Email:
info@fixiz.co.uk
Physical address:
128 City Road, EC1V 2NX, London,UK

If you’ve noticed your water meter spinning even when everything looks “off”, you’re not being dramatic — in the UK it can mean you’ve got a hidden leak somewhere between the street and your internal pipework, or a problem on your side of the supply. Either way, every hour matters because a small underground leak can turn into a big bill, damp patches, and even structural issues if water starts tracking under floors.
We’re Fixiz Ltd in London. We deal with leaks in real homes — Victorian terraces, 1930s semis, flats with shared risers — and the first thing we do is slow the situation down, then work methodically so you don’t dig up half the property for guesswork.
A meter only measures flow. If it’s moving, water is passing through it — but the leak might be underground, behind finishes, or feeding something you didn’t realise was connected. In London and the wider UK, common scenarios include a split service pipe in the front garden, a leaking stop tap, a pinhole in a pipe under a solid floor, or a faulty appliance fill valve quietly topping up.
What makes this stressful is that the leak often isn’t “wet” on the surface. Water can follow backfilled trenches, run along the outside of a pipe, or soak into sub-base under paving. By the time you see staining, you’ve already paid for a lot of water.
Tip: If the meter is spinning fast, treat it as urgent — turn to isolation tests immediately rather than waiting to “see if it stops”.
Before any specialist kit comes out, we start with isolation. The goal is to answer one question: is the leak inside your home, or on the supply between the meter and your internal stop tap? That single answer determines whether you call your water supplier, an insurer, or a leak detection specialist — and it stops you paying for the wrong work.
Here’s the process we follow (and what you can do safely as a homeowner):
Once we know which side it’s on, we narrow it down without guesswork. For internal leaks, we’ll isolate circuits (kitchen cold, bathroom cold, heating fill loop) and look for pressure drops or thermal anomalies. For external supply leaks, we plan the least disruptive route to confirmation.
Tip: If your internal stop tap doesn’t fully shut off, don’t force it. We can replace stop taps and add better isolation valves as part of a proper leak plan.
Responsibility is often split. In most UK setups, you’re responsible for the supply pipe on your land up to the point it enters your property, and the water company is responsible for the main and sometimes parts of the connection. The detail varies by region and property type, which is why isolating the leak location matters before you start paying contractors or opening an insurance claim.
From a practical point of view, this is how we advise clients:
We can help you create a clean evidence pack — meter readings, isolation test results, photos, and a clear description — which speeds up conversations with suppliers and insurers and reduces “bounce-back” between parties.
Proper leak detection is not “let’s dig where it feels wet”. It’s a combination of tests that narrow down the leak to a zone, then confirm the exact point before invasive works. The right approach depends on the leak type — pressurised cold supply behaves differently to a heating leak, and both behave differently to a waste pipe leak.
Depending on the situation, we may use:
Our priority is always the same: confirm the leak location before you pay for reinstatement. London reinstatement is often the most expensive part — paving, timber floors, screeds, tiles, decorating — so the “find” stage must be accurate.
Tip: If someone can’t explain their method beyond “we’ll have a look”, pause. A good leak plan should describe the tests, what each test proves, and what counts as confirmation.
When you call us about a spinning meter, we aim to get you from panic to a controlled plan in a single visit or two. We start with isolation and evidence, then we confirm the leak location, and only then do we recommend the most cost-effective repair route.
If the leak indicator is moving continuously, you already have confirmation. For very slow leaks, take a photo, wait 30–60 minutes with no water use, then compare the readings. Longer monitoring makes small leaks easier to prove.
It’s possible but uncommon. In practice, most spinning meters reflect real flow. Do the internal stop tap test first — it gives you a strong answer without arguing about the meter.
Only if the leak is inside the property after that valve. If the leak is between the meter and the stop tap, you may need the external boundary valve or water supplier support.
Yes. A toilet fill valve that doesn’t shut properly can cause constant top-up flow. That’s why we isolate the internal stop tap and then check individual appliances if the meter stops.
Ready to move from confusion to construction? Get in touch with Fixiz today for a no-pressure chat about your leak symptoms, the quickest isolation checks, and the most cost-effective route to a confirmed repair.