If your boiler pressure keeps falling, water is likely escaping from your sealed heating system. Sometimes the cause is simple. In other cases, repeated pressure loss points to a hidden leak in pipework, radiator circuits or underfloor heating that needs professional investigation.
Yes, dropping boiler pressure can be a sign of a leak, especially if the pressure falls repeatedly after you top it up. A sealed central heating system should normally hold pressure. If the gauge keeps falling, water may be escaping from a radiator valve, pipe joint, underfloor heating pipe, pressure relief valve or a hidden section of heating pipework.
A one-off pressure drop is not always a major concern. Releasing trapped air when bleeding radiators, for example, will reduce system pressure slightly. But if you are topping up your boiler every few days or weeks, the system should be checked properly. Constantly repressurising the boiler does not solve the underlying issue and can dilute the protective chemicals inside your heating system, increasing the risk of corrosion.
The key warning sign is repetition. If the pressure keeps falling again and again, it needs proper investigation. At WaterLeakFinder, we connect homeowners, landlords and property managers with specialists who can investigate suspected central heating leaks in London and the surrounding areas.
Most domestic boilers are designed to operate at around 1 to 1.5 bar when cold. When the heating is running, pressure may rise slightly as water expands. If the gauge falls to 0.4 bar or below, the boiler may cut out to protect itself.
A sealed heating system should not need constant topping up. If it does, water is going somewhere.
A small change in pressure between heating cycles can be normal. A repeated fall to zero or near-zero is not. Low boiler pressure often makes itself known through a combination of heating problems before you even check the gauge.
You should always check your boiler manual for the correct pressure range for your specific appliance. If the pressure falls below the recommended level, the boiler may stop working or display a fault code.
The boiler cutting out — a common first sign that pressure has dropped too low for safe operation.
Radiators not heating properly — particularly those further from the boiler, which lose pressure first.
Hot water becoming unreliable — inconsistent flow or temperature from taps and showers.
Error codes on the display — most modern boilers show a low-pressure fault code such as F22 or similar.
Regularly needing to top up the system — more than once every few weeks is a strong indicator of a leak.
Yes — and this is very common. Heating pipework is often hidden beneath floors, behind walls, inside boxing or under concrete. Water may escape slowly into the structure of the building long before it becomes visible on a surface.
A hidden heating leak may be absorbed by timber floorboards, chipboard flooring, insulation, plasterboard, concrete screed, wall cavities, carpet underlay or floor voids. In older London properties, pipework may run through suspended timber floors, extensions, loft conversions or converted flats — making leaks especially difficult to trace without specialist equipment.
You can top up the boiler pressure occasionally if the system has dropped slightly and your boiler manual explains how to do so safely. But repeatedly topping up is not a solution.
Constantly refilling the system can hide the real cause of pressure loss, add oxygen-rich water into the heating circuit, dilute corrosion inhibitors, increase the risk of sludge, and allow a hidden leak to continue damaging the property. If you are topping up more than once every few weeks, the issue should be investigated.
There are several possible reasons why boiler pressure keeps dropping. Some are visible and easy to identify. Others require professional leak detection equipment to locate.
A hidden leak in the central heating pipework is one of the most common reasons for repeated pressure loss. Your heating system is a sealed circuit — if even a small amount of water escapes, the pressure gradually falls. Leaking pipes may be under floorboards, beneath concrete or screed, inside wall cavities, behind kitchen units or within an underfloor heating circuit. A very small leak may not create an obvious puddle — it may slowly soak into timber, insulation or plasterboard for weeks before any damp patch appears.
Central heating leak detectionRadiator valves, lockshield valves and pipe joints are common leak points. Sometimes the leak is visible as a drip or stain. In other cases, water evaporates from the hot pipework before forming a noticeable puddle. Check around radiator valves, pipework entering the radiator, towel rails, visible copper or plastic pipe joints and areas beneath radiators. Look for green staining on copper pipe, rust marks, damp carpet edges, swollen skirting boards or flaking paint. Even a slow drip can cause the boiler pressure to fall over time.
Often Detectable VisuallyThe pressure relief valve (PRV) releases water if boiler pressure gets too high. If the PRV is faulty, stuck open or has been activated repeatedly, it may allow water to discharge through the copper discharge pipe outside the property — causing pressure to drop even with no pipe leak. Check outside for a small copper pipe from the boiler area. If it is dripping or there is staining on the wall below it, the PRV may be releasing water. PRV repair should be carried out by a suitably qualified engineer. For gas boilers, use a Gas Safe registered engineer.
Boiler Component IssueThe expansion vessel absorbs pressure changes as water heats and expands. If it fails, boiler pressure may rise too high when heating is on, then drop again after water is discharged through the PRV. A common pattern: you top up the system, pressure rises excessively when heating runs, water discharges through the safety valve, then pressure drops again when it cools. This can look like a pipe leak, but the underlying cause may be a boiler component issue. A heating engineer can test the expansion vessel and confirm whether it needs recharging or replacing.
