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❄️ Frozen Pipes: Prevention, Thawing, and What NOT To Do

Last updated: February 2025

It's -5°C outside. You turn the tap. Nothing comes out. Your pipes are frozen solid.

Here's what's happening, how to fix it safely, and how to prevent it happening again. From someone who's thawed 100+ frozen pipes every winter.

Why Pipes Freeze (And Why It Matters)

Water expands 9% when it freezes. Pipe doesn't expand. Something's gotta give. The pipe splits.

The dangerous part? You don't know it's burst until it thaws. Ice is plugging the hole. When ice melts? Water everywhere.

Which pipes freeze first:

When pipes freeze: Usually at -3°C to -5°C sustained for 6+ hours. Colder = faster. Windchill makes it worse.

Prevention: £20 of Insulation Beats £500 Emergency Callout

1. Insulate Pipes (30 Minutes, £15-30)

What you need:

Which pipes to insulate first:

  1. All loft pipes (cold water tank feeds, overflow)
  2. Pipes on external walls (especially north-facing)
  3. Pipes in garages, sheds, outbuildings
  4. Under-floor pipes (if accessible)
  5. External taps

How to fit: Foam insulation splits lengthways. Open it up, slide over pipe, close around pipe, tape joins. Done. Five-year-old could do it.

2. Heating Strategy (When It's Forecast Below Zero)

Don't turn heating off at night. Set it to 15°C minimum. Costs £2-5/night. Emergency plumber costs £350+. You do the math.

Open loft hatch slightly: Lets warm air rise into loft. Keeps pipes above freezing.

Open cupboard doors: Under-sink pipes stay warmer if cupboard door is open (lets room heat in).

Drip taps overnight: Moving water doesn't freeze easily. Leave cold tap dripping (very slightly—pencil-lead width stream). Annoying but effective.

3. If You're Going Away in Winter

Option 1: Leave heating on (safest)

Option 2: Drain the system (cheaper but risky)

  1. Turn off water at stopcock
  2. Turn off boiler/immersion heater
  3. Open all taps (hot and cold, every sink/bath)
  4. Flush all toilets
  5. Open drain valve on lowest radiator

Problem with Option 2: If you miss a valve, or a trap still has water, or you don't drain fully—it freezes anyway. And now you come home to a dry system that needs refilling/bleeding. Only do this if confident.

How To Tell If Pipes Are Frozen

Symptoms:

How to locate the freeze:

  1. Work out which tap isn't working
  2. Trace pipe back to where it comes from (usually loft or external wall)
  3. Feel pipes—frozen section will be very cold, maybe frost visible
  4. Look for bulges in pipe (ice expanding it)

Safe Thawing Methods (What Actually Works)

⚠️ DO NOT USE A BLOWTORCH

Every winter someone sets their house on fire, or causes a pipe to burst from thermal shock, or burns through the pipe. A blowtorch is 1,100°C. Copper melts at 1,085°C. You WILL cause damage. Do. Not. Do. This.

✅ Safe Methods (In Order of Effectiveness):

Method 1: Hairdryer (Best for Accessible Pipes)

Method 2: Hot Water Bottles / Towels

Method 3: Space Heater in Room

Method 4: Turn Heating Up

Thawing Tips:

When To Call a Plumber (Don't DIY This)

Call immediately if:

What a plumber does:

💷 Frozen Pipe Costs

What Happens When Frozen Pipes Thaw

Scenario 1: Pipe Was Fine (Lucky)

Ice melts. Water flows. No leak. Celebrate. Then insulate that pipe so it doesn't happen again.

Scenario 2: Pipe Split (Common)

Ice melts. Water starts spraying/dripping. Now you have a burst pipe. Turn off water at stopcock immediately. Call emergency plumber.

How to check:

  1. As pipe thaws, WATCH IT like a hawk
  2. Look for water beading, drips, spray
  3. Listen for hissing (water escaping under pressure)
  4. If you see/hear anything suspicious, turn water off

Insurance Coverage (Does It Pay?)

✅ Usually covered (buildings insurance):

❌ Usually NOT covered:

💡 Insurance Fine Print: Most policies define "unoccupied" as 30+ days with no one living there AND heating off. If you went away for Christmas (2 weeks) with heating on low? Usually covered. Went away for 6 weeks with heating off? Probably not covered.

Common Mistakes (What NOT To Do)

❌ Using a blowtorch/heat gun on high: Causes thermal shock, melts pipes, starts fires. Just don't.

❌ Pouring boiling water on pipes: Thermal shock can crack copper or split joints. Use hot (not boiling) water.

❌ Ignoring it ("it'll thaw by itself"): Maybe. But if it's burst, you're flooding your house slowly. Check it.

❌ Turning water on full blast before checking for leaks: If pipe burst, you've just created a geyser. Turn on gently, watch for leaks.

❌ Not insulating after a freeze: It'll freeze again in the next cold snap. Insulate it NOW while you remember.

Quick Prevention Checklist (Before Winter)

  1. Insulate loft pipes (£15-30, 30 minutes)
  2. Insulate external wall pipes (any you can access)
  3. Insulate external taps (or turn off and drain)
  4. Fix dripping taps (drips freeze into icicles that block pipes)
  5. Know where stopcock is (test it turns)
  6. Check loft insulation (should be 270mm depth minimum)
  7. Service boiler (don't want it failing in a freeze)

Emergency Action Plan (If Pipes Freeze Tonight)

  1. Check all taps (which ones don't work?)
  2. Turn heating up to maximum
  3. Open cupboard doors (under sinks especially)
  4. Locate frozen section (trace pipe from affected tap)
  5. Thaw safely (hairdryer, hot water bottles—no blowtorch)
  6. Open tap slightly (lets water escape as ice melts)
  7. Watch for leaks (as pipe thaws, check for splits)
  8. Call plumber if: can't access pipe, no thawing progress, leak appears

Need Help Right Now?

National Plumbing Dispatch: 0333 600 0990

24/7 frozen pipe emergency service. Thermal imaging to locate freeze. Professional thawing equipment. Pressure testing for splits. Repairs done same visit.

We get 100+ frozen pipe calls every cold snap. We know what works, what doesn't, and what's dangerous. If DIY thawing isn't working or you've got a leak, call us. We'll get your water back on safely.

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