloor, and cabinetry while the plumber works.
5. Report to your insurance agent. After mitigation has started and you have a contractor onsite, call your agent to open a claim. You'll want answers ready: when you discovered it, what's affected, and whether mitigation has started.
Will Homeowners Insurance Cover Slab Leak Water Damage in California?
The water damage — yes, typically. Most standard HO-3 homeowner policies in California cover sudden and accidental water damage from a slab leak. The damage to your flooring, subfloor, drywall, and cabinetry is usually covered.
The slab repair itself — usually not. Fixing the pipe and breaking through the concrete is a plumbing scope. That's generally not covered under a standard homeowner policy.
The key word adjusters look for: sudden. If the leak was slow and gradual — a slow drip that went undetected for months — carriers may push back on coverage or limit it. If it was sudden, your documentation needs to show that: intact materials around the leak point, no signs of prior ignored damage.
Our documentation package — moisture logs, Xactimate-formatted scope, photos from intake — gives your adjuster what they need to process the claim clean.
Why Fast Mitigation Matters More Than You Think
Standing water under a slab doesn't stay there. It wicks upward through concrete into the subfloor. It travels laterally through framing and into adjacent rooms. Drywall that reads wet at 48 hours can start showing mold growth by day 3 or 4 in a hot Bakersfield summer.
The decision that affects your outcome most isn't which plumber you call. It's whether you get a restoration contractor onsite that day. Every day of delay extends the affected area, raises the reconstruction scope, and gives secondary damage time to develop — which complicates the claim.
I run jobs myself. When you call KWDR, I'm onsite with extraction equipment and moisture meters within 60 minutes. We take baseline readings, place Dri-Eaz dehumidifiers and air movers, and document everything the adjuster will need from the first hour forward.