Boiler Component IssueIf you have recently bled your radiators, the pressure may drop afterwards. This happens because releasing trapped air from the system reduces the overall pressure — and a small drop after bleeding can be normal. You may simply need to top up the system once, following your boiler manufacturer's instructions. However, if the pressure continues to fall after that top-up, there is likely another issue at play. Bleeding radiators is not the underlying cause of repeated pressure loss.
Often Easily ResolvedUnderfloor heating leaks can be particularly difficult to spot because the pipework is concealed beneath the floor surface — the only early sign may be regular boiler pressure loss. Other possible signs include one area of flooring feeling unusually warm, damp or musty smells, cracked tiles or lifting flooring, cold patches in the heating zone, and higher heating bills. Because underfloor heating pipes are hidden within screed, specialist detection methods such as thermal imaging, acoustic testing and tracer gas are needed to locate the leak accurately without guesswork.
Specialist Detection NeededIn flats, maisonettes and multi-storey homes, a central heating leak may appear as damage in the ceiling below rather than near the boiler itself. Warning signs include yellow or brown staining on the ceiling, bubbling paint, damp plasterboard, water marks around light fittings, mould near ceiling edges and a musty smell in the room below. If boiler pressure keeps dropping alongside ceiling damage, the leak may be coming from heating pipework in the floor above — requiring both ceiling leak investigation and leak tracing before any repair work.
Multi-Storey PropertiesA leak becomes more likely when the pressure loss is repeated, unexplained or accompanied by signs of water damage. Take these signals seriously.
Repeated pressure loss after topping up is the clearest indicator that water is escaping from the system somewhere.
Visible moisture, wet carpet edges or damp skirting boards near radiator pipework often point directly to a leaking valve or joint.
Floors reacting to moisture from below — particularly tiles, laminate or solid wood — may indicate an underfloor heating or pipe leak beneath the surface.
Mould appearing in unexpected locations — along skirting boards, near pipe runs or on internal walls — can indicate a slow concealed leak.
Codes such as F22 (Vaillant) or similar low-pressure errors appearing repeatedly confirm that the system pressure is consistently below the safe minimum.
Yellow or brown marks on a ceiling below heating pipes or a bathroom above can point to a leak that has already migrated significantly from its source.
A sealed heating system should not need constant topping up. If it does, water is going somewhere — whether that is through a visible drip, a slow saturating leak inside the structure, or discharge through a faulty component.
In commercial premises, repeated boiler pressure loss should be treated seriously. A hidden heating leak in an office, shop, restaurant, hotel or managed building can affect business operations, damage stock, disrupt tenants and create health and safety concerns.
Commercial heating systems can be more complex than domestic systems — with multiple zones, larger pipe runs, plant rooms and concealed pipework. WaterLeakFinder connects you with specialists experienced in commercial leak detection in London.
Before arranging a leak inspection, there are a few safe visual checks you can carry out yourself. Do not remove boiler covers, open sealed components or lift floors unless advised by a qualified professional.
Note the pressure when the system is cold, then after the heating has been running and once it cools. This pattern helps identify whether the cause is a hidden leak, expansion vessel fault, PRV discharge or normal pressure movement.
Check for damp patches, staining, rust marks, green copper staining or wet carpet around radiator valves and pipe entries into the radiator body.
Look for the boiler discharge pipe outside your property. If it is dripping or there is water staining on the wall below it, the boiler may be releasing pressure through the safety valve.
Check floors, skirting boards, ceilings and walls near pipe routes. A central heating leak may not appear directly below the leak point — water can travel along joists or under flooring before becoming visible.
Pressure loss often starts after radiator replacement, boiler servicing, new flooring installation, underfloor heating work or a bathroom or kitchen renovation. This helps narrow down the likely leak location.
Submit a quick enquiry and we will connect you with a specialist central heating leak detection engineer in your area across London — fast, professional, and with no obligation to proceed.
Professional leak detection aims to locate the source of the problem without unnecessary damage. The exact method depends on the system type, property layout and symptoms.
Thermal imaging cameras detect temperature differences across floors, walls and ceilings. Particularly useful where hot water from a heating pipe is escaping beneath a floor or behind a surface — the heat signature reveals the leak location without opening anything up.
Acoustic equipment listens for the sound of water escaping from pressurised pipework. This can help narrow down the leak location precisely, especially where pipes are buried under floors or hidden inside walls.
A safe hydrogen and nitrogen mixture is introduced into the pipework and detected at the surface using specialist equipment. Useful when leaks are very small or hidden beneath hard floors where acoustic detection has limitations.
Moisture meters help map how far water has travelled through floors, walls or ceilings. This is important for both repair planning and producing accurate insurance documentation that reflects the full extent of water damage.
