
Confirm whether movement points to hidden water loss.
Use available valves to narrow inside, outside, slab, or irrigation clues.
Help the homeowner decide who should repair and where to begin.
Homeowners searching for Water Meter Moving Roswell GA usually want a straight answer before anyone opens the yard, floor, driveway, or wall. A moving water meter can waste water quietly and still leave only a few clues. North Georgia Leak Detection focuses on locating the evidence, marking the likely area, and explaining what it means in plain language.
In Roswell, this work has to account for local property layouts around Historic Roswell, Canton Street, Holcomb Bridge Road, Crabapple Road, Crossville Road, Riverside Road, Horseshoe Bend, and established neighborhoods near Vickery Creek. The homes and lots often include older homes, slab foundations, basements, crawlspaces, mature landscaping, irrigation systems, and mixed pipe routes added over years of remodeling, so a hidden water leak Roswell problem may not show up directly above the failed pipe.
The best repair plan starts with a good location. A moving meter does not automatically tell you where to dig, so leak detection helps turn that warning sign into a more useful repair plan. We are not trying to take repair work from plumbers; we help make the repair decision more accurate.
For homeowners, that can mean fewer assumptions, less exploratory damage, and a better conversation with the contractor who will perform the repair.
Local conditions matter. Red clay, rock, tree roots, older utility paths, driveway crossings, and sloped lots where water can follow the easiest path instead of rising straight up can hide the path of escaping water. A spot that looks like irrigation overspray or ordinary drainage may still be tied to a pressurized line.
Roswell homeowners often call about warm floors, meter movement, damp crawlspaces, wet basement edges, high bills, or irrigation areas that stay wet when the rest of the yard dries. We use that local context while checking the property, so the visit is not based on one mark in the grass or one sound through the floor.
For this kind of call, we start with what can be checked before damage is done: meter behavior, shutoffs, pipe route clues, visible wet areas, and the symptom pattern. Then we use meter checks, shutoff testing, pressure clues, acoustic listening, service line tracing, and irrigation isolation when possible when those tools fit the site.
The point is to turn a vague warning sign into a focused repair direction. If the evidence points away from the original assumption, we say that too.
A moving meter is useful because it confirms water is going somewhere, but it does not say where. The leak could be inside, outside, under the slab, or tied to irrigation. Leak detection turns meter movement into a more practical plan by checking shutoffs, routes, sounds, and property conditions.
In Roswell, we compare that symptom with the property layout, meter location, irrigation setup, slab areas, crawlspace or basement access, and the way water could move through red clay, rock, tree roots, older utility paths, driveway crossings, and sloped lots where water can follow the easiest path instead of rising straight up. That keeps the visit focused on evidence instead of assumptions.
Do not ignore a spinning leak indicator, digital usage that keeps changing, or meter movement when every faucet, toilet, appliance, and hose bib is off. Those symptoms can point to a service line, slab line, irrigation zone, crawlspace issue, or another hidden water path.
We help sort those possibilities without turning the visit into a repair sales pitch. The homeowner gets a clearer explanation of what the evidence supports.
Recent Roswell work has included acoustic checks inside established homes, thermal review near finished flooring, tracing older service lines, and separating irrigation leaks from slab or underground water loss. The job photos on this site show water meter readings, meter-to-home checks, marked leak areas, and equipment used to narrow down hidden water loss. They are included so homeowners can see real field work instead of generic stock images.
Helpful related pages include <a href="roswell-ga-leak-detection.html">Leak Detection Roswell</a>, <a href="high-water-bill-roswell-ga.html">High Water Bill</a>, <a href="irrigation-leak-detection-roswell-ga.html">Irrigation Leak Detection</a>, <a href="slab-leak-detection-roswell-ga.html">Slab Leak Detection</a>, <a href="underground-water-leak-roswell-ga.html">Underground Water Leak Detection</a>, <a href="water-line-leak-detection-roswell-ga.html">Water Line Leak Detection</a>. Nearby city pages include <a href="alpharetta-ga-leak-detection.html">Alpharetta</a>, <a href="leak-detection-milton-ga.html">Milton</a>, <a href="leak-detection-east-cobb-ga.html">East Cobb</a>, <a href="leak-detection-johns-creek-ga.html">Johns Creek</a>. These links are useful if your property is near a city line or if the symptom fits another page more closely.
We specialize in finding leaks and explaining the evidence, not pushing unnecessary repair work.
We narrow the likely area before a yard, driveway, slab, crawlspace, or finished room is opened.
Many plumbers use us because a marked area helps them repair the right section.












Scott was fast to respond and very professional! He found the leak under the slab in the Smyrna townhouse within the first 30 mins. He also referred an excellent plumber to do the repair. I would recommend him without a second thought.
Scott was professionally outstanding and extremely kind. He even called back later to make sure the plumber found the leak in the area that he had marked. Gratefully, Nancy & Roland.
Scott is the best! I had a leak in Dawsonville that another leak detection company was not able to find. I called Scott and he found the leak quickly. I highly recommend North Georgia Leak Detection and would hire Scott again in the future.
Yes. North Georgia Leak Detection helps homeowners in Roswell locate hidden water loss before repair work begins. We focus on finding the leak evidence and explaining it clearly.
Common signs include a spinning leak indicator, digital usage that keeps changing, or meter movement when every faucet, toilet, appliance, and hose bib is off. If the symptom keeps returning or the meter moves when fixtures are off, leak detection is a smart next step.
That is the goal. We use leak detection equipment and site clues to narrow the likely area so the homeowner and repair contractor can avoid as much unnecessary damage as possible.
If the leak location is unknown, yes. A plumber repairs the pipe, while leak detection helps identify where the repair should begin. Many plumbers prefer having the area marked first.
Yes. Red clay, rock, tree roots, older utility paths, driveway crossings, and sloped lots where water can follow the easiest path instead of rising straight up can let water move away from the actual break. The wettest spot is not always the leak point.
Yes. A hidden leak can waste water continuously, especially if the meter moves when no fixtures are running. We help determine whether the loss appears to be inside, outside, under a slab, or tied to irrigation.
Yes. Irrigation leaks can look like service line leaks or cause seasonal bill spikes. We review irrigation clues when they may be part of the water loss.
We serve homeowners around Historic Roswell, Canton Street, Holcomb Bridge Road, Crabapple Road, Crossville Road, Riverside Road, Horseshoe Bend and nearby North Georgia communities. If you are close to a city line, call and describe where the property is located.
We specialize in leak detection, not selling repair jobs. Once the likely area is marked, the homeowner or chosen repair contractor can handle the repair.
Make note of the recent bill change, whether the meter moves with fixtures off, where you see wet spots, and whether irrigation has been running. That information helps the visit start faster.
Call now for focused leak detection before unnecessary repair work begins.
(404) 683-3733