Water Loss
Water Loss Adds Up
Your little drip from the kitchen faucet or your running toilet might not seem like a big deal but those little drips add up fast!
![Drippy faucet](https://www.aumsville.us/sites/default/files/styles/full_node_additional_two_column/public/imageattachments/publicworks/page/5201/single_drop.png?itok=a9Nzovzt)
A little drip like this from your faucet could be 120-300 gallons of water lost a day. That adds up to 3,600-10,800 gallons a month!
![two drips from faucet](https://www.aumsville.us/sites/default/files/styles/full_node_additional_two_column/public/imageattachments/publicworks/page/5201/two_drops.png?itok=N1BgrnNg)
If you get a slightly bigger leak we're talking 693 gallons of water lost a day. That adds up to 20,790 gallons a month!
![big drip](https://www.aumsville.us/sites/default/files/styles/full_node_additional_two_column/public/imageattachments/publicworks/page/5201/big_drop.png?itok=iDZ4PaV_)
Are we talking long and large drops? Not quite a steady stream but not just a little leak? Then you could be losing 1,200 gallons a day!
![lots of drips from faucet](https://www.aumsville.us/sites/default/files/styles/full_node_additional_two_column/public/imageattachments/publicworks/page/5201/lots_drops.png?itok=aXXM6EgV)
A constant, steady stream on a leaky faucet could be losing anywhere from 1,900 to 3,000 gallons of water a day!