OT: Water Heater

miket007

All-American
Aug 9, 2007
11,760
9,098
113
Good day gents, need some opinions. I'm about to finish my basement but have a electric water heater that is 14 years old but hasn't given us any issues. I have American Home Shied as my home warranty but they won't help cover this since there aren't any problems with it. I'm thinking I just bite the bullet and pay the 2k-3k i'm thinking it will cost for the unit and labor down here in Delaware. If not I run the risk of the water heater leaking messing up the newly installed flooring/sheet rock???????
 

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
88,567
86,587
113
Grok says:

At 14 years, your heater is well into (or past) its expected service life. Many units fail between 10–15 years due to internal corrosion, even if they still produce hot water today.
The big risk at this age isn't gradual decline—it's a catastrophic tank leak that can dump 40–80 gallons of water with little warning. Repairs on a 14-year-old unit are rarely worth it long-term, as other components (elements, thermostat, valves) are also aging.Is It Wise to Replace Now?Yes, in these common scenarios:
  • The unit is hard to access or a leak would cause expensive damage.
  • You have hard water or haven't flushed it regularly (sediment buildup accelerates failure).
  • You're planning a home renovation, sale, or want peace of mind.
 

RUPete90

Senior
Jul 3, 2025
523
740
93
Do it. I put off doing a pre-emptive replacement and it failed. It sucked. Mine was 19 years old, put in the day before Rutgers beat Pitt in 2007 to clinch a bowl berth that year.
 

Rutgers Chris

All-American
Nov 29, 2005
5,048
5,908
97
Good day gents, need some opinions. I'm about to finish my basement but have an electric water heater that is 14 years old but hasn't given us any issues. I have American Home Shied as my home warranty but they won't help cover this since there aren't any problems with it. I'm thinking I just bite the bullet and pay the 2k-3k i'm thinking it will cost for the unit and labor down here in Delaware. If not I run the risk of the water heater leaking messing up the newly installed flooring/sheet rock???????
Not sure what your experience with the home warranty company is, but my experience with them was they do everything they can to not replace things. And when they do, it’s with bottom of the barrel options. I’ve only had them as part of a home purchase/sale so maybe they weren’t great, but I’d suggest just replacing it.
 

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
88,567
86,587
113
Not sure what your experience with the home warranty company is, but my experience with them was they do everything they can to not replace things. And when they do, it’s with bottom of the barrel options. I’ve only had them as part of a home purchase/sale so maybe they weren’t great, but I’d suggest just replacing it.
Having looked into these, we concluded the same. Usually the options for repair were less attractive then setting the whole house on fire (sarcasm).
 

LETSGORU91

Senior
Jul 9, 2025
425
435
63
This past summer, my 10 yr warranty gas heater (which was on year 14 of use!!), opened the floodgates into my finished basement. I was lucky to catch it fairly quick but still had to pull up some floating floor, replace partial sheetrock on 6 panels, and cut a small amount of carpet to pull and dry on another part of the basement. Big pain in the ***, especially as we were doing major renovations upstairs and plenty of stuff was being stored downstairs. My buddy who came over to install the new one repeatedly said "replace it before or as the warranty expires". Even if your heater has a 10 yr warranty, you are 4 years past. Time for a new one. Avoid the potential headaches.
 
  • Like
Reactions: miket007

ClassOf02v.2

Heisman
Sep 30, 2010
13,730
15,148
103
Yes. And as I said, it failed, it sucked and I wish I had replaced it sooner. That's why I advised the OP to go ahead and do it now. Did I miss something or did you?
I did, sorry. I thought the situation you were describing was an incident in 2007 on a 19 year old water heater (i.e. installed in 1988). I now understand what you meant.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Knight Shift

famousbill19

Senior
Nov 26, 2006
1,220
770
73
Don't minimize the possibility that your existing HWH could go when you are not home for several days/weeks. Would be an absolute disaster.

We were in a similar boat as you are currently and we bit the bullet and changed it preemptively.
 
  • Like
Reactions: miket007 and fsng

RUPete90

Senior
Jul 3, 2025
523
740
93
I did, sorry. I thought the situation you were describing was an incident in 2007 on a 19 year old water heater (i.e. installed in 1988). I now understand what you meant.
No problem! Since the OP is renovating his basement, it's totally a no-brainer to replace it now. It could last a few more years or a few more minutes. Not worth a bunch of water and potential mold damage to a newly renovated space.
 

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
88,567
86,587
113
I did, sorry. I thought the situation you were describing was an incident in 2007 on a 19 year old water heater (i.e. installed in 1988). I now understand what you meant.
I thought the same thing as you when I first read the post. Therefore it's RuPete's fault! 😂 Kidding!!!!
 
  • Haha
Reactions: ClassOf02v.2

RUPete90

Senior
Jul 3, 2025
523
740
93
I thought the same thing as you when I first read the post. Therefore it's RuPete's fault! 😂 Kidding!!!!
It's funny, but it shows how people can interpret the same line or written expression in very different ways. I may need to run my posts through a clarity checker from now on. :)
 
  • Haha
Reactions: Knight Shift

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
88,567
86,587
113
It's funny, but it shows how people can interpret the same line or written expression in very different ways. I may need to run my posts through a clarity checker from now on. :)
Was just having this discussion with a work colleague. You read e-mails from certain people, and it seems in most e-mails they are yelling at you. You meet those people in person, and they are one of the nicest people you ever met. We see this type of thing on social media a lot too. You were very kind in your questioning, whereas I could see some totally ripping into the person who asked an innocent question.
 

ClassOf02v.2

Heisman
Sep 30, 2010
13,730
15,148
103
Was just having this discussion with a work colleague. You read e-mails from certain people, and it seems in most e-mails they are yelling at you. You meet those people in person, and they are one of the nicest people you ever met. We see this type of thing on social media a lot too. You were very kind in your questioning, whereas I could see some totally ripping into the person who asked an innocent question.
Yes, agreed. The world needs more rational people like @Knight Shift @RUPete90 and @ClassOf02v.2 (yeah, throwing myself in there) to work through misunderstandings in online communication.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Knight Shift

fsng

Freshman
Oct 31, 2025
64
64
18
It's funny, but it shows how people can interpret the same line or written expression in very different ways. I may need to run my posts through a clarity checker from now on. :)

In this case, I think it was reading too fast. I did the same and had to read it over again to make sure I understood, but the wording said what you meant and wasn't ambiguous ...Just easy to misinterpret with a quick read.

Can't say the same for all posts!

As to OP ..floods suck, change that water heater while you're working and have peace of mind into next decade.
 
  • Like
Reactions: RUPete90

T2Kplus20

Heisman
May 1, 2007
31,765
19,770
113
Good day gents, need some opinions. I'm about to finish my basement but have a electric water heater that is 14 years old but hasn't given us any issues. I have American Home Shied as my home warranty but they won't help cover this since there aren't any problems with it. I'm thinking I just bite the bullet and pay the 2k-3k i'm thinking it will cost for the unit and labor down here in Delaware. If not I run the risk of the water heater leaking messing up the newly installed flooring/sheet rock???????
Thanks for the reminder! We need to replace our 2009 gas water heater (direct vent). Gotta call Gold Medal.
 
  • Like
Reactions: miket007

Section124

Heisman
Dec 21, 2002
17,127
20,547
96
My plumber said to replace every 10 years. I write the date on it in marker and I am close to replacing as well. My last one was just over 10 years and cracked. Flooded my whole basement. Luckily I got rid of the carpet due to water in the basement from Irene.
 
  • Like
Reactions: miket007