Short definition
A pipe patch is a temporary fix for a small leak — a rubber-gasketed repair clamp, an epoxy putty wrap, or a self-fusing silicone tape — applied around a pinhole or hairline crack to stop the drip until proper repair. Common sizes fit ½, ¾, and 1-inch residential supply lines. Always temporary: corrosion under the clamp continues.
What it is
Three patch types cover most homeowner needs:
- Repair clamp / sleeve clamp. A two-piece metal band with a rubber gasket that bolts around the pipe. Sized to pipe diameter (½, ¾, 1-inch are the residential standard). Best for pinhole leaks and hairline cracks on straight runs.
- Epoxy putty. A two-part kneadable putty that cures around the pipe in 5–10 minutes (full cure 1–24 hours). Good for irregular surfaces, corners, and fittings where a clamp won’t seat. Cracks under repeated hot-water cycling.
- Self-fusing silicone tape. Stretchable rubber tape that bonds to itself with no adhesive. Stops drips quickly; not load-bearing under high pressure.
Workflow:
- Shut water at the nearest valve.
- Dry the pipe thoroughly.
- Sand the pinhole site lightly to give the patch something to grip.
- Apply epoxy putty centered on the hole, or seat the rubber gasket of a repair clamp over the leak and tighten the bolts alternately.
- Restore water at low pressure first; watch for seep before opening fully.
Why it matters to a homeowner
A pipe patch is the difference between calling a plumber on Sunday afternoon and calling Monday morning. Keep a $5-$15 repair clamp and a tube of epoxy putty in your toolkit — the SKUs you want are ½-inch, ¾-inch, and the “all-purpose” putty stick. Together they handle almost any small home leak long enough to schedule a real repair.
What a patch is not: a permanent fix. Galvanized rusts under a clamp; copper pitting continues; CPVC stress-cracks propagate. When a plumber says “we’ll patch and come back,” confirm what come back means and when. A patch left for years is how a small leak becomes a wall replacement.
Common failure modes (of the patch itself)
- Leak migrates next to the clamp. The pipe is weakened upstream or downstream of the original failure; the clamp didn’t address the underlying cause.
- Clamp gasket perishes. Older repair clamps lose their rubber after 5-10 years.
- Epoxy putty cracks. Hot-water cycling fatigues the bond.
- Clamp slips on a wet or oily surface. Always dry and sand before applying.
- Tape unspools under hot water. Self-fusing silicone is for cold and warm — not hot.
Common variants
- Pipe patch vs. CIPP liner. Both are “patches” in the loosest sense, but CIPP (cured-in-place pipe) is a trade-grade sewer relining technique, not a homeowner DIY. Different scale entirely.
- Pipe patch vs. soldered repair. A clamp doesn’t replace pipe; cutting out the bad section and soldering or pressing in a new piece does.
- Pipe patch vs. repipe. A patch stops one leak. A repipe replaces the failing system. Galvanized homes that patch chronically should repipe.
Washington note
In pre-1960 WA homes with galvanized supply, patches buy weeks-to-months, not years. Rust progresses inside the pipe wall regardless of the clamp; the next pinhole usually shows up within a foot of the first. Homeowners who patch three times in a year on the same line should price a partial or whole-house PEX repipe before the fourth call.
For copper pinhole leaks in soft Cedar/Tolt water (Seattle, Bellevue, Sammamish), patching is a short bridge — the underlying water chemistry continues attacking the rest of the pipe. Pinhole leaks usually arrive in clusters: one this month, two more within a year. A patch makes sense as you decide between repipe (PEX) and pH neutralization, not as a long-term plan.