When a Faucet Leak Is a Repair vs. a Replacement
A dripping faucet does not always mean you need a new fixture. Some leaks come from worn washers, gaskets, cartridges, O-rings, or seals. Others point to corrosion, fixture age, hard-to-source parts, or repeated failures that make replacement the smarter option. The first step is not deciding whether to repair or replace. The first step is figuring out where the leak starts.
A slow drip can also waste more water than most homeowners expect. EPA WaterSense estimates that a faucet dripping once per second can waste more than 3,000 gallons per year. EPA also notes that old and worn faucet washers and gaskets frequently cause faucet leaks. Source: EPA WaterSense Fix a Leak Week
For Tacoma-area homeowners comparing repair and replacement, Royal Flush Plumbing can help inspect the leak source and explain the most practical fix. If you are trying to decide whether you need faucet repair and installation , this guide explains how plumbers think through the repair-vs-replacement decision.
Start With Where the Faucet Appears to Be Leaking
Where water appears is useful, but it can also be misleading. Water may collect at the base of the faucet even if the leak starts at the handle. Water under the sink may come from the faucet, supply line, shutoff valve, drain assembly, or another nearby connection.
Use the visible leak location as a clue, not a final diagnosis.
| Where water appears | Common source | Repair or replace? | Important note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dripping from the spout | Cartridge, washer, gasket, or valve seat | Usually repair first | Strong repair-first signal if the fixture is otherwise in good shape |
| Around the handle | Cartridge, O-ring, or packing issue | Usually repair first | Water can run from here and collect around the base |
| Around the base | Handle leak, seal issue, or fixture body problem | Diagnose first | Do not assume the base itself is the original leak source |
| Under the sink | Supply line, shutoff valve, connection, drain assembly, or corrosion | Plumbing repair, sometimes replacement | Confirm whether it is faucet, supply, drain, or disposal-related |
| Faucet will not shut off | Cartridge or valve failure | Repair if parts are available | Replacement may make sense if parts are unavailable or fixture is old |
| Corroded fixture body | Age, deterioration, or mineral damage | Replacement often smarter | Especially if leaks are recurring |
Moen’s support documentation is useful here because it separates faucet leaks by symptom. A kitchen faucet that keeps dripping from the spout when the handle is off is often related to the cartridge, the internal part that controls water flow. Source: Moen kitchen faucet spout leak guidance
Moen also notes that water around the base may actually be coming from a handle leak that runs downward. Source: Moen bathroom faucet base leak guidance
The practical takeaway: do not replace a faucet just because water appears near the base. Confirm where the water starts first.
When Faucet Repair Usually Makes Sense
Repair often makes sense when the faucet is newer, the leak is isolated, and the fixture body is still in good shape.
A repair-first approach is reasonable when:
- The faucet is newer.
- The leak is limited to the spout or handle.
- The fixture is not corroded.
- Replacement parts are available.
- The homeowner likes the fixture.
- The repair cost is reasonable compared with replacement.
Common repairable causes include worn washers, gaskets, cartridges, O-rings, and seals. A plumber can confirm whether the leak source is internal to the faucet, at a connection, or from another nearby component. If the fixture is otherwise in good condition, faucet repair may solve the problem without replacement.
This article pairs naturally with the existing dripping faucet article: why ignoring a dripping faucet can cost Tacoma homeowners big.
When Faucet Replacement Is the Better Move
Replacement may make more sense when the fixture is worn out, unreliable, corroded, or difficult to repair properly.
Consider replacement when:
- The faucet has repeated leaks.
- The fixture body is corroded.
- Parts are difficult or impossible to source.
- Water flow is poor because of age or mineral buildup.
- The fixture is loose, damaged, or outdated.
- A remodel or fixture upgrade is already planned.
- Multiple fixtures in the bathroom are aging.
- Prior repairs have not lasted.
This does not mean every older faucet should automatically be replaced. It means the long-term value of repair needs to make sense. If a fixture keeps leaking, parts are unavailable, or corrosion is visible, repeated repair attempts may cost more than solving the problem with a replacement.
For bathrooms with multiple aging fixtures, replacement may also fit into a broader bathroom fixture replacement or bathroom remodel plumbing plan. If the work is part of a larger upgrade, the related guide to bathroom plumbing upgrades may also help.
Kitchen, Bathroom, and Under-Sink Leak Differences
Kitchen and bathroom faucet leaks can look similar, but the surrounding plumbing can change the diagnosis.
Kitchen faucets often have more moving parts and nearby connections. Pull-down sprayers, supply lines, dishwasher connections, garbage disposal connections, and sink drains can all create or confuse under-sink moisture. If water appears in the cabinet, the faucet may not be the only possible source.
Bathroom faucets are more likely to show familiar symptoms such as a dripping spout, handle leak, mineral buildup, or water collecting around the base. If the bathroom vanity is aging or the homeowner is already planning updates, a leak may become a good time to consider broader fixture replacement.
In both cases, the right recommendation depends on where the water starts, not just where it appears.
Repair First or Replace First?
Use this quick table as a starting point.
| Situation | Better first move |
|---|---|
| Newer faucet dripping from spout | Repair |
| Handle leak with available cartridge | Repair |
| Leak under sink from a supply connection | Plumbing repair |
| Water around base but source is unclear | Diagnose first |
| Corroded fixture body | Replace |
| Repeated repairs on older fixture | Replace |
| Remodel already planned | Replace or upgrade |
| Parts are unavailable | Replace |
The best recommendation is not always the most expensive one. A newer faucet with a cartridge issue may be a repair candidate. A corroded fixture with repeated leaks may not be worth another temporary fix.
If you are unsure, Royal Flush Plumbing can help with faucet repair and installation and explain whether repair or replacement makes more sense.
What a Plumber Checks Before Recommending Repair or Replacement
Before recommending a new faucet, a plumber should confirm the leak source and the condition of the surrounding plumbing.
That may include checking:
- Where the water first appears.
- Whether water is traveling from another part of the fixture.
- Fixture age.
- Shutoff valve condition.
- Supply line condition.
- Corrosion.
- Sink or counter condition.
- Cartridge or part availability.
- Water damage under the sink.
- Whether nearby drain or disposal components are contributing to the visible water.
This protects the homeowner from two bad outcomes: replacing a faucet that could have been repaired, or repairing a fixture that is likely to fail again.
Need Help Deciding Between Faucet Repair and Replacement?
Royal Flush Plumbing can inspect the leak source, explain what is causing it, and help you decide whether repair or replacement is the better option.
Many faucet leaks can be repaired when the fixture is in good shape and parts are available. Replacement may be recommended when the fixture is corroded, unreliable, outdated, or not worth repeated repairs.
If you are not sure whether your faucet should be repaired or replaced, contact Royal Flush Plumbing for faucet repair and installation help.
FAQs
Is a dripping faucet usually repairable?
Often, yes. Many dripping faucets are caused by worn washers, gaskets, cartridges, O-rings, or seals. If the faucet is otherwise in good condition and parts are available, repair may make sense.
When should I replace instead of repair a faucet?
Replacement may be better when the faucet is corroded, repeatedly leaking, outdated, hard to source parts for, or already part of a planned remodel.
What causes a faucet to leak from the handle?
Handle leaks are often related to cartridges, O-rings, or packing components. The exact cause depends on the faucet type.
Why is water pooling around the faucet base?
Water around the base does not always mean the base is leaking. The leak may start at the handle and run downward, or it may come from another nearby connection.
Can a small faucet drip waste much water?
Yes. EPA WaterSense estimates that a faucet dripping once per second can waste more than 3,000 gallons per year.
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