Warm the room. Turn up the heat. If your bathroom has a little built-in heater of its own or radiant-heat flooring, all the better. Crank them up too.
Open the cabinet doors to let air circulate. “Leave those doors open and let the heat get in,” says Boston area plumber Jim Dellarocco, who has extensive experience with frozen pipes. If you have a space heater, aim it toward the pipes.
Caution: Dellarocco advises being careful if you use an electric heater, as common sense can fly out the window when you’re in a frozen-pipe panic. “Your instinct is to place it as close to the pipe as possible, but don’t do that,” he says. Keep your eye on the portable heater and do not place it somewhere where it could get wet and electrocute you when the water starts to flow, like a shower stall or in a bathtub. If you don’t have a space heater, you can use a heat lamp or Dellarocco’s tool of choice, a blow dryer.
Heat the whole pipe. If you’re noticing frozen pipes from an upper story, make sure the rooms below (where the pipes run up the wall) are toasty as well. Crank up the heat along the entire length of the pipe.
If you have a basement, continue checking out that pipe as you go down, as it could be exposed there. Touch the pipes and you may well find the frozen spot. You may see frost on the frozen portion as well.
Thaw the pipe. The Red Cross recommends using a space heater, a hair dryer or a hot towel wrapped around the pipe to help thaw it out. They also warn not to use a blowtorch, a kerosene or propane heater, a charcoal stove or any other open-flame device. These devices not only could damage the pipes but worse, could cause a house fire.
Check for leaks. Once things have started to thaw, make sure there are not any leaks. If you can hear a leak, shut off the main water valve and call a plumber. If you don’t hear any rushing water, you can still test it by using your water meter.
If you have an ice maker, turn it off. Make sure all the toilet tanks have stopped running, make a note of the number on your water meter and set a timer for 30 minutes. Do not use one drop of water during this time. After the timer goes off, check to see if the water meter has shown any use. If it has, you have a leak; call a plumber.
What if it bursts? If a pipe does burst, shut off the main water valve, call your plumber and insurance company immediately and be sure to take photos of the damage while you’re waiting for the plumber to arrive.
How to Avoid Frozen Pipes — Short-Term Solutions
Locate the shut-off valve for the main water line to your property. If there is a leak or if the pipe does burst, you’ll need to be able to turn it off.
Take extra care on nights when it’s going to dip below freezing. Dellarocco recommends leaving the heat constant from day to night instead of turning it down when you go to bed. “The few dollars you’ll spend on your bills are a lot better than having to pay plumbers, painters, plasterers and floor refinishers if your pipes burst,” he says. Keep the thermostat at a few degrees higher than you usually would.
It goes against that water-wasting experiment you did in the second grade, but let your faucets drip overnight.
Keep cabinet doors beneath your sinks open to let the warm air hit the pipes underneath the sink.
How to Avoid Frozen Pipes — Long-Term Solutions
Make sure your home is properly insulated. Uninvited guests like rodents tend to pull down insulation for nests in crawl spaces and attics, so make sure yours is intact before the cold weather hits.
Be vigilant. After 11 years in my home, I know it pretty well. If the temperature has dipped to about 20 degrees or less and the water coming out of my faucets feels extra cold, I go around the house every morning and run each faucet to make sure they haven’t frozen overnight. If you do this and you get no water or only a trickle, it’s highly likely you have a frozen pipe. (If you are also vigilant about not wasting a drop of water, collect it for other uses.)
How to Plan for Resilient Pipes in New Construction
Massachusetts firm ZeroEnergy Design has extensive experience designing energy-efficient homes in places with frigid winters, such as this Passive House in Vermont. Jordan Goldman, an engineering principal there, shared some tips for constructing a house with pipes that won’t be vulnerable to freezing.
“Implementing these strategies will yield a more comfortable home with improved plumbing resilience and a far lower chance of any pipes freezing, even in the case of a power outage without a generator and/or in the presence of low outdoor temperatures,” he says.
“A super-insulated building envelope in a home will almost assuredly keep the house above freezing, even if the heating system or power fails, thus providing exceptional protection against frozen pipes,” Goldman says.