What's actually causing this

Electric water heaters lose heat when a heating element burns out or the thermostat fails. Gas heaters fail when the pilot light goes out, the thermocouple wears out, or the gas valve malfunctions.

What you'll need

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Step-by-step fix

  1. 1

    Check the circuit breaker

    Go to your electrical panel and look for a tripped breaker labeled 'water heater.' Reset it and wait 30 minutes to see if hot water returns.

  2. 2

    Check the pilot light (gas heaters)

    Look at the pilot light window on the front of the tank. If the pilot is out, follow the manufacturer's relighting instructions on the label.

  3. 3

    Test the heating elements (electric heaters)

    Turn off power at the breaker. Remove the access panel on the side of the heater and test each element with a multimeter set to ohms. A reading of 0 or infinity indicates a failed element.

  4. 4

    Replace the failed element

    Drain the tank, unscrew the failed element with a heating element wrench, and install the replacement. Refill before restoring power.

  5. 5

    Check the thermostat setting

    The thermostat should be set to 120°F (49°C). Higher settings can cause scalding; lower may feel cold. Adjust and wait 1 hour.

What this costs in Tampa
DIY (parts only) $0–80
Hiring a local pro $300–1,500
Cost of doing nothing No hot water indefinitely; potential energy waste
Plumbing considerations for Tampa homeowners

In Tampa, tap water is moderate (120–180 ppm). Tampa's water is moderately hard, sourced from limestone aquifers. Scale buildup is noticeable but less severe than in very hard-water areas. Coastal salt intrusion is a growing concern.

Plumbers in Tampa typically charge $100–160/hr. Most homeowners budget $800–2,500 for common repairs like fixture replacement, drain clearing, or valve repairs.

Florida has strict licensing. Plumbing requires state-licensed plumber. Homeowner exemptions are very limited.

Majority post-1980s elevated construction. Copper is standard. Moderate hardness means fixture life is moderate. Humidity and salt air accelerate corrosion. Slab-on-grade with salt intrusion risk in coastal areas. Storm surge can flood piping.

DIY in Tampa: Tampa's strict Florida licensing, hurricane codes, and environmental hazards restrict DIY repairs. Hire licensed professionals for plumbing, electrical, and HVAC. Coastal humidity and salt air require specialized knowledge.

Stop and call a pro if you see this
  • The tank is leaking from the base — this means the tank has failed internally and needs full replacement.
  • The unit is over 12 years old — replacement is more cost-effective than repair.
  • You smell rotten eggs (gas smell) — leave the house and call the gas company immediately.
  • The pressure relief valve is releasing water — this is a safety issue requiring professional diagnosis.
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