Pressure testing can confirm whether a particular circuit is losing pressure and whether the issue is isolated to the heating system or another part of the property's pipework — helping to define the scope of the investigation before any physical access work begins.
A professional report documenting the leak location with photographic evidence and moisture readings is produced after the investigation. This is formatted for use with buildings insurance Trace and Access and Escape of Water claims.
Once the source of the pressure loss has been identified, the next step is usually repair. Depending on the cause, this may involve tightening or replacing a radiator valve, repairing a leaking pipe joint, accessing and repairing underfloor pipework, or resolving a boiler component fault. A professional report may also be useful if you are making an insurance claim. Many buildings insurance policies include Trace and Access cover, which may help with the cost of locating and accessing a hidden leak — always check your policy documents and speak to your insurer before assuming what is covered.
The earlier the cause is found, the easier it is to limit damage and keep repair costs under control. Ignored, a hidden central heating leak can cause rotten floor timbers, swollen skirting boards, damaged plaster, mould growth, cracked screed, staining on ceilings and corrosion within the heating system itself.
Your boiler pressure may keep dropping because water is escaping from the sealed heating system. Common causes include a leaking radiator valve, hidden pipe leak, underfloor heating leak, faulty pressure relief valve or expansion vessel issue. If the pressure drops repeatedly after topping up, the cause should be investigated by a professional rather than masked with further top-ups.
Low boiler pressure is not usually dangerous by itself, but it can stop the boiler working correctly and may indicate an underlying leak or boiler fault. If the boiler is gas-fired, any internal boiler repair or gas-related work should be handled by a Gas Safe registered engineer. The greater risk is the hidden water damage that a slow leak can cause if the underlying cause is not found and resolved.
You should not need to top up boiler pressure regularly. An occasional top-up after bleeding radiators may be normal, but if you are topping up every few days or weeks, the system may be losing water and should be checked. A sealed heating system is designed to hold its pressure indefinitely — repeated pressure loss is always a symptom of something else.
Yes. A boiler can lose pressure because of a faulty pressure relief valve, expansion vessel problem or recent radiator bleeding. However, if the pressure keeps dropping repeatedly and there is no obvious boiler component issue, a hidden leak in the heating system is a strong possibility. A systematic check of the pressure pattern — noting whether it rises excessively when the heating runs, then drops when cool — can help identify whether the issue is component-related or a pipe leak.
Yes. A hidden leak in central heating pipework can cause boiler pressure to fall gradually or quickly, depending on the size of the leak. The leak may be under flooring, behind walls, beneath screed or inside an underfloor heating system. Because the pipework is hidden, water may soak silently into the building structure for weeks before any damp patch or visible damage appears on a surface.
If your boiler pressure drops to zero, check your boiler manual and avoid using the system if you are unsure. You may be able to repressurise it once, following the manufacturer's guidance. But if the pressure drops again quickly, arrange for a heating engineer or leak detection specialist to investigate the cause. A pressure drop to zero that repeats after topping up is a clear sign that water is escaping from the system somewhere.
Possible signs of an underfloor leak include boiler pressure loss, warm spots on the floor surface, damp smells, lifting or warping flooring, cracked tiles, mould near skirting boards or staining on the ceiling below. Where an underfloor heating circuit is involved, cold patches within the heating zone can also point to a leak. Specialist leak detection equipment — including thermal imaging and acoustic testing — can help confirm the location without lifting large areas of flooring unnecessarily.
In many cases, yes. Specialists can use thermal imaging, acoustic testing, tracer gas, moisture mapping and pressure testing to locate hidden heating leaks with minimal disruption. Access work is only recommended once the likely leak location has been narrowed down to a small area — avoiding unnecessary floor lifting, wall chasing or ceiling damage. This is the main advantage of professional detection over guesswork-based investigation.
Insurance may cover some costs if the pressure loss is caused by an escape of water from fixed heating pipework, particularly where Trace and Access cover is included in your buildings insurance policy. Policies vary significantly, so check your documents carefully and notify your insurer before arranging major investigation or repair work. Mention whether you have Trace and Access cover when you submit your enquiry to us and we can advise accordingly.
If the issue appears to be inside the boiler itself — such as a faulty PRV or expansion vessel — contact a qualified heating engineer or Gas Safe registered engineer for gas boilers. If there is no obvious boiler component fault and you suspect a hidden pipework, radiator circuit or underfloor heating leak, arrange professional central heating leak detection. WaterLeakFinder can connect you with specialists across London and the surrounding areas.
Whether the cause of your dropping boiler pressure turns out to be a central heating pipe, an underfloor circuit or a ceiling void, our network covers every type of hidden water leak.
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Learn moreA hidden central heating leak can cause significant damage to your property before it becomes visible. WaterLeakFinder connects customers with qualified leak detection professionals across London and the surrounding areas — tell us what you have noticed and we will help match your enquiry with a suitable specialist.
