Los Angeles has the oldest housing stock of any major California city. Nearly 60% of homes were built before 1980, and many still have original water heaters that are 15 to 25 years old. The hard water in Los Angeles, fed by the Colorado River Aqueduct and local groundwater, accelerates sediment buildup inside tanks. That sediment corrodes the steel lining and weakens the tank from the inside out. When pressure relief valves fail or anode rods disintegrate, catastrophic failure happens fast. The combination of old infrastructure, hard water chemistry, and deferred maintenance makes Los Angeles one of the highest-risk metro areas for burst water heater incidents.
Los Angeles building codes require water heaters installed in attics or upper floors to have drain pans connected to visible discharge pipes, but thousands of older installations do not meet current standards. When those units fail, water pours directly onto ceilings and floods multiple rooms before homeowners realize what happened. United Water Damage Restoration Los Angeles understands the building code timeline in this city and how older homes were constructed. We know which neighborhoods have the highest concentration of non-compliant installations and the damage patterns that result. That local knowledge allows us to anticipate hidden damage other restoration companies miss.