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    plumbing troubleshooting

    Fix P-trap leak

    Common symptoms: leaking p-trap; water under sink; drip from drain; cabinet floor wet; slip joint leak

    Stop and call a pro if:

    • mold and rotted cabinet floor
    • raw sewage exposure
    • chemical drain cleaner risk

    Step-by-step diagnostic flow

    1. Step 1

      Is the cabinet floor visibly rotted, is there mold, OR has chemical drain cleaner been used recently in this drain?

      Soft/rotted cabinet floors mean a chronic leak that may have spread into framing. Chemical cleaner residue can burn skin if a slip joint is opened.

    2. Step 2

      Dry the trap completely with a paper towel, then run water for 30 seconds. Where does the first drip appear?

      Marking the drip point precisely saves disassembly. Watch from below with a flashlight.

    3. Step 3

      Place a bucket under the trap, unscrew the slip nut by hand, and slide it back. Inspect the nylon/rubber washer inside. What do you see?

      The beveled (slanted) side of the washer faces the trap. A flat, deformed, or split washer will leak no matter how tight the nut.

    4. Step 4

      Hand-thread the slip nut back on. Does it spin on smoothly for at least 3 full turns before snugging up?

      If the nut catches, binds, or goes on crooked, it is cross-threaded. Cross-threaded plastic nuts cannot seal.

    Possible outcomes

    Stop — assess water damage or chemical exposure first

    high confidence

    Rotted cabinets or chemical-cleaner residue change this from a slip-nut job into a damage-mitigation or hazmat situation.

    Safe next steps
    • Shut off the supply stops under the sink so the basin cannot be filled
    • Photograph the damage and any product labels
    • Ventilate the cabinet and avoid skin contact with standing water
    What to document for a pro
    • How long the leak has been present
    • Brand of any drain cleaner used
    Possible structural rot or mold remediation needed. Chemical drain cleaner residue in the trap

    Replace the slip-joint washer

    high confidence

    A failed slip-joint washer is the most common cause of a P-trap leak and is a low-risk swap.

    Safe next steps
    • Take the old washer to the hardware store to match size (typically 1-1/4" or 1-1/2")
    • Install the new washer with the beveled edge facing into the trap fitting
    • Hand-tighten the slip nut, then add at most a quarter turn with channel-locks wrapped in tape
    • Run water for 60 seconds with a dry paper towel under the joint to confirm dry
    What to document for a pro
    • Trap pipe diameter
    • Whether trap is PVC or chromed brass

    Cross-threaded slip nut — restart the threads

    high confidence

    Cross-threading prevents the washer from compressing evenly. Restarting threads by hand usually fixes it.

    Safe next steps
    • Fully back off the nut and inspect threads for visible damage
    • Align the nut square to the pipe and turn counter-clockwise until you feel a click (threads dropping in)
    • Then turn clockwise — it should spin freely for several turns by hand
    • Snug with hands only; finish with a quarter turn from padded pliers
    • If it cross-threads again, the nut or pipe threads are stripped — replace the trap
    What to document for a pro
    • Photo of nut threads
    • Trap material

    Replace the P-trap assembly

    medium confidence

    Cracked traps, pinhole leaks, and stripped threads are not repairable — the trap kit is inexpensive and swaps in minutes.

    Safe next steps
    • Buy a complete P-trap kit matching your pipe diameter (1-1/4" bath, 1-1/2" kitchen typical)
    • Bucket under the work area; remove the old trap by hand
    • Dry-fit the new trap before tightening anything to confirm alignment with wall stub-out and tailpiece
    • Install washers beveled-edge-into-fitting, hand-tighten, then a quarter turn with padded pliers
    • Fill the sink basin, then release — a full-volume test stresses joints more than a trickle
    What to document for a pro
    • Pipe material and diameter
    • Photo of existing trap configuration before removal

    Reseat and snug — retest before deciding

    medium confidence

    Threads and washer both check out — the leak may have been from an under-tightened or shifted joint.

    Safe next steps
    • Hand-tighten all slip nuts, then add a quarter turn with padded channel-locks
    • Dry every joint completely with paper towels
    • Run water for 2 full minutes and watch each joint with a flashlight
    • If a drip returns, redo the washer-replacement workflow
    What to document for a pro
    • Which joint reappeared as a leak
    • Photo of the trap configuration
    Diagnostic guidance only. If unsure, stop and call a licensed professional — gas, electrical, and refrigerant work is hazardous to untrained users.

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