Lawn Mower Leaking Gas: Why Gas Comes Out of the Air Filter or Carburetor
In This Guide
Finding fuel dripping from the air filter housing is alarming for good reason: gasoline is escaping somewhere it was never meant to be, on a machine built around a spark. The reassuring part is that this exact leak has one overwhelmingly common cause, it is fixable, and understanding the path the fuel takes tells you everything else to check. This page covers why it happens, the immediate safety steps, the fixes from a tap of a screwdriver handle to a proper cleaning, and the oil check that too many owners skip.
First: Stop and Make It Safe
With the situation stable, the diagnosis is straightforward, because gas appearing at the air filter has essentially one route it can take.
Why Gas Comes Out of the Air Filter: The Stuck Float Valve
Inside the carburetor bowl, a small float rides on the fuel level like the float in a toilet tank, closing a needle valve when the bowl is full. When varnish from old fuel or a fleck of debris holds that needle valve open, fuel never stops flowing in. The bowl overfills, fuel rises into the carburetor throat, and from there it runs downhill in both directions: out through the intake into the air filter housing, which is the drip you found, and on gravity fed mowers, onward as long as the tank has fuel to give.
The same failure explains the related symptoms people search alongside this one. Fuel reaching the cylinder unburned ends up as gas in the exhaust, producing fuel dripping from the muffler or white smoke and raw fuel smell when it finally runs. And a mower parked overnight with a stuck float can quietly drain half a tank through the engine. Our carburetor location guide shows you exactly where the bowl and float live on your machine.
The Tap Test and the Real Fix
Technicians try the gentle fix first: with the fuel on, tap the side of the carburetor float bowl a few times with a screwdriver handle. The vibration often jars a varnish stuck needle off its perch, the valve seats, and the leak stops on the spot. If the dripping quits, you have confirmed the diagnosis, but treat it as a stay of execution rather than a repair: the varnish that stuck the valve once is still in there.
The real fix is cleaning the carburetor: bowl off, float and needle out, seat and jets cleaned, fresh bowl gasket on reassembly, plus fresh fuel so the problem does not reload. Our checklist on confirming a carburetor needs cleaning applies here, and if the needle or its seat is worn rather than dirty, a float valve kit or replacement carburetor ends the recurrence. A Wildwood technician does the whole job at your driveway, $115 flat on push mowers, with the leak source verified before any work is billed.
Other Places Mowers Leak Gas (Quick Elimination)
If the fuel is appearing somewhere other than the filter and carburetor area, run down the short list:
| Where the Fuel Shows Up | Likely Source | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Air filter housing, carb area | Stuck float valve flooding the carb | Tap test, then carburetor cleaning |
| Along the fuel line | Cracked line or loose clamp | Replace line and clamps |
| Under the tank | Tank seam crack or fitting | Replace tank or fitting |
| Around the bowl gasket | Dried, shrunken bowl gasket | New gasket, minutes to fit |
| At the cap when mowing | Overfilled tank or bad cap seal | Fill to the line, replace cap |
| From the muffler | Severe carb flooding reaching the cylinder | Fix the float valve, then the oil check below |
Heat and ethanol age every rubber part in the system, so a mower old enough to have a leaking gasket usually deserves a fuel line inspection in the same session.
The Oil Check Everyone Skips
Fuel that flooded past the piston had one more place to go: the crankcase. Gasoline thins engine oil dramatically, and running on fuel diluted oil wears an engine fast. After any flooding leak, pull the dipstick and check two things: an oil level sitting above the full mark, and oil that smells like gasoline. Either one means raw fuel joined the oil, and the response is a simple oil change before the next mowing, cheap insurance against the only way this failure causes lasting damage.
Preventing the Next Stuck Float
The needle valve sticks because of what fuel leaves behind, so prevention is fuel discipline: fresh gas, stabilizer in every can, and no untreated fuel sitting through the off season, the full case for which is in our guide on telling when gas has gone bad. Two hardware habits help too: shut the fuel valve when the mower is parked for more than a few days if you have one, and replace the inline fuel filter on schedule so debris never reaches the needle in the first place. A mower that floods more than once despite clean fuel has a worn valve seat, and that is a parts fix, not a cleaning.
Fuel Where It Should Not Be? We Will Sort It.
A Wildwood technician can diagnose and fix it in your driveway, usually in about an hour. More than 10,000 repairs completed since 2019, with flat rates published before we arrive.
