Water Meter Reading & Leak Estimator

Track water consumption between meter readings and estimate potential leak rates based on usage patterns.

Meter Readings

Household & Leak Detection

Formulas Used

Total Consumption:
Consumption = Current Reading − Previous Reading

Daily Usage:
Daily Usage = Total Consumption ÷ Days Between Readings

Expected Daily Usage:
Expected Daily = Number of Occupants × Baseline Usage per Person per Day
(US EPA average: ~80 gallons/person/day indoors)

Excess Usage (Leak Estimate):
Excess = max(0, Total Consumption − Expected Total Usage)
where Expected Total = Expected Daily × Days

Leak Rate:
Leak Rate (per day) = Excess ÷ Days
Leak Rate (GPM) = Leak Rate (gal/day) ÷ 1,440 min/day
Leak Rate (drops/min) = Leak Rate (GPM) × 75,708 drops/gallon

Cost:
Total Cost = Total Consumption × Rate per Unit
Leak Cost = Excess Consumption × Rate per Unit
Annual Leak Cost = Leak Rate (per day) × 365 × Rate per Unit

Unit Conversions:
1 m³ = 264.172 US gallons | 1 ft³ = 7.48052 US gallons | 1 L = 0.264172 US gallons

Assumptions & References

  • Default baseline of 80 gallons per person per day is based on the US EPA WaterSense program average indoor residential usage.
  • Leak severity thresholds are based on EPA estimates: a dripping faucet at 1 drop/second wastes ~3,000 gallons/year; a running toilet can waste 200+ gallons/day.
  • 1 US gallon = 3.78541 liters; 1 m³ = 1,000 liters; 1 ft³ = 28.3168 liters.
  • Drop volume assumed at ~0.05 mL (1 gallon ≈ 75,708 drops), per standard laboratory definition.
  • Meter readings are assumed to be cumulative (odometer-style). If your meter resets, split readings into two separate calculations.
  • Water rates vary widely by municipality. Check your utility bill for the exact rate per unit (often tiered).
  • This tool provides estimates only. Actual leak detection requires a licensed plumber and pressure testing.
  • Reference: US EPA — Fix a Leak Week (www.epa.gov/watersense/fix-leak-week)
  • Reference: AWWA (American Water Works Association) — Residential End Uses of Water Study

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