Quick Answer: If your garbage disposal hums but does not spin, it is likely jammed. If it does nothing at all, the issue is usually electrical. Leaking underneath typically means a cracked housing or failed seal. Reset the unit, check the breaker, and try the hex wrench on the bottom. If none of that works, call a licensed Indianapolis plumber for repair or replacement.
A garbage disposal that stops working always seems to happen at the worst possible time. You are cleaning up after dinner, flip the switch, and nothing happens. Or worse, it hums loudly and refuses to grind. Or water starts pooling under the sink.
Before you panic or start shopping for a new unit, there are a few things worth checking. Some disposal problems have a simple fix. Others need a plumber.
It Hums but Will Not Spin
This is the most common garbage disposal complaint Indianapolis homeowners call about, and it almost always means the grinding plate is jammed. A piece of bone, a fruit pit, a piece of silverware, or a buildup of fibrous material like celery or corn husks has locked the impellers in place.
First, turn the disposal off at the switch and unplug it or kill the breaker. Never put your hand inside a disposal, even when it is off. Use the hex wrench that came with the unit (or any 1/4-inch Allen key) and insert it into the socket on the bottom center of the disposal. Rotate it back and forth to free the jam. Remove the obstruction with tongs or pliers, restore power, and press the small red reset button on the bottom of the unit before testing.
If the wrench will not turn or the disposal continues to jam after clearing, the internal components may be worn out and the unit needs replacement.
It Does Absolutely Nothing
No hum, no sound, no vibration. Start with the basics. Press the red reset button on the bottom of the disposal. Check the circuit breaker or the outlet the disposal is plugged into. If the disposal is hardwired, confirm the breaker has not tripped.
If power is reaching the unit and it still does nothing, the internal motor has failed. On a disposal that is 8 to 12 years old, replacement is typically more practical than motor repair.
It Leaks From the Bottom
A disposal that leaks from the bottom housing (not from the drain connection or the dishwasher inlet) has an internal seal failure or a cracked body. This is not repairable. The unit needs to be replaced.
Leaks from the top flange where the disposal meets the sink drain are a different story. The mounting ring or plumber’s putty seal may have loosened over time, especially in homes where the sink sees heavy daily use. A plumber can reseat and reseal the flange without replacing the entire unit.
Leaks from the side dishwasher connection or the discharge pipe are typically loose hose clamps or worn gaskets, both of which are quick fixes.
Water Drains Slowly With the Disposal Running
If the disposal grinds but water backs up into the sink, the clog is downstream in the drain line, not in the disposal itself. The P-trap or the horizontal drain line between the disposal and the main stack is blocked, usually with grease and food particle buildup.
This ties directly into a problem we covered in our post on kitchen drains that keep backing up in Indianapolis. Grease coats the inside of drain lines over time, and a disposal that pushes finely ground food particles into a grease-narrowed pipe accelerates the problem.
Professional drain cleaning clears the downstream blockage and restores full flow.
What Should Never Go in a Garbage Disposal
Disposals are designed for small food scraps, not full meal waste. Indianapolis homeowners who treat the disposal like a second trash can end up calling a plumber far more often. Avoid putting these items down the disposal: grease, oil, or fat in any form. Coffee grounds. Pasta or rice (both expand with water). Eggshells. Potato peels. Celery, artichokes, corn husks, or any stringy vegetables. Bones thicker than a chicken wing.
When to Replace Instead of Repair
If your disposal is over 10 years old, requires frequent resets, leaks from the body, or no longer grinds effectively even after clearing jams, replacement is the better investment. Modern disposal units are quieter, more powerful, and more energy efficient than units from a decade ago.
DW Plumbing installs and repairs garbage disposals as part of our toilets, faucets, sinks, and more service across Indianapolis and surrounding counties. We carry popular models on our trucks for same-day installation and provide upfront pricing on every job.
Call 317-500-1009 for fast disposal repair or replacement in Indianapolis. We will diagnose the issue and give you a straight answer on whether it is worth fixing.