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Livewell Won't Hold Water or Won't Fill — How to Fix It

My livewell either won't fill or drains right out — how do I fix the pump and valves?

A livewell is a simple loop: a raw-water aerator/fill pump pushes water in, and a standpipe plus a drain/overflow holds the level. "Won't fill" is almost always a pump or intake problem (clogged thru-hull screen, air-locked or dead pump, blown fuse, kinked hose). "Won't hold" is almost always a level-control problem (missing or wrong-height standpipe, an open drain valve, or a bad seal/cracked fitting). Diagnose which half is failing first — that tells you whether to chase the pump side or the drain side.

ℹ️ Reference only: For general reference only. This guide does not guarantee any result — every home is different. Verify against your local building codes and a licensed professional before acting, especially for electrical, gas, plumbing, structural, or roof work.

💵 $15-$80 DIY (standpipe, hose, clamps, strainer, fuse, connectors; aerator pump $25-$70). $150-$350 at a marine shop including parts and labor; more if a thru-hull/seacock is involved. ⏱ 30-90 minutes for standpipe, hose, fuse, or strainer; 1-2 hours to replace an aerator pump or reseal a drain fitting. ● Use caution
Safety: Two real hazards. (1) Below-waterline plumbing: a livewell fed by a thru-hull below the waterline can sink the boat if a hose blows off or a fitting cracks — use reinforced hose, double-clamp below-waterline joints with two stainless clamps (ABYC H-27), keep a seacock you can reach and close, and test at the dock, not offshore. (2) Fire/explosion on gasoline boats: any pump installed in a space that contains the gas engine, fuel tank, or fuel lines must be ignition-protected so its motor brushes can't ignite fuel vapor (this is a gasoline issue; diesel vapor isn't flammable at normal temps). Do all 12V work to ABYC E-11 — correct fuse, tinned marine wire, sealed connections — to prevent shorts and fire, and disconnect power before working on the pump.

Common causes

How to fix it

  1. Split the problem first. Run the pump and watch: if little or no water enters, it's a fill/pump-side issue. If water enters fine but the level drops or never builds, it's a hold/drain-side issue. Fix the failing half.
  2. HOLD SIDE — check the standpipe. Most livewells hold water with a removable standpipe tube that sets the water level and feeds the overflow. Confirm it's present, the right length, and seated/sealed in its base. A missing or short standpipe is the #1 reason a well 'won't hold.' Replace with the correct OEM-height tube.
  3. HOLD SIDE — check the drain valve and seals. Close any drain/transom ball valve fully. Inspect the drain fitting gasket and the standpipe base O-ring for cracks or grit; reseal with marine sealant rated for below-waterline use. Fill the well with the pump off and watch where it leaks down to — that line marks the failing fitting.
  4. FILL SIDE — kill power and clear the intake. Pull the in-line fuse or breaker. Inspect and clean the intake thru-hull screen/scoop strainer and the pump's inlet strainer. Backflush the supply hose; look for kinks, collapsed sections, or a hose pushed onto a barb past the strainer.
  5. FILL SIDE — verify power at the pump. With a multimeter, confirm ~12V at the pump leads when switched on. No voltage: check the fuse, the switch, and the ground. Corroded crimps are common — redo connections with marine-grade tinned wire and adhesive-lined heat-shrink butt connectors per ABYC E-11. Use the fuse size on the pump label.
  6. FILL SIDE — test the pump itself. If it has voltage but won't move water, it may be air-locked (common when mounted above the waterline) or burned out from running dry. Briefly prime/bleed it; if it still won't pump or spins noisily, replace it. Use a marine-rated aerator pump matched to the original GPH. On a gasoline boat, any pump installed in a space that holds the gas engine, fuel tank, or fuel lines must be ignition-protected (diesel boats don't need ignition protection for vapor reasons, but still use marine-rated gear).
  7. Reassemble, double-clamp below-waterline hose connections with two stainless clamps, and run a leak/level test at the dock before relying on it on the water. Confirm the well fills, holds at the standpipe height, and the overflow/drain works without seeping.

DIY or call a pro?

Solidly DIY for most owners — standpipe, hose, strainer, fuse, and aerator-pump swaps are basic plumbing and 12V work. Call a pro if the leak is at a hull penetration below the waterline that needs a thru-hull or seacock replaced, if you find chronic run-dry pump failures pointing to a wiring/switch design problem, or if you're on a gasoline boat and aren't comfortable verifying ignition-protection and ABYC-compliant wiring near the fuel system.

Tools & parts

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Based on: BoatUS / BoatUS Foundation; ABYC (American Boat & Yacht Council) — E-11 AC & DC electrical systems; H-27 seacocks, thru-hull fittings & drain plugs; NMMA; Mercury Marine service guidance; Yamaha Marine service guidance

General marine-maintenance guidance, not a substitute for a qualified marine technician or surveyor. Boats and conditions vary; for fuel, electrical, fire, or structural issues — or anything safety-critical — consult a professional. Always follow your engine and equipment manuals.