Garbage Disposal Leaking From Bottom — Replace or Fix?

A garbage disposal leaking from the bottom is almost always bad news. The internal seals that keep water inside the unit have failed. Those seals aren’t something you can replace on most residential models. We have diagnosed hundreds of these leaks, and the answer is the same nearly every time: the disposal needs to be replaced.

Before you start shopping for a new unit, though, take five minutes to confirm that the leak is actually coming from the bottom. Water runs downhill, and a loose connection at the top or side can drip all the way to the base and fool you.

For a full overview of all leak types, see our garbage disposal troubleshooting guide.

garbage disposal mounted under kitchen sink showing bottom and connections

What a Bottom Leak Looks Like

True bottom leaks show water dripping from the underside of the disposal body itself — from the bottom plate, from near the reset button, or from the area where the power cord exits. The water appears even when the sink is empty and no connections are visibly wet above.

This is different from connection leaks:

Leak LocationWhat It MeansFixable?
Top (sink flange)Mounting bolts loose or plumber’s putty dried outYes
Side (drain pipe or dishwasher hose)Loose hose clamp or slip-nut connectionYes
Bottom (unit body)Internal seal or bearing failureAlmost never

If the water is running down from the flange area and collecting at the bottom, that’s a top leak, not a bottom leak. Check our guide on leaking from the top or side before assuming the worst.

Confirm the leak source

Grab some paper towels and a flashlight. This takes about five minutes and saves you from replacing a unit that only needed a tightened connection.

Dry all surfaces under the sink, disposal body, connections, and pipes, thoroughly with paper towels first. Then, block the drain with a stopper and fill the basin with 3 to 4 inches of water; monitor where the water starts to flow from the disposal. If a dry paper towel wrapped around the top where the disposal meets the sink gets wet, the leak is likely at the flange. Check the side drain pipe by wrapping another paper towel around it and tighten the slip nut if it shows moisture. Lastly, run a short dishwasher cycle and inspect for any leaks at the connection.

If all those areas stay dry and water is seeping from the disposal body itself, you have a confirmed bottom leak.

Video guide

Video: “6 Reasons Disposal Leaks From Bottom (Causes & Fix)” by Genius Asian

Why Disposals Leak From the Bottom

There are three causes, and none of them are cheap to fix.

Internal seal failure is the most common. The seals around the motor shaft and bearings keep water from reaching the motor housing. These seals degrade with age and use. Garbage disposals typically last 8-12 years, and seal deterioration accelerates after year 5-7, according to compiled manufacturer and repair data. Once the seals fail, water leaks through the bottom of the unit near the reset button or power cord.

Corrosion is the second cause. Years of exposure to water and food waste can eat through the disposal housing from the inside. This creates small holes in the body shell that let water seep out. According to EPA Fix a Leak Week resources{:target=“_blank”}, even small household leaks waste thousands of gallons per year — catching disposal corrosion early prevents water damage under the sink.

Cracked housing is less common but happens when heavy objects fall into the sink and strike the unit, or when the disposal takes repeated impacts during installation or plumbing work.





Can You Fix a Bottom Leak?

We will be direct: almost certainly not. And even if you could, it wouldn’t make financial sense.

The internal seals in a residential garbage disposal aren’t designed to be user-serviceable. You would need to disassemble the motor housing, source replacement seals specific to your model (most manufacturers don’t sell them separately), and reassemble everything with a watertight fit. Most plumbers won’t attempt this repair either.

Worth doing.

The one rare exception: some bottom leaks are caused by loose screws on the bottom plate. If you can see screws on the underside of the unit, try tightening them. We have seen this fix work on maybe 1 in 20 bottom leaks. But it takes 30 seconds and costs nothing to check.

Here’s the cost comparison:

OptionCost
Professional leak repair attempt$80-$180
New disposal (DIY install)$75-$200
New disposal (professional install)$200-$625

When a repair attempt costs nearly as much as a brand-new unit, replacement is the better investment. This is especially true for disposals over 5 years old — leak repair costs $80-$180 per 2026 plumbing industry pricing data, while a replacement unit with professional installation runs $200-$625 total.

If your disposal stopped working alongside the leak, that confirms the water has reached the motor and the unit is done.

Replacement options and costs

Once you have confirmed a bottom leak, here’s what replacement looks like.

It works.

DIY replacement costs $75-$200 for the unit alone. If you’re swapping the same brand and mounting type (EZ Mount or 3-bolt), the job takes 1-3 hours. No electrician needed if the existing wiring is in good condition. The DOE kitchen appliance guide{:target=“_blank”} has general guidance on appliance efficiency ratings to consider.

Professional replacement adds $80-$200 in labor at plumber rates of $50-$120 per hour. Total cost with a mid-range unit runs $300-$450. Weekend or emergency service costs 1.5x-2x the normal rate.

For a detailed breakdown, see our page on disposal repair and replacement costs.

Bottom line.

Budget pick: The InSinkErator Badger 5 costs $80-$120 and handles most households. It’s a 1/2 HP unit with a 1-2 year warranty and a simple EZ Mount installation.

Value pick: The Waste King L-8000 runs $150-$200 and comes with a 20-year warranty. Its permanent magnet motor spins at 2,800 RPM compared to the Badger 5’s 1,725 RPM — which means fewer jams over the life of the unit.





FAQ

Is it worth fixing a leaking garbage disposal?

It depends on where the leak is. A garbage disposal leaking from the bottom has failed internal seals that aren’t user-serviceable — replacement is the only practical option. Top leaks (loose flange) and side leaks (loose drain connections) are worth fixing because they cost $10-$30 in parts and take under an hour.

How much does it cost to replace a garbage disposal?

Garbage disposal replacements range from $75 to $400 for the unit, with pricing varying by horsepower; professional installation labor can add $80 to $200 at rates of $50 to $120 per hour. You’ll want to check that the new unit’s PSI rating matches your home’s line pressure, usually around 60 to 80 psi for residential use. A DIY job might cost you between $75 and $200, taking roughly 1 to 3 hours, assuming the current disposal has simply loses prime or is plugged.

Can a garbage disposal leak be dangerous?

Yes. Water pooling under the sink causes mold growth, wood rot in cabinetry, and potential electrical hazards since the disposal runs on 120V household current. A bottom leak that reaches the motor wiring creates a short-circuit risk. Address any disposal leak within a few days.

How long do garbage disposals last?

A garbage disposal lasts 10-12 years on average with normal use, though seal failure can begin as early as 5-7 years. InSinkErator models typically last 10-15 years, while budget units from lesser-known brands may need replacement after 6-8 years. The biggest factor in disposal lifespan is avoiding grease, fibrous foods, and non-food items.