Guides

Ceiling Leak in Your Las Vegas Home? Here's What to Do

A brown ring spreading across the ceiling, a bulge that wasn't there yesterday, or an actual drip onto the floor — a ceiling leak is unsettling because the water is coming from somewhere you can't see. In a Las Vegas home that usually means plumbing, an upstairs bathroom, the HVAC system, or the roof. Here is how to respond safely and start tracking down the source.

First: protect the room and stay safe

A water-logged ceiling is heavier than it looks, and saturated drywall can let go suddenly. If you see a sagging, bulging area, keep people out from underneath it. Be especially careful around ceiling light fixtures and fans — water traveling along wiring is a real hazard. If water is dripping near or through a fixture, shut off power to that room at the breaker before you do anything else, and if anything feels uncertain, call a licensed electrician.

Contain the water

Move furniture, rugs, and electronics out of the drip zone and put down a bucket and towels. If the ceiling is bulging with trapped water, a controlled release can actually prevent a bigger collapse: from a safe position, a small hole poked at the lowest point of the bulge lets the water drain into a bucket instead of bringing the whole section down at once. Only do this if you can do it safely — otherwise wait for help. Stopping the water at its source upstairs, if you can find it, is always the priority.

Ceiling dripping right now?

We respond fast across the valley — emergency water extraction, drying, and documentation while you track down the source.

Where ceiling leaks usually come from

Ceiling leaks have a short list of usual suspects, and where the stain sits is a clue:

An upstairs bathroom or laundry. In two-story homes across Henderson, Summerlin, and Enterprise, a toilet, shower, tub, or washing machine overflow on the second floor is the most common cause. A stain directly below an upstairs wet room points here.

Plumbing in the ceiling or wall. A supply line or drain running above the ceiling can weep slowly. These often show up as a stain that grows over days rather than a sudden gush.

The HVAC system. During our long cooling season, a clogged AC condensation line or a leaking air handler in the attic or a closet can drip into the ceiling below. Stains near a vent or air handler are a tell.

The roof. Less common in our dry climate, but a single hard rain can find a worn flashing or tile. Roof-related stains often appear near exterior walls or roof penetrations.

Document before the stain dries

Before you clean up or patch anything, photograph the ceiling — the stain, any soft spots, the drip, and the room below. Note when it started and what you suspect. This kind of documentation is useful whether you end up filing a claim or just want a record. For the full method, our documentation checklist walks through every shot to take.

Repairing a ceiling after a leak

Once the source is fixed and the area is dry, the finishing work begins. Lightly stained drywall that dried quickly can sometimes be sealed and repainted; drywall that swelled, sagged, or stayed wet usually needs to be cut out and patched. That kind of drywall repair, patching, and paint is part of the restoration we handle end to end.

Lowering the odds of the next one

Once you have dealt with one ceiling leak, a little prevention goes a long way. Have the AC condensation line cleared as part of routine HVAC maintenance before the cooling season — a clogged line is one of the most common and most avoidable causes here. Know where your main water shutoff is and check that it turns. In two-story homes, glance at the ceilings below upstairs bathrooms now and then so you catch a faint stain early. And if your home sat vacant or you were traveling, do a quick walkthrough on your return.

When it needs a licensed trade

One distinction worth knowing: we restore the water damage a ceiling leak causes — drying, mold treatment, and repairs — but the repair of the source (the plumbing, HVAC, or roofing that let the water in) belongs with that licensed trade. Once the source is stopped, the restoration is ours, start to finish. To see how that works, visit our water damage restoration page — or read what to do after water damage for the full playbook.

Loyalty Home Services LLC provides water damage restoration, emergency water extraction, structural drying, water mitigation, and mold remediation across Las Vegas and Clark County, NV. Major structural reconstruction that requires a building permit is completed with a licensed general contractor. We do not provide asbestos or lead abatement.

Related answers

Quick answers

Can you handle ceiling leak damage?

Yes. We dry out the ceiling and the rooms above and below, treat for mold if needed, and repair and repaint the damaged area. If the leak comes from a pipe, the roof, or HVAC, we restore the water damage and can point you to the right trade to fix the source.

What should I do immediately after water damage?

If it is safe, stop the water at the source and stay clear of any electrical hazards. Move what you can out of the water and take a few photos. Then call us — the faster we extract the water and start drying, the less the damage spreads. We respond quickly across the Las Vegas valley and can walk you through stabilizing it on the phone.

Can wet drywall be saved?

Sometimes. Drywall that was only lightly dampened and dries quickly can often be saved; drywall that stayed wet, swelled, or crumbles needs to be removed and replaced. We use moisture meters to make the call, dry what can be saved, and cut out and rebuild what cannot.

Do you bring in a licensed general contractor for anything?

Water damage restoration, mitigation, and mold remediation are not state-licensed trades in Nevada, so we handle them in-house. For major structural reconstruction that requires a building permit, we complete the rebuild with a licensed general contractor. We do not provide asbestos or lead abatement, which require separate licensing.

Water damage? Get it dried out fast.

Call Loyalty Home Services LLC for fast water extraction, professional structural drying, and complete restoration across the Las Vegas valley.

También podemos ayudar en español. Llame o envíe un mensaje de texto al (888) 844-8121.