Whole-House Water Supply Interruption

Water running from a household faucet into a sink

This hub covers whole-house water interruptions and major pressure loss—no water at any fixture, intermittent supply, and cases where water returns but pressure stays low.

It also includes symptoms that help narrow down whether the issue is city-side, valve-related, or something triggered by a repair or new appliance.

Use the groups below to match what’s happening and open the article that fits best.

Related sub-category: Water Entry, Shutoffs & Flow Control Systems

Sudden or near-total loss of water

When the whole house goes dry or pressure drops to almost nothing, start with basic supply checks before assuming complex failures.

After repairs or installations

Supply problems that start right after plumbing work or a new appliance often trace to valves, debris, or incorrect reconnections.

Intermittent supply and pressure collapses

Water comes and goes, or pressure slowly builds then drops again—these patterns point to cycling equipment, blockages, or supply instability.

Side-specific or zone-specific loss

When only hot or cold lines, or just one level of the house, are affected, focus on localized valves, the water heater, and zone controls.

After an outage: air and fixtures not working

Restored supply can bring air, sediment, or stuck fixtures; these issues often require systematic purging and local checks.

City vs house clues

Simple checks and observations help determine whether the outage is on the municipal side or within your service and plumbing.

All Articles in This Cluster