How to Fix a Leaking Shower Faucet
Most shower drips trace to a single $15 cartridge. The cartridge swap takes 30 minutes if you can identify the brand.
TL;DR
90% of leaking shower faucets need a new cartridge ($15–$45). Identify your brand (Moen, Delta, Kohler, Pfister, Mixet), shut off water at the main, remove handle and trim, swap cartridge, reassemble. Hard LA water makes cartridges fail every 7–10 years.
What’s in this guide
- Identify your shower valve
- Tools needed
- Disassembly
- Cartridge swap
- Reassembly and test
A leaking shower head — or worse, a leak inside the wall behind the shower — almost always traces to a worn cartridge in the shower valve body. The fix is straightforward but requires identifying your specific brand and accessing the valve through the trim plate.
Tools & Materials You’ll Need
Tools
- Allen wrench set
- Phillips and flathead screwdrivers
- Channel-lock pliers
- Cartridge puller (specific to brand) — Moen and Delta sell these
- Towel
- Flashlight
Materials
- Replacement cartridge (brand-specific) $15–$45
- Replacement O-rings if cartridge ones are old ($3)
- Plumber’s grease
- Trim escutcheon if old one is damaged ($25–$80)
Step-by-Step Instructions
Shut Off Water at the Main
Most shower valves don’t have local shutoffs. You’ll need to shut off the main water supply to the home. This will leave you without water everywhere — plan accordingly. Turn off both hot and cold at the main valve (usually outside the home or near the water heater).
Remove the Trim and Handle
Pop off any decorative cap on the handle. Beneath, find the screw (usually Phillips or Allen). Remove the screw. The handle pulls or twists off — gently. Behind the handle is a trim escutcheon (the round plate against the wall). Remove the screws holding it on.
Identify Your Cartridge
With the handle and trim off, you can see the valve body and the cartridge. Common brands: Moen (cartridge with brand name), Delta (similar), Kohler (often labeled), Pfister, Mixet. Take a photo and bring it to a hardware store or call the manufacturer for the correct replacement.
Remove the Cartridge
Most cartridges have a retaining clip or pin that holds them in. Use needle-nose pliers to pull the clip. Then use the brand-specific cartridge puller (or sometimes channel-locks) to extract the cartridge straight back. Hard water-locked cartridges may require vinegar soaking and gentle persuasion.
Install New Cartridge
Apply plumber’s grease to the new cartridge’s O-rings. Insert in the same orientation as the old one (note any alignment marks). Reinstall the retaining clip. Reverse the disassembly: trim escutcheon, handle, decorative cap.
Restore Water and Test
Slowly turn the main water back on. Test the shower through full hot/cold range. Watch for any leaks at the trim and inside the wall (if you have access to the back of the wall). Listen for any whistling or hissing.
When replacing a shower cartridge, also inspect for limescale buildup in the valve body. In hard SFV water, a 10+ year-old valve body has scale on the brass that prevents the new cartridge from sealing properly. If your new cartridge still leaks slightly after install, soak the valve body interior with vinegar for an hour, scrub gently with a toothbrush, then reinstall the cartridge. We routinely solve “stubborn” cartridge leaks this way.
Don’t use channel-locks on the cartridge with maximum force
Cracking the brass valve body costs $400–$800 in repair (in-wall replacement). If the cartridge won’t budge, soak it in vinegar for an hour and try again gently.
Real Scenarios from Our LA Service Calls
40-year-old Moen valve repair
Homeowner had been chasing a slow drip for 6 months. Original 1985 Moen Posi-Temp valve. Cartridge was severely calcified. Soaked the valve body in vinegar for 90 minutes, gently extracted with the Moen cartridge puller, installed new cartridge ($28 at the Moen counter). Drip stopped. Total visit: 75 minutes, $385.
When to Call a Plumber Instead
DIY isn’t always the right call. Bring in a licensed plumber if any of these apply:
- Cartridge won’t come out after vinegar soak
- You crack the valve body trying to extract
- Leak is inside the wall, not at the handle
- You can’t identify the brand and parts aren’t readily available
- Your home has a hot/cold mixing valve (different repair, different parts)
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a shower cartridge last?
Soft water: 12–18 years. Moderate hardness: 8–12 years. Hard SFV water: 5–8 years.
Why does my shower drip even with the handle off?
Worn cartridge — the seal between hot and cold within the cartridge has degraded. Replacement is the only real fix.
Can I just buy a universal cartridge?
Universal cartridges work but rarely seal as well as brand-specific. Costs $5–$10 less but fails 30–50% sooner. Brand-specific is worth the extra cost.
How do I find the brand of my shower valve?
Look at the back of the trim escutcheon (often stamped). Or photograph the cartridge and ask at a plumbing supply store.
My shower has 2 handles — different repair?
Yes — older 2-handle showers use compression-style stems with washers/seats, similar to compression faucets. Different parts but similar concept. Each handle has its own stem.
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