Buying Guide · Updated 2026
Five smart leak sensors, compared on the one thing that actually decides how bad the damage gets: how fast the alert reaches you, and whether the sensor can even see the leak from where you've put it.
Quick answer
This is the only system here that does more than alert you. Pair the sensor with Moen's shutoff valve and the whole setup closes your main line the moment it spots something wrong. Skip the valve and you still get a fast, reliable spot sensor — just without the automatic stop.
Nothing else on this list covers a whole house for less. It connects straight to WiFi, no hub needed, and backs up its push notification with a local alarm loud enough to hear from another room — handy the night your phone's on silent.
Swap WiFi for long-range radio and a basement mechanical room, a detached garage, or any dead zone in the house stops being a problem. Watching a sump pump area specifically? This is the one least likely to quietly drop connection without telling you.
This one's a non-starter without a Ring Alarm system already installed — it simply won't work otherwise. But if you've already got Ring, it drops into the app you're checking anyway and throws in freeze detection alongside leak alerts.
For an all-Apple household, this is the tidiest fit — native HomeKit and Siri, processed locally, no cloud account to manage. The catch: it's iOS only, so one Android phone in the house rules it out.
Side by side
| Detector | Hub required? | Best placement | Auto shutoff available? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Flo by Moen | No (sensor) / install (shutoff) | Water heater, main line | Yes, with full system |
| Govee | No | Under sinks, behind appliances | No |
| YoLink | Yes | Basement, crawl space, sump area | No (sensor only) |
| Ring Flood & Freeze | Yes (Ring Alarm) | Under appliances, flat spaces | No |
| Eve Water Guard | Apple hub for remote access | Anywhere in an Apple-only home | No |
Before you buy
Five spots cause most of the damage: under every sink, where supply lines and shutoff valves quietly corrode; behind the washing machine, where hose failures are the single biggest cause of major water claims; at the base of the water heater; under a fridge with an ice line; and right next to the sump pump discharge line.
A sensor only knows about water it physically touches. Set one upright on a shelf above a cabinet and it'll miss the leak pooling on the cabinet floor right below it. Put it at the lowest point water would actually collect — not wherever's easiest to reach.
FAQ
No. Standalone WiFi sensors like Govee connect straight to your home network — nothing extra to buy. Hub-based systems such as YoLink ask you to add one more device, but in return you get real range through concrete and steel.
Budget for one per high-risk zone: sinks, washing machine, water heater, fridge ice line, sump area. For most 3-bedroom homes, that lands somewhere between 5 and 8 sensors before you've got real coverage.
No — a sensor's job is to tell you, not to fix it. If you're away a lot, pair one with an automatic shutoff valve, or just get a system like Flo by Moen that bundles both.
Some carriers do offer a discount for monitored leak detection, but the qualifying brands and setups vary by insurer. Call yours and ask before you buy, if that discount is part of your decision.