If you can smell gas, every second counts. Here is the step-by-step guide from a Gas Safe registered engineer — know it before you need it.
By Nicholas King, Gas Safe Engineer July 2026 5 min read
If You Can Smell Gas Right Now
Do not touch any light switches. Do not use your phone indoors. Leave the building immediately, then call 0800 111 999 (National Gas Emergency — free, 24/7) from outside.
Gas leaks are rare but they do happen — and the first few minutes matter enormously. As a Gas Safe registered engineer in the West Midlands I attend a number of gas leak call-outs every year, and the customers who handle them best are always the ones who already knew what to do. This guide gives you that knowledge now, before you ever need it.
What Does a Gas Leak Smell Like?
Natural gas itself is actually odourless. Gas suppliers deliberately add a chemical called mercaptan (ethyl mercaptan) to give it a distinctive, unmistakable smell. Most people describe it as rotten eggs, sulphur, or a heavy, pungent chemical odour.
If you can smell this — even faintly — treat it as a gas leak immediately. Do not wait to see if the smell gets stronger, and do not try to track down the source yourself.
Other signs of a possible gas leak include: a hissing or whistling sound near a gas appliance or pipe, dead or discoloured vegetation near an outdoor gas pipe, or an unexplained increase in your gas bill (which can indicate a slow leak in the system).
What to Do — Step by Step
Follow these steps in order. Do not skip any.
Stop what you are doing. Do not finish what you were cooking, do not fetch belongings, do not delay.
Do not use any electrical switches — not light switches, not the cooker, not the kettle, not anything. Even a tiny spark from a switch can ignite a gas atmosphere.
Do not use your mobile phone inside the property. Step outside first.
Do not smoke or use any naked flame.
Open windows and doors as you leave to ventilate the property — do this quickly on your way out, not as a detour.
Turn off the gas at the meter if it is on your route out and you can do it in seconds. Turn the emergency control valve a quarter-turn so the handle sits at a right angle to the pipe. If the meter is out of your way or you are not sure, skip this step and just leave.
Leave the building and do not re-enter.
Call 0800 111 999 (National Gas Emergency Service) from outside or from a neighbour's house. This line is free and available 24/7. They will dispatch an emergency engineer.
Wait outside until the emergency service tells you it is safe to return.
What NOT to Do
These are the most common mistakes people make during a gas leak — any of them can turn a manageable situation into a disaster:
Do not turn any electrical switches on or off — this includes light switches, fans, extractor fans, and appliances
Do not use your mobile phone, doorbell, or any electrical device inside the building
Do not try to find the source of the leak yourself
Do not attempt to repair the leak yourself — even turning a gas appliance off at the appliance itself can cause a spark
Do not re-enter the building until the emergency engineer has confirmed it is safe
Do not turn the gas back on yourself after a leak — the system must be inspected and cleared by a Gas Safe registered engineer first
After the Emergency Service Have Been
The National Gas Emergency Service will make the situation safe — but their job is emergency containment, not repair. After they have attended and declared the property safe, you will typically need:
Repair or replacement of the faulty component (pipework, valve, appliance connection)
A safety check of all gas appliances before the gas supply is restored
Possibly a new gas safety certificate if the appliances have been condemned or if you are a landlord
All of this work must be carried out by a Gas Safe registered engineer. Do not let anyone touch your gas system after a leak without checking their Gas Safe card first.
Common Causes of Domestic Gas Leaks
In my experience, the most common causes of gas leaks in homes are:
Poorly fitted appliance connections — work carried out by an unregistered person is the leading cause
Perished or corroded pipework — especially in older properties with steel or iron gas pipes
Faulty appliance seals — gas cookers and fires are the most common culprits
Disturbed pipework — drilling through a wall or floor and hitting a gas pipe
Flexible gas connectors behind cookers that have cracked, kinked, or perished over time
Many of these are preventable with regular servicing and by always using a Gas Safe registered engineer for any gas work. An annual boiler service includes a visual inspection of visible pipework and connections, which can catch deterioration before it becomes a leak.
Carbon Monoxide — the Silent Danger
Carbon monoxide (CO) is a separate but related hazard. Unlike a gas leak, you cannot smell CO — it is completely colourless and odourless. It is produced when gas appliances burn incorrectly due to a fault or poor ventilation. Every home with gas appliances should have a working CO alarm, fitted according to the manufacturer's instructions.
If your CO alarm sounds, treat it with the same urgency as a gas leak: leave the building immediately and call 0800 111 999. Read our guide on carbon monoxide symptoms to understand what CO poisoning looks like.
GAS LEAK REPAIR — WEST MIDLANDS
Gas Leak Detection & Repair from NK Gas
Once the emergency service has made your property safe, call us for full leak detection and repair. Gas Safe registered #568305. Covering Wolverhampton, Walsall, Cannock and across the West Midlands.
For the gas emergency line call 0800 111 999 (free, 24/7)
Frequently Asked Questions
Do not use any electrical switches. Open windows and doors on your way out. Turn off the gas at the meter if you can do it quickly. Leave the property immediately and call 0800 111 999 from outside. Do not re-enter until the emergency service says it is safe.
Natural gas has a distinctive rotten egg or sulphur smell added to it by the supplier. If you smell this — even faintly — treat it as a gas leak and follow the emergency steps immediately.
Call the National Gas Emergency Service on 0800 111 999. This is free and available 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. They will send an emergency engineer. After they have made things safe, you will need a Gas Safe registered engineer like NK Gas to carry out the repair.
Yes — turn the emergency control valve at the meter a quarter-turn so the handle sits at a right angle to the pipe. Only do this if the meter is on your way out and you can do it quickly. Do not go looking for the meter if it means staying in the building longer than necessary.