When lawn sprinklers stay on, check stuck valves, active schedules, or a tripped sensor; shut water off at the valve while you diagnose.
Your yard is soaking, the controller says “off,” and water still flows. This guide shows how to stop the flow fast, find the root cause, and fix it with clear, step-by-step checks. You’ll see quick safety moves, simple tests for each part, and when to call a pro.
Sprinklers Keep Running — Causes And Cures
Most run-on problems trace to one of three buckets: a valve that won’t close, a controller sending power when it shouldn’t, or plumbing that lets water bypass the valve. Start with a safe shutoff, then move through the checks below.
Quick Triage: What To Check First
Use this table as a fast map. Work top to bottom until the water stops and the cause is clear.
| Symptom | Likely Cause | Fast Check |
|---|---|---|
| Only one zone stays on | Debris in that zone valve; solenoid jammed | Turn the solenoid 1/4 turn to “click” closed; flush the valve |
| Multiple zones seep or run | Mainline pressure bleed; master valve stuck; backflow not sealing | Shut water at backflow; see if flow stops |
| Controller says “off” yet water runs | Stuck valve or constant power from a short | Unplug controller; if water still runs, the valve is open mechanically |
| Rain sensor recently tripped | Bypass engaged; controller ignored the sensor | Flip sensor to “active”; inspect sensor wiring |
| System runs at odd hours | Extra start times or overlapping programs | Clear extra starts; verify only the schedules you want |
| Leak at backflow | Debris in check; freeze damage | Close inlet/outlet; inspect for cracked parts |
Safe Shutoff Before You Troubleshoot
Stop the water first. Find the isolation point that feeds the yard lines. Many homes have a ball valve in a green box near the sidewalk or a brass handle near the main. Turn it a quarter turn so the handle is across the pipe. If you see a pressure-vacuum breaker outside, close both yellow handles to horizontal to stop flow on most models. This buys you time to test without flooding beds or hardscape. Manufacturer literature shows the same layout: a shutoff near the tee to the yard line, usually in a box for easy access—see Rain Bird’s valve troubleshooting guide for diagrams.
If you can’t find the isolation point, close the house main valve for a few minutes while you sort the next steps. Open a hose bib to relieve pressure, then move ahead.
How An Auto Valve Closes
A zone valve closes when its diaphragm seals the seat and the solenoid vents pilot water back to the downstream side. Debris, a torn diaphragm, or constant electrical power can keep the port open. That’s why you test both the mechanical side and the control side.
Hands-On Tests That Pinpoint The Fault
1) Test The Controller Path
Pull the common wire from the controller terminal strip and unplug the transformer. If the water keeps flowing, the valve is open mechanically and you can skip to valve checks. If flow stops, a mis-programmed schedule or a short is energizing the coil.
Fixes
- Clear extra start times on all programs. Many timers allow several starts per day, and a stray entry can stack run windows.
- Disable seasonal adjust and rain-delay overrides until the issue is solved.
- Inspect field wiring for splices sitting in wet soil. A nicked cable can energize a coil.
- Measure coil resistance with a multimeter; typical coils read in the 20–60 ohm range. A shorted coil reads near zero.
2) Test The Valve Body
At the valve box, twist the solenoid a quarter turn counter-clockwise to open the bleed. Water should start, then twist back to close. If closing doesn’t stop the zone, the diaphragm may be dirty or torn. Hunter’s service note points to debris between the diaphragm and seat as a top cause of a valve that stays on—see the valve not closing guidance.
Fixes
- Shut water at the isolation point. Remove the valve bonnet. Rinse the diaphragm and seat; remove grit and scale.
- Check the small bleed port and the spring. Clean both so the diaphragm moves freely.
- Rebuild kits are cheap and faster than full replacement. Match model numbers stamped on the cap.
3) Check The Backflow And Master Valve
A master valve or a pressure-vacuum breaker that doesn’t seal can feed zones even when controllers are idle. Close the two backflow handles. If all flow stops, service the device before chasing zone parts.
4) Confirm Water Pressure Isn’t Forcing Bypass
Very high pressure can force seepage past a worn seat. If sprays fog or mist, you likely have pressure over spec. A regulator on the main or at each zone tames that.
