A fault at home is rarely what it looks like at first glance. A wet ceiling patch can be condensation rather than a burst pipe. Before calling a technician, spend 10–15 minutes on initial diagnosis — it genuinely saves time and money.
Rule One — Observe Before You Touch
Before unscrewing anything, answer a few questions:
- Did it appear suddenly or gradually?
- Is it one point (a socket, a tap, a switch) or a whole circuit / riser?
- Did anything happen beforehand — drilling, a storm, a sharp temperature drop?
- Is there a smell — burning, damp, gas?
These answers cut the search area in half.
Electrical Issues: Where to Look
Safety first: any work near open sockets or the consumer unit must be done with the relevant circuit breaker off. Verify the absence of voltage with a multimeter. Never work on a live circuit.
- One socket not working — check whether the RCD (residual current device) has tripped. Often a single button reset is all it takes.
- No power in one room — open the consumer unit and see which breaker is off.
- Socket sparks or feels warm — stop using it immediately and call an electrician.
- Bulb flickering — replace the bulb first, then investigate further if the problem persists.
Plumbing: Tracing the Source
- Dripping tap — most likely a washer or ceramic cartridge. Close the isolation valve underneath and check whether the drip stops.
- Wet wall or floor — first check with upstairs neighbours. If they have no issue, look at your own pipes or the bath / shower seal.
- Water not draining — blocked trap. In 80% of cases, cleaning the siphon is enough.
- Low pressure — check isolation valves and the aerator on the tap (the small mesh screen — it clogs with limescale).
Damp and Stains — Finding the Real Source
A damp patch on a wall does not always appear where the water enters. Water travels through the building structure. A moisture meter (covered in a dedicated guide) will show where humidity is highest — that’s where the real source is.
- Check window and balcony door seals — a very common culprit in Warsaw flats.
- Inspect the waterproofing around the shower enclosure.
- Consider thermal bridging — condensation from cold bridges is more common in newer buildings than most people realise.
When DIY Diagnosis Hits Its Limit
Observation and elimination are what you can do without specialist tools. If you haven’t found the source in 15 minutes — stop there. Digging further without the right equipment can make things worse. Describe the problem in the form on this page and a HandyMan24 technician will arrive with the right tools and carry out a proper diagnosis.