PoolLeakFix • Autofill & Water Bills
Autofill Never Shuts Off? How to Tell If It’s Hiding a Leak
An autofill is great for keeping your waterline looking perfect. The downside is that it can quietly mask a
leak for months or years. If yours always seems to be running, here’s how to sort out normal topping-off from
a real problem.
What an Autofill Is Supposed to Do
A pool autofill is basically a toilet float for your pool. When the water level drops a bit, it opens and
lets in fresh water. When the level comes back up, it closes.
In normal conditions, you might hear it kick on occasionally—after a hot, windy day, a big pool party, or a
week with no rain. What you shouldn’t hear is a constant trickle with no obvious reason.
Signs Your Autofill May Be Masking a Leak
Watch for patterns like these:
- You hear the autofill running almost every time you walk past the pool.
- Your water bill has climbed without a big change in household use.
- The waterline always looks “perfect,” but you’re constantly paying for extra water.
Because the autofill keeps the pool topped off, you never see the level drop. Instead, the leak and the
autofill silently fight each other all month long—and you pay for the battle.
How to Test the Pool Without the Autofill’s Help
To see what the pool is doing on its own, you need to take the autofill out of the equation for a short time.
If you can safely do it:
- Turn off or temporarily block the autofill so it can’t add water.
- Bring the water to your normal level and mark the waterline on the tile or wall.
- Note the weather and whether the pump is on or off.
- Wait 24 hours and mark the waterline again.
For even better data, combine this with a
bucket test
so you can compare the pool’s drop to a small container of water in the same conditions.
If the pool drops aggressively once the autofill is off—and that drop is clearly more than the bucket—you’re
no longer talking about normal evaporation.
What to Do If the Autofill Confirms a Leak
If the test shows heavy loss without the autofill’s help:
- Document the amount of loss over 24–48 hours.
- Note whether the pump was on or off during the test.
- Inspect the equipment pad and surrounding yard for soggy spots.
That information will be extremely valuable if you decide to call a leak detection company. It also helps you
decide how urgent the situation is—small, slow loss vs heavy, fast loss.
Bottom Line
An autofill that never seems to shut off is more than an annoyance—it’s a warning. By turning it off briefly,
marking the waterline, and running a simple bucket test, you can see what the pool is really doing and whether
you’re quietly feeding a leak.
Once you know how fast the water is disappearing without the autofill’s help, you can decide whether it’s time
to call in a leak detection pro or just tighten up your evaporation and splash-out.
Next:
Do I Really Have a Pool Leak? 7 Checks Before You Call a Leak Company