Pipe Burst at 2am — What to Do in the First Hour Before We Get There
You wake up at 2am to the sound of running water. By the time you find it, half the kitchen ceiling is wet, water is pooling in the basement, and you are panicking. The next hour decides whether this is a $4,000 mitigation or a $40,000 rebuild.
Shut off the water
Find your main shut-off. It is usually in the basement on the wall facing the street, or in a utility closet on the ground floor. Turn it clockwise until it stops. If you can isolate to a single fixture (under a sink, behind a toilet, behind the washing machine), do that first. Knowing where your shut-off is BEFORE an emergency is the single most valuable thing you can do as a homeowner.
Kill power to the affected area
If water is reaching outlets, light fixtures, or any electrical, flip the breaker for that area at the main panel. Do not walk through standing water near energized circuits.
Move what you can save
Lift furniture off wet carpet onto blocks or tinfoil squares to prevent stain transfer. Get books, papers, electronics, and rugs off the floor. Unplug anything still safe to reach.
Call us
Then call. The faster we get there, the less material has to come out. Our crew is mobilizing while we are still on the phone with you. Bring the claim number from your insurer if you can.
Do NOT do these things
- Do not run an extension cord through standing water.
- Do not lift wet sheetrock — it crumbles and makes the cleanup worse.
- Do not turn the heat WAY up trying to dry it yourself. You drive moisture deeper into materials.
- Do not start ripping things out before we document for insurance. Wait the 30 to 60 minutes for us to get there.