Step-By-Step Fixes For Common Scenarios
Case A: One Zone Won’t Shut
This points to a single valve. With water off, open the bonnet and lift the diaphragm. Rinse grit, inspect the rubber face for cuts, and clear the tiny pilot hole. Reassemble, snug the screws in a cross pattern, and restore water. If the zone still runs, swap in a new diaphragm or a full top-end kit.
Still running after a rebuild? Swap the field wires for that zone with a known good zone at the controller. If the problem follows the wires, you have a control issue. If it stays with the piping, the valve body is the cause.
Case B: All Zones Weep Or Run
Look upstream. Close the backflow handles. If water stops, the backflow needs service. If water keeps moving, the main shutoff didn’t close or a master valve is stuck open. Flush the master valve like a zone valve. If needed, rebuild or replace it.
Case C: Timers And Sensors Create Ghost Runs
A rain or soil sensor wired in “bypass” mode can leave watering active. Switch the sensor to “active” and test. In the program menu, delete duplicate start times and any legacy programs. Many controllers have A, B, and C programs; clear the ones you don’t use so they don’t overlap the one you do.
When Parts Need Replacement
Diaphragms harden with age, coils fail, and bonnets crack. If the valve is older than the landscape, a new top-end is time well spent. Match brand and model, since port sizes and screw patterns vary.
Typical Parts And Cost Range
| Part | What It Fixes | Typical Cost |
|---|---|---|
| Diaphragm/bonnet kit | Valve stuck on; seepage | Low to mid cost |
| Solenoid coil | No click; valve stuck energized | Low cost |
| Complete valve body | Cracked cap; stripped screws | Mid cost |
| Backflow repair kit | Leak or bypass at checks | Mid to high |
| Pressure regulator | Misting, overspray, seepage | Mid cost |
| New controller | Ghost schedules; dead display | Mid to high |
Programming Tips That Prevent Run-On
Keep only the programs you use. If you run two days a week, set a single program with the correct stations and delete the rest. Limit each program to one start time unless you’re doing short cycles for slopes. Check seasonal adjust after storms; old settings can keep valves energized longer than you expect.
Do a full reset when a controller acts odd. Write down station names and run times, pull power for a minute, then reload only the schedules you need. Update firmware if your model allows it. Many vendors post reset steps on a label inside the door.
Pressure, Flow, And Sizing Basics
Each zone should run within the valve’s pressure and flow range. When zones are oversized, high flow can erode seats and leave grit behind. When pressure is too high, sprays atomize and water drifts; it also nudges diaphragms open. A simple gauge on a hose bib tells you static pressure at the lot. Use regulators on the main or at valve manifolds to bring numbers into the sweet spot printed on your parts.
Backflow Devices And The Shutoff You’ll Use
Most homes have a pressure-vacuum breaker or a double-check device near the supply. Learn which you have and how its handles work. In many layouts, turning either handle 90 degrees stops yard flow. That move protects beds and gives you a quiet work zone for valve service. Know where it sits before you need it; a quick walk-through today saves stress during a leak.
What Pros Do Differently
Pros move fast on isolation and diagnosis. They carry spare diaphragms and coils, clean seats with a toothbrush, and replace caps that deform. They also check surge protection on controllers and add waterproof connectors on field splices. Those small habits cut repeat callbacks and keep zones closing cleanly.
When To Call A Technician
Call for help when you see cracked backflow housings, flooded valve boxes that won’t pump out, or wiring faults you can’t trace. Backflow devices tie to local code, so licensed work may be required in your area.
Printable Checklist: From Flood To Fix
Keep this sequence handy so the yard stays neat while you work.
- Shut water at the irrigation isolation valve or backflow.
- Confirm which zones run by trying a manual cycle with water off.
- Unplug the controller and pull the common wire. If flow continues, move to valve service.
- Open the suspect valve, clean the diaphragm and seat, and reassemble.
- Rebuild or replace worn parts. Match brand and model.
- Clear extra start times and set the sensor to “active.”
- Restore water, test each zone, and check for seepage at rest.
