Emergency Plumber · 1 min read · Katy, Texas
Burst pipe emergency: what to do in the first 10 minutes
Shut off water, protect your home, and get connected with emergency plumbing help — step by step.
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Why speed matters
A burst pipe can release dozens of gallons per hour. The first minutes are about stopping the flow and reducing damage — not waiting for a perfect plan.
Homeowners in growing suburbs with newer and older plumbing mixes (including fast-growing areas like Katy-class communities) often face freezes, ground shift, or high water pressure events that lead to sudden failures.
Step 1 — Shut off the main water valve
Find your main shutoff (often near the water meter, front hose bib, or where the line enters the home). Turn it clockwise until it stops. If you cannot find it safely, call for emergency help immediately.
After shutoff, open a faucet at the lowest level of the home to relieve pressure remaining in the lines.
Step 2 — Kill electricity near water if needed
If water is near outlets, panels, or appliances, avoid contact and shut off power at the breaker only if you can do so safely without standing in water. Call 911 if there is sparking or fire risk.
Step 3 — Capture water and document damage
Use buckets, towels, and move valuables. Photos help insurance later. Do not use a wet vac on standing water near live electricity.
Step 4 — Call for emergency plumbing help
Once people are safe and water is controlled as much as possible, call a 24/7 emergency plumbing line. Share your city, ZIP, and what failed (main line, water heater, supply line, etc.).
Emergency Trades connects homeowners with local plumbing professionals — we are a matching service, not a single storefront in every city.
Get local emergency help
When DIY steps are not enough, use these local pages:
Guide FAQs
Should I try to repair a burst pipe myself?
Only if you are qualified and the situation is safe. Most homeowners should shut off water and call emergency help. Temporary clamps are not a permanent fix.
Is a small drip an emergency?
A small drip can wait for scheduled service if you can shut off the fixture. Active spraying, ceiling saturation, or flooding is an emergency.
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