Why the pipe outside your wall drips, what the pressure relief (safety) valve actually does, and why this is a job for a qualified engineer — not a DIY fix.
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The pressure relief valve (PRV) — sometimes called the safety valve or expansion relief valve — is one of the most important safety components in a sealed central heating system. Combi, system and modern heat-only boilers all run as a pressurised, sealed circuit. As the water inside heats up it expands, and that expansion pushes the pressure up. Normally that rise is absorbed by the boiler's expansion vessel. If something goes wrong and the pressure climbs too high, the PRV is the last line of defence.
Most domestic PRVs are set to open at around 3 bar. When the system pressure reaches that point, the valve lifts and releases water — and that water is piped to the outside of your property through a copper discharge pipe (the "overflow" that ends in a downward-pointing bend near an external wall). Letting the pressure escape this way protects the boiler, the cylinder and the pipework from dangerous over-pressure. In short: the valve is designed to dump water deliberately when the pressure gets too high, so the system can't be damaged.
Because the valve discharges to the outside, the first sign of trouble is usually something you spot outdoors or notice on the boiler's pressure gauge:
A small puddle under the external pipe, a green algae streak down the wall, or a slow drip on a cold day are all clues worth acting on rather than ignoring.
It's tempting to blame the valve, but a leaking PRV is often a symptom rather than the root cause. An engineer will be looking at three main possibilities:
The expansion vessel is a sealed tank with a rubber diaphragm and a cushion of air (or nitrogen) that absorbs the expansion of heated water. Over time that air charge can leak away or the diaphragm can fail. When it does, there's nowhere for the expanding water to go, the pressure climbs sharply as the boiler heats, and it pushes past 3 bar — forcing the PRV open. This is one of the most common reasons a discharge pipe drips. The cure is usually re-pressurising or replacing the vessel, not the valve.
Valves wear out. A speck of debris (limescale or sludge) can lodge on the seat so the valve no longer seals fully, leaving it weeping even at normal pressure. Once a PRV has lifted a few times it can also fail to re-seat cleanly. In these cases the valve is genuinely faulty and needs replacing.
Sometimes the cause is simpler: the system has been filled to too high a pressure, or a filling loop has been left slightly open and is slowly creeping the pressure up. As soon as the heating runs and the water expands, it tips over 3 bar and the valve releases. An engineer will check the filling loop is fully closed and isolated, and that the cold fill pressure is correct.
The PRV exists precisely because over-pressure is dangerous. If a valve leaks, the temptation is to shrug it off as a minor drip — but a weeping valve and a pressure gauge that keeps falling tell you the sealed system isn't holding pressure as it should, and the underlying fault won't fix itself. Equally, you should never plug, cap or tamper with the discharge pipe to stop the dripping: that pipe is a deliberate safety outlet, and blocking it removes the boiler's protection against over-pressure. Leave the valve and the pipe alone, and get the cause diagnosed.
When you book a heating or Gas Safe registered engineer for a dripping discharge pipe, they'll typically work through the system rather than just swapping the visible part:
Prices vary by region, boiler type and how much draining-down the job needs. The figures below are indicative ranges, last reviewed June 2026 — get a written quote before any work.
| Job | What's involved | Indicative cost |
|---|---|---|
| Diagnostic call-out | Engineer attends, tests pressure and identifies the cause | £70–£120 |
| Re-pressurise / re-charge expansion vessel | Restore the air charge if the diaphragm is intact | £80–£150 |
| Replace expansion vessel | Fit a new vessel where the diaphragm has failed | £120–£300 |
| Replace pressure relief valve | Drain down, fit a new PRV, refill and test | £120–£250 |
If you have a boiler cover plan, a fault like this is often exactly what it's for — the call-out, labour and parts may be included subject to your plan's terms, excess and any exclusion period. It's worth checking your policy before you pay out of pocket. If you don't have cover and you're weighing it up, you can compare boiler cover plans across our selected panel, or read our guide to choosing the right level of cover.
A boiler cover plan can turn unexpected breakdowns into a fixed monthly cost. Compare indicative prices and cover levels across our panel, then buy direct.
Compare boiler coverA brief discharge after a one-off fault can be normal — it's the valve releasing excess pressure. But continuous or repeated dripping from the external discharge pipe is a sign of a fault, usually a failing expansion vessel or a worn pressure relief valve. Have it diagnosed by an engineer rather than ignoring it.
No. The PRV is a safety-critical part inside the sealed boiler circuit, and replacing it means draining the system and working inside the boiler. Booking a heating engineer — and a Gas Safe registered engineer for any work on the boiler — is the safe and correct route.
A falling gauge means water is leaving the sealed system. A leaking pressure relief valve discharging out of the external pipe is one common cause; a leak on a radiator, valve or joint is another. If you're topping up every few days, get the leak traced rather than just refilling repeatedly.
Never. That pipe is a deliberate safety outlet for excess pressure. Capping or blocking it removes the boiler's protection against dangerous over-pressure. Leave the pipe alone and get the underlying cause fixed.