
Industrial Valve Leakage: Internal vs External — Causes, Standards, and Solutions
Introduction Valve leakage is the most frequently encountered failure mode in industrial piping systems. Whether it appears as a slow seep around a valve stem or an invisible flow of gas crossing a supposedly closed seat, leakage costs industry billions of dollars annually in lost product, unplanned downtime, regulatory penalties, and safety incidents. Yet “valve leakage” is not a single problem — it is two fundamentally different problems that require different diagnostic approaches, different repair strategies, and different compliance standards. Internal leakage (seat leakage or pass-by leakage) occurs when a closed valve fails to fully block flow across its seating surface. External leakage occurs when process fluid escapes from the valve body to the surrounding atmosphere. Understanding this distinction is the starting point for any effective valve maintenance and procurement strategy. This guide covers the root causes of both leakage types across common valve designs, the industry standards that define acceptable limits, and the practical measures available to prevent and repair each. Key Distinction:Internal leakage = fluid crosses the valve seat from upstream to downstream while the valve is closed. The leak stays inside the piping system.External leakage = fluid escapes from the valve body into the atmosphere. The leak exits the piping system entirely. 1.




