Leaking shower repairs

How do showers leak?

Most shower leaks don’t happen overnight—they develop over time. Cement grout can erode, silicone seals in the corners can peel away, and natural movement in your property can crack tiles. In some cases, it comes down to poor workmanship or a lack of experience with the right systems and products. Sadly, some showers are built with fundamental flaws that set them up for failure from day one.

Whatever the cause, you can rest easy knowing this is our bread and butter. We’ve been diagnosing and fixing these problems for well over a decade and a half, and there’s nothing we haven’t seen—or solved.

hover over me

Empty shower stall with beige and dark brown tiles, a drain on the floor, and a small recessed shelf in the wall.
View of a bathroom shower area with beige tile walls, a round drain at the corner, and a glass door, with a bottle of cleaning spray on the countertop nearby.

How to spot a shower leak?

Corner of a room with damaged baseboard at the bottom of the wall near a sliding glass door with dirt and damage visible.
Close-up of a white painted wall and baseboard with signs of patching or damage, along with part of a wooden floor.
Mold growth on a wall near the baseboard, with black spots and discoloration.
Close-up of a cracked white tile wall with visible grout lines.
Close-up of damaged and stained bathroom tile and bathtub edge with visible mold, dirt, and cracked grout.

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