Water leaks cost UK homes £13.6bn in repairs
Leaky pipes and taps have cost Brits £13.6bn ($17.3bn) to repair over the past 12 months, a study suggests.
One in three Brits — or 21.5 million people — have had a leak in their home in the past year, according to a nationwide survey based on a sample of 2,000 people by Neos.
It found the average leak repair costs £632.80. The survey also suggests that 44.77 million Brits have at some point experienced a leak in their current or past home.
Many Brits don’t take precautions against leaks because it’s a “hidden problem that often only comes to light when it’s too late and the damage is done,” according to Neos.
Just one in 10 Brits have a leak detector installed, and 11% don’t have insurance that would protect them against leak damage.
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London homes are the leakiest, with four in five (81%) people having to pay for leak damage repairs in their current or previous home.
However, at 38%, Scots are the most likely to have experienced a leak in the past year, the study found.
Meanwhile, the south-west is the most leak-free region, with two in five (41%) residents saying they’ve never had a leak in any home.
People living in council housing are less likely to experience leaks — just 42% compared with 52% of homeowners and 55% of private renters, the data shows.
Although leak repair cost the average Brit about £633, some individuals had to pay up to £12,000, the study found.
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Northern Ireland residents pay the most (£724), while those in the East Midlands pay the least (£425).
The survey also found that nearly a third (30%) of Brits had leakage cost covered by their insurance, but a quarter (24%) ended up paying themselves because they didn’t tell their insurer.
This was “perhaps because they didn’t understand their policy or feared being penalised,” Neos said.