
Leak detection across Fort Worth — from the historic neighborhoods near downtown to the newer subdivisions on the west and south sides. Same-week appointments and written reports any plumber can act on.
RGC Leak Detection serves all of Fort Worth, from the older neighborhoods around the inner loop to the newer subdivisions stretching west toward Aledo and south toward Crowley. We pinpoint plumbing leaks with non-invasive electronic equipment — acoustic, thermal, and line tracing — and hand off a written report your plumber can act on.
We also offer pre-purchase leak inspections for buyers and agents, insurance documentation for adjusters and homeowners, and full construction management for major repairs and ground-up builds.
Fort Worth's housing stock spans roughly a hundred years. Neighborhoods like Arlington Heights, Ryan Place, Fairmount, and the historic district around downtown were built with cast iron drains and copper or galvanized supply lines that are now reaching the end of their service lives. Pinhole leaks in mid-century copper, slab leaks in 1960s and '70s ranch homes, and main-line failures in older landscaping are routine work for us in Fort Worth.
The newer subdivisions in west and southwest Fort Worth sit on the same expansive North Texas clay that drives slab leaks across the Metroplex. Add Fort Worth's hot summers and irrigation-heavy lawns, and we see steady volume on irrigation main-line leaks during peak watering season.
If you're a Fort Worth homeowner with mystery water somewhere in your home — or a Fort Worth real estate agent or insurance adjuster who needs an independent third-party inspection — we can typically schedule your detection within the same week.
Fort Worth is the seat of Tarrant County and the fifth-largest city in Texas, with roughly 950,000 residents spread across more than 350 square miles. The city's housing stock runs from Victorian-era homes in the Fairmount Historic District, through mid-century neighborhoods like Arlington Heights and Ryan Place, to fast-growing newer subdivisions on the western and southern edges of the city. Fort Worth Water Department serves the city core, with municipal utility districts handling outlying developments — and the underlying soil across most of the city is the heavy expansive clay that makes North Texas leak detection a craft of its own.
Tell us what you're seeing. Five-minute call, flat estimate, same-week scheduling. If RGC isn't the right fit, Ralph will tell you straight.
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