Using excess water or having leaks can cost you hundreds of dollars a year in wasted water. A simple toilet leak can use 50 extra gallons of water a day, and a faucet leak can waste up to 5,000 gallons a year. We’ve got some tips for keeping that water bill down.
Saving water indoors
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Think you might have a leak? Check by reading your water meter before and after a 2-hour period when water hasn’t been run in your home. If the reading isn’t exactly the same, you’ve got a leak.
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If you’ve got a well-water system and the pump comes on when no one is using water, you have a leak.
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Find out if the toilet is leaking by putting a few drops of food coloring into the toilet tank. If the color leaks into the bowl, replace the flapper.
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Get those dripping faucets repaired. Usually it’s a simple matter of replacing worn washers. Check all the washers in the house and replace them all at once.
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Replace “sticky” toilet handles.
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Make sure the flapper ball in the tank seats correctly.
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Don’t use the toilet as a wastebasket or ashtray. Avoid unnecessary flushing.
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Install faucet aerators to slow the flow of water.
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Rinse vegetables over a large bowl and reuse what would have gone down the drain to water plants.
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Keep drinking water in the refrigerator to avoid letting water run until it gets cool enough to drink.
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Defrost foods in the microwave instead of under running water.
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Insulate water heater and water pipes. (65% of the water you use is hot water.)
Saving water in the bathroom
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Don’t let the water run continuously when you are shaving, brushing your teeth, etc.
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Replace two-handle systems with single-lever faucets.
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Shower instead of bathe.
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Install low-flow showerheads that reduce water use up to half but still give a great feeling shower.
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Get a showerhead with a “shower off” button to conserve water while you lather up.
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Take shorter showers. Five-minute showers per day for a four-member family use about 28,000 gallons of water per year.
Saving water in cleaning
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Older standard washing machines use up to 50 gallons of water per load, Newer models use only 11-30 gallons.
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Don’t wash half loads, and if you do, adjust the water level.
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Presoaking prevents having to re-wash heavily soiled clothes.
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Soak dirty dishes instead of rinsing each dish separately.
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If you’re washing dishes in a double sink, wash them all at once and rinse them all at once.
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Replace an old, water-inefficient dishwasher. You can save 10 to 20 gallons of water per wash cycle.
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Select the water-saving cycle on your dishwasher.
Saving water outdoors
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Landscape with plants that need less water.
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Don’t overwater. Buy a gauge to measure the rain your lawn gets.
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Water lawns during the time of day when temperature and wind speed are lowest to reduce evaporation.
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Put a timer on your sprinklers so you don’t forget to turn them off.
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Over-fertilization increases your lawn’s need for watering. Don’t over feed.
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Use a soaker hose instead of a sprinkler system to better target the water to your plants.
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Mulch plants well to retain moisture.
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Make sure your sprinkler system isn’t watering the sidewalk, driveway or street.
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Set your lawnmower blades to 3 inches or higher to encourage you lawn to grow deeper roots and hold moisture better.
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Use water-saving filters in your pool.