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10 Common Causes of Pool Plumbing Issues and How They Are Fixed

A swimming pool is a major investment that brings fun, relaxation, and value to your home. Under the water is a system of pipes, valves, and equipment that keeps your pool running. This network is your pool plumbing system. It works constantly to move water from the pool, push it through the filter and heater, and send it back clean and warm.

When your pool plumbing works perfectly, you rarely think about it. However, pool plumbing problems can happen to any pool owner. A small leak or blockage can quickly become a costly problem. If not fixed, plumbing problems can damage your pump, crack your deck, or harm your pool. 

The 10 Most Common Pool Plumbing Problems

1. Suction Side Air Leaks

The suction side of your pool plumbing includes everything before the pool pump. This includes the skimmer lines, the main drain line, and the pipes leading directly into the front of the pump.

When there is a gap or a loose seal on the suction side, the pump pulls in air instead of water.  You will notice bubbles shooting out of your return jets in the pool. You might also see the water level inside your pump basket drop, or see the pump struggle to prime (fill up with water).

How It Is Fixed

  • Inspect the Pump Lid: Check the clear plastic lid on top of your pump. If it has a tiny crack, air will leak in. Replace a cracked lid immediately.
  • Lubricate the O-Ring: The rubber seal under the pump lid can become dry and crack over time. Technicians remove the O-ring, clean it, coat it with a silicone-based pool lubricant, and reinstall it. If it is stretched out, they replace it.
  • Tighten the Unions: Threaded plumbing connections (unions) right before the pump can loosen due to pump vibration. Tightening these connections by hand or replacing the internal O-ring usually stops the air leak.

2. Pressure Side Water Leaks

The pressure side is the part of your plumbing after the pump. It includes the filter, heater, and the jets that push water back into the pool. Water moves through these pipes under pressure, so even a small crack can cause a leak. 

Water leaks on the equipment pad are easy to spot because you will see puddles on the ground. Underground leaks are harder to find but show up as unexplained water loss or wet patches in your yard.

How It Is Fixed

  • Cut and Re-pipe: Plumbers shut down the system and drain the water. They use a PVC pipe cutter to remove the section of cracked pipe or the leaking joint.
  • Sand and Clean: The technician sands the outside of the old pipe and the inside of the new PVC coupling to make the surfaces rough. They wipe them clean with PVC primer.
  • Glue the Connection: They apply heavy-duty PVC cement to both pieces, push them together, and hold them tightly for 30 seconds to create a strong, leak-free connection.

3. Clogged Main Drains and Skimmer Lines

Debris is a constant enemy of pool plumbing. While your skimmer basket catches large leaves and twigs, small debris can pass through if the basket is cracked or floating loose. Over time, leaves, hair, dirt, and even small toys can lodge inside the underground plumbing lines.

A clog slows down water flow. This starves your pump of water, causes low water pressure at the return jets, and stops your pool vacuum from working correctly.

How It Is Fixed

  • The Water Bladder Method: An expert attaches a specialized tool called a water bladder (or drain auger) ‘water garden hose and inserts it into the clogged plumbing line. The bladder swells up to seal the pipe, then shoots a powerful blast of pressurized water forward to break the clog apart.
  • Plumbing Snake: For tough blockages like packed wet leaves, a flexible plumbing snake is guided down the pipe to break up the clog.

4. Broken or Leaking Pool Valves

Broken or Leaking Pool Valves

Pool valves control the direction of your pool water. Diverter valves control where the water flows in your pool system or send filtered water to a spa or waterfall.

Because valves contain moving plastic and rubber parts, they wear down over time. The small rubber gaskets inside the valve can dry out, causing water to leak from the valve. The plastic handle can also snap off if the valve becomes too stiff to turn.

How It Is Fixed

  • Valve Rebuild: For high-quality diverter valves, you do not need to cut the plumbing. A pool technician unscrews the top cover, pulls out the internal diverter assembly, and replaces the worn rubber O-rings and seals with a fresh rebuild kit.
  • Complete Replacement: Inexpensive, single-piece ball valves cannot be rebuilt. If a ball valve cracks or leaks, the technician must cut the old valve out of the PVC line and glue a new, durable diverter valve in its place.

5. Underground Ground Shifting and Settling

The dirt under your backyard moves naturally over time. If the soil was not packed down tightly when your pool was built, it will slowly sink. Heavy rains, changing seasons, and shifting concrete decks put a lot of weight on buried PVC pipes.

This pressure can crack pipes or separate pipe connections far below the surface of your deck or lawn.

How It Is Fixed

  • Leak Detection: Technicians use specialized listening devices or pressure tests to find the exact location of the underground break.
  • Excavation: They carefully chip through the concrete deck or dig down into the soil to uncover the damaged line.
  • Flexible PVC Install: The broken section of rigid pipe is cut away. Repair teams often use short sections of flexible PVC pipe or heavy-duty repair couplings to mend the gap. This gives the plumbing a small amount of flexibility to handle future ground movement without breaking.

