Every pool loses water. The question is always whether the loss is normal evaporation or an actual leak. A pool losing an inch per week in July heat with high winds and low humidity might be normal. A pool losing two inches every four days in October is almost certainly leaking. The process of confirming and locating a leak follows a logical sequence — start with the bucket test, then isolate by turning equipment on and off, and then call a leak detection professional once you have confirmed the direction of the problem.
The bucket test is the foundational tool for separating evaporation from leakage. It works by measuring water loss at the pool surface (evaporation) and comparing it to total pool water loss (evaporation plus leak).
If both levels dropped by the same amount, all loss was evaporation. If the pool dropped significantly more than the bucket, the difference is your leak rate. More than 1/4 inch difference per day confirms a leak worth investigating.
Run the bucket test twice — once with the pump running and once with the pump off. Comparing the two results tells you whether the leak is plumbing-related (worse with pump on) or structural (same rate regardless of pump operation).
Turn off the pump and any auto-fill. Run the bucket test for 24 hours. If water loss is significant with the pump off, the leak is structural (shell, fittings, main drain cover, light housing) rather than in the pressure plumbing.
If the pool loses significantly more water with the pump running than with it off, the leak is on the pressure side of the plumbing — a return line, a fitting behind a return jet, or a leaking union at the equipment pad. Check all visible plumbing at the equipment pad first: unions, heater connections, filter body, and any valves.
If the pool is leaking but the source is not visible, let the water drop without adding fill and observe where it stabilizes. A pool that drops to the skimmer inlet level and stops suggests the skimmer throat is the source — the leak stops when water falls below it. A pool that stops at the level of the return jets suggests a return fitting leak. A pool that drains completely to the deep end drain implies a drain or main drain fitting issue.
Do not let a leaking pool drain more than 12–18 inches below normal level before taking action. Hydrostatic pressure from groundwater can cause a fiberglass or vinyl liner pool shell to lift or "pop" out of the ground when water weight is reduced.
Once you have confirmed via bucket test that a leak exists and have a rough idea of its location (shell vs. plumbing, which level it stabilizes at), a leak detection professional uses pressurized nitrogen or electronic listening equipment to pinpoint the exact failure. This saves excavation cost by identifying the repair spot before breaking ground. Log your bucket test data in PoolLens to provide the leak detection tech with concrete measurements when they arrive.
Log bucket test results, pump-on vs pump-off measurements, and service dates. Build a complete record for leak detection professionals and client reporting. Free for pool service pros.
Open PoolLens Free →A typical residential pool loses 1/4 to 1/2 inch of water per day to evaporation in hot, dry, windy conditions. Over a week that is 1.75 to 3.5 inches. If you are losing more than that consistently, and the bucket test confirms it is not just evaporation, there is a leak.
Fill a 5-gallon bucket with pool water to within 1 inch of the rim. Place it on the first or second pool step so it is in the water but not submerged. Mark the water level inside and outside the bucket. Wait 24 hours without adding water or running auto-fill. If the pool loses significantly more than the bucket, you have a leak beyond evaporation.
Yes. Underground return lines and suction lines can leak where they exit the pool shell or at underground fittings. The water exits into the surrounding soil with no visible wet area at the surface. A pressure test on the plumbing circuits is the only reliable way to detect underground plumbing leaks.
Turn off the pump and auto-fill and measure water loss over 24 hours with the pump off vs. 24 hours with the pump on. If the pool loses water faster with the pump running, the leak is on the pressure side of the plumbing. If loss rate is the same whether running or not, the shell is the likely suspect.