How Long Does a Water Heater Last? Signs Yours Is About to Fail
Most water heaters last 8–12 years. Learn the warning signs of a failing water heater, what shortens its life in Oklahoma, and how to decide between repair and replacement.
A water heater is one of the hardest-working appliances in your home, quietly delivering hot water every single day until the moment it doesn’t. The good news: water heaters usually warn you before they fail completely. Here’s how to read the signs.
Typical lifespan
A conventional tank water heater generally lasts 8 to 12 years. Tankless units often run 15 to 20 years with proper maintenance. Where your unit falls in that range depends heavily on water quality and upkeep.
In much of central Oklahoma, harder water accelerates sediment buildup inside the tank. That sediment insulates the water from the burner, forces the unit to work harder, and slowly cooks the tank from the inside — which is why annual flushing matters so much here.
Warning signs to watch for
Rusty or discolored hot water. If only your hot water runs rusty, the corrosion is likely inside the tank, not your pipes. That’s often a sign the tank is failing.
Rumbling or popping noises. That’s sediment hardening at the bottom of the tank and steam bubbling up through it. It means reduced efficiency and added stress on the tank.
Water around the base. Even a small puddle is a red flag. Once a tank itself starts leaking, it cannot be repaired — only replaced — and a full tank rupture can flood a room fast.
Not enough hot water, or it runs cold quickly. Declining capacity often points to sediment, a failing heating element, or a burner problem.
Age. If your unit is past 10 years and showing any of the above, replacement is usually the smarter long-term choice.
Repair or replace?
A few problems are genuinely repairable: a faulty thermostat, a bad heating element, a failed thermocouple, or a worn anode rod. If your unit is relatively young and the tank itself is sound, a repair makes sense.
But once a tank is leaking, badly corroded, or simply old and inefficient, replacement almost always wins. Newer units are significantly more efficient, which means lower energy bills, and you avoid the very real risk of a sudden failure that floods your garage or utility closet.
A simple way to add years
The single best thing you can do is flush the tank once a year to clear sediment, and have the anode rod checked periodically — it’s a sacrificial part designed to corrode instead of your tank. Many homeowners never know it exists until the tank fails.
If your water heater is showing warning signs, our team can assess it, explain your options honestly, and quote both repair and replacement up front. Learn more about our water heater service, or reach out any time — we’re here 24/7.