6. Winter Freeze Damage

In cold climates, freezing temperatures are a major threat to pool plumbing. When water turns into ice, it expands by about 9%. If water remains trapped inside your PVC pipes, valves, or filters during a hard freeze, the expanding ice can crack plastic parts and break pipes. 

Freeze damage usually often requires major repairs because multiple pipes, your filter tank, or your pool pump housing can crack all at once.

How It Is Fixed

  • Component Replacement: Cracked filter tanks, shattered chlorinator bodies, and split pump housings cannot be glued or taped. They must be removed and replaced with new equipment.
  • Prevention: The best fix for freeze damage is avoiding it entirely. Pool owners winterize their pools by blowing all the water out of the underground lines using an air compressor and sealing the pipe ends with rubber winter plugs.

7. High System Pressure Issues

High System Pressure Issues

Your pool pipes are built to handle a safe amount of water pressure. If the pressure rises too high, it puts too much stress on your pipes, valves, and equipment lids. 

High pressure is almost always caused by a restriction in the water flow after the pump. A dirty pool filter packed with debris is the most common reason for high pressure. Closed return valves can also block water from leaving the equipment pad, forcing the pressure gauge into the danger zone.

How It Is Fixed

  • Filter Maintenance: If the pressure gauge reads 8 to 10 PSI higher than its clean starting pressure, it is time to clean the filter. Sand filters are backwashed to flush out dirt. Cartridge filters are opened and cleaned with water. 
  • Valve Alignment: Ensure all return line valves are fully open so water can travel back to the pool freely.

8. Tree Root Intrusion

Tree roots constantly grow outward to look for water and nutrients. Pool pipes underground can become damp on the outside. This moisture attracts the roots directly to your plumbing lines. 

As a tree root grows, it wraps around the PVC pipe. The pressure can crush the line. Alternatively, microscopic root hairs can slip into tiny imperfections in glued joints, growing larger inside the pipe until they completely block water flow or crack the fitting.

How It Is Fixed

  • Root Clearing: If roots are inside the pipe, a mechanical root cutter or plumbing snake clears the line.
  • Rerouting the Pipe: To fix the cracked area permanently, the surrounding roots must be cut back and cleared out of the trench. The damaged section of PVC is cut out, and a new line is installed. If the tree is too close, the pool plumber may choose to reroute the plumbing line completely around the root zone.

9. Clogged Pump Impeller

The impeller is a part inside the pump that moves water. It spins at high speeds to create the suction that moves your pool water. The pump basket is designed to catch debris before it hits the impeller, but tiny items like pine needles, grass clippings, small pebbles, and hair can pass through the basket holes.

When these small items get caught in the vanes of the impeller, the pump can no longer push water forward. The motor will run and sound normal, but your water flow drops to zero.

How It Is Fixed

  • Disconnect Power: For safety, the main circuit breaker to the pool equipment is turned off.
  • Open the Pump Housing: The bolts holding the pump housing together are removed, allowing the technician to separate the motor from the wet end of the pump.
  • Clean the Impeller: Using simple tools, the technician removes the debris, the technician pulls the packed debris out of the small openings on the face of the impeller. Once clear, the pump is reassembled with a fresh housing gasket.

10. Chemical Degradation and Scale Buildup

Chemical Degradation and Scale Buildup

Your pool chemistry must stay balanced to keep the water safe for swimming. If your water chemistry is consistently off, it damages your plumbing system over time.

Bad pool chemistry hurts your pipes over time. Water with low pH can damage rubber seals and plastic parts. On the other hand, high calcium levels cause hard mineral crusts to form inside your pipes. This buildup narrows the inside of the pipes and slows down the water flow. 

How It Is Fixed

  • Water Balancing: Test your water weekly. Keep your pH between 7.4 and 7.6 and your total alkalinity between 80 and 120 parts per million (PPM).
  • Chemical Descaling: If mineral scale has narrowed your pipes, pool professionals can introduce a safe, commercial-grade descaling chemical into the plumbing loop to remove calcium buildup without damaging your pipes. 

Conclusion

Your pool plumbing system is the unsung hero that keeps your swimming water clean, clear, and safe. While small plumbing issues like a dried-out O-ring or a minor clog are easy to handle, ignoring them can lead to serious damage and costly repairs. Regular maintenance like cleaning your skimmer baskets and tracking your filter pressure is your best defense against these ten common problems.

If you notice air bubbles in your pool, unexpected water loss, or a sudden spike in your pressure gauge, do not wait for the problem to get worse. Fixing a plumbing leak or a broken valve early saves you time, money, and stress. Are you dealing with a stubborn pool leak or a mystery plumbing issue? We are here to help. Contact us today at Epic Watershapes to schedule a professional inspection with our expert pool technicians. Let us handle the technical work so you can get back to enjoying your backyard paradise.

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