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Maintenance

Understanding Your Home's Water Shut-Off Valves

Picture this: water is gushing from a burst pipe in the basement, and you do not know where the shut-off valve is. That five minutes of searching can mean thousands of dollars in damage.

Plumb Zebra TeamMay 14, 20266 min read

Let us start with a question that sounds simple but catches most homeowners off guard: do you know where your main water shut off valve is? Can you reach it quickly? Does it actually turn?

If you hesitated on any of those, you are not alone. And that is exactly why this guide exists.

Why This Matters More Than You Think

Knowing where and how to shut off your home's water supply is not some obscure bit of homeowner trivia. It is essential. By code, every home is required to have a main shut off valve installed. In an emergency, being able to reach that valve in seconds, not minutes, is the difference between a manageable cleanup and a devastating flood.

Where to Find Your Main Shut-Off

In modern homes, there is usually a main shut off valve inside the house. In Spokane, where most homes have basements, you will typically find it on the basement wall closest to the street.

There is also a primary shut off located underground, usually in the street or front yard, that controls water to the entire property. Here is the thing about both of these valves: they are rarely used. Sometimes a valve that has been sitting untouched for decades will start leaking the moment you try to turn it.

If your home does not have a basement, the valve is still usually located near the street side of the house. Check near your water heater or under the kitchen sink. If you know where the utility hole or valve cover for your water supply is located in the yard, the indoor shut off is generally on the nearest wall.

The Upgrade Worth Making

Older homes often have gate valves with wheel style handles. These can be notoriously difficult to turn, especially after years of sitting idle. They can seize up, strip, or even break when you need them most.

We recommend upgrading to a quarter turn ball valve. These modern valves have a lever handle that shuts the water off with a single quick motion. They are reliable, they rarely stick, and they can serve you well for decades.

Fixture Level Shut-Offs

Beyond your main valve, having shut off valves near individual fixtures is equally important. In newer homes, you will find small stop valves behind toilets, under sinks, and near the washing machine. These let you control water to a single fixture without interrupting service to the rest of the house.

Having an overflowing toilet is a terrible time to discover you do not have a working stop valve. Look for the small handle behind the toilet. There should be similar valves near the water heater and at the back of each sink.

If your valves are dripping or stuck, it may be time for replacement. We shut off the main supply, remove the old valve, clean the pipe, install the new one, then turn the water back on and test for leaks. There are different valve types depending on your piping material, and we match the right valve to your system.

Take Five Minutes Today

Here is what we ask: take five minutes today to locate your main shut off valve. Walk to wherever it is in your home, put your hand on it, and make sure it turns. That simple act of preparation is one of the smartest things any homeowner can do.

If you are having trouble finding or turning your shut off valve, or if yours is leaking or corroded, call Plumb Zebra at (509) 317-9009.

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