Slow leaks are the trickiest spa repair to nail down. Water moves, foam soaks it up, and the actual source can be six feet from where you see the drip. We find leaks others miss.
Get a Free QuoteSpa leaks fall into three buckets: plumbing leaks at fittings or unions, equipment leaks at pumps and heaters, and shell leaks through cracks or jets. The diagnostic approach is different for each, and most home-DIY fixes only work when the leak is exactly where it looks like it is. We use pressure tests, dye traces, and direct inspection to find the source and fix it once.
You submit a quote request describing what your spa is doing. A real Nashville-based tech responds soon to confirm the appointment. We arrive in a marked truck with common parts on board, run a structured diagnostic, and give you a flat-rate quote before any work begins. Most jobs are done the same day.
We service every major brand on the market — Jacuzzi, Hot Spring, Caldera, Sundance, Marquis, Master Spas, Bullfrog, Dimension One, Cal Spas, Coleman — plus most off-brand and inflatable spas. If you've inherited a spa or aren't sure what you have, send a photo with your quote request and we'll figure it out.
If your spa is doing any of these, this is the right page.
A classic slow leak. Could be plumbing, equipment, or shell — pressure testing isolates it.
Plumbing or shell-side leak. Where the water sits doesn't always match where it's coming from.
Means the leak is somewhere in the equipment bay. Foam removal exposes the real source.
Mechanical seal, union, or heater manifold. Each has a specific repair path.
Pressure-side leak — usually a jet body, manifold, or a hairline crack in a plumbing line.
Heater tube or heater union. Common as spas age and PVC contracts and expands.
Most leak diagnoses are wrapped up in 1 to 2 hours using pressure tests and dye traces. Repair time depends on the source.
Yes — acrylic and rotomolded shells can be repaired. The repair is permanent when done correctly, though cosmetic match isn't always perfect.
Sometimes. For an equipment-bay leak we can usually keep it filled. For a shell or jet leak we drain to the level of the source.
Liquid sealers only fill very small leaks and often clog filters and heaters in the process. We don't recommend them and don't use them.