An overhead water tank that leaks is a nuisance. An overhead water tank that contaminates drinking water is a health hazard. The difference between these two outcomes is almost entirely the product selection and application quality during waterproofing.
This is the one waterproofing application where "I'll use whatever's available" is genuinely dangerous. Not just expensive. Dangerous.
Why Water Tank Waterproofing Is Different
Most waterproofing protects buildings from water. Water tank waterproofing protects water from the structure. The concern is contamination, not just leakage.
Waterproofing products contain chemicals. Most are fine for structural applications where they're never in contact with drinking water. In a water tank, the product is in direct, continuous contact with water that people will drink. If the product leaches toxic compounds, the water becomes unsafe.
The standard products that work fine on terraces, basements, and walls are often not rated for potable water contact. Using them in a drinking water tank is not a shortcut, it's a liability.
What "Potable Water Safe" Actually Means
A product is potable water safe when it has been tested and certified to not leach harmful compounds into water at levels that affect human health. The main certifications:
NSF/ANSI 61: The gold standard. This US standard is recognized globally and tests products for leaching of heavy metals, volatile organic compounds, and other harmful substances into drinking water. Products with NSF 61 certification have been tested with immersion and are confirmed safe for potable water contact.
IS 4111 (India): The Indian standard for waterproofing compounds. Less rigorous than NSF 61 but still relevant for Indian regulatory compliance.
BIS certification for tanks: India's Bureau of Indian Standards has standards for water tank linings. For any tank supplying drinking water to a building or community, BIS-compliant products are the minimum.
The problem: most Indian site teams don't ask about certification. They use whatever waterproofing product is available. In some cases that's fine. In water tanks, it's not.
The Right Products for Overhead Tanks
Cementitious coatings with potable water certification: Two-component cementitious waterproofing that's been certified for drinking water contact. SikaTop 107 IN is specifically formulated and certified for potable water applications. BS MoistureZero 2K is another option with appropriate certification. These are applied like standard cementitious waterproofing but are formulated without compounds that leach into water.
Crystalline waterproofing: Products like Dichtament DS or equivalent crystalline systems penetrate the concrete and become part of the structure. They're inert once cured. Many crystalline systems are NSF 61 certified and are used globally in potable water infrastructure. They're particularly good for RCC tanks because they self-seal hairline cracks over time as the crystals grow.
Epoxy linings (food-grade): For steel tanks or concrete tanks that need a complete barrier rather than a penetrating treatment. Food-grade or NSF-certified epoxy linings are expensive but give complete chemical isolation between the tank wall and the water. Used on large municipal tanks and industrial water storage.
What NOT to use: Bituminous products (tar, bitumen-based coatings), these leach hydrocarbons. Standard acrylic waterproofing coatings without potable water certification. Epoxy coatings without food-grade or NSF certification. Anything that smells strongly of solvents once cured.
RCC Tank Repair : The Common Scenario
Most Indian overhead water tanks are reinforced concrete. They're built as part of the building structure on the terrace. They develop problems: hairline cracks (concrete shrinkage), joint failures (construction joints between the base and walls), and deterioration of the original waterproofing (if any was applied at all many are just bare concrete).
Repair sequence for a leaking RCC tank:
- Empty the tank completely. Drain and dry for at least 48 hours.
- Inspect all surfaces for cracks. Mark them. Cracks over 0.3mm need to be routed and sealed before applying coating.
- Route cracks with an angle grinder or disc cutter to minimum 6mm wide, 10mm deep. This creates a proper substrate for sealant.
- Seal routed cracks with polymerised cementitious or epoxy based repair mortar, depending on whether movement is expected.
- Apply bonding slurry (cement + bonding agent) to all surfaces.
- Apply potable water-rated waterproofing coating in two coats, covering walls, floor, and particularly the base-wall junction, this is the most common failure point.
- Cure for the specified period (usually 7-14 days for cementitious systems before water contact).
- Fill with water, let stand 24 hours, drain and refill before using for drinking water.
Tank Cleaning > The Ignored Step
An overhead water tank that has never been cleaned is not just a waterproofing problem it's a contamination problem even without waterproofing failure. Sediment, biofilm, algae, and in extreme cases, rodent contamination accumulate over years.
Indian Bureau of Indian Standards recommends water tank cleaning every 6 months. Most residential tanks are cleaned once in 5 years, if ever.
Cleaning protocol: empty tank, scrub walls and floor with a stiff brush and chlorine solution (1 tablespoon household bleach per 5 litres water), rinse thoroughly, inspect for damage, fill and use. Professional tank cleaning services exist in Jaipur and most Indian cities for under ₹3,000.
Tank Inspection Schedule
Annual inspection: drain, check for cracks, check the overflow pipe (is it running when it shouldn't?), check the inlet valve (is it closing properly?), look for any staining on the external walls of the tank. Minor issues caught annually prevent major repairs every 5 years.
Full waterproofing review every 5-7 years: depending on the system used. Crystalline systems last longer (20+ years, self-healing). Cementitious coatings need review at 7-10 years. Epoxy linings at 10-15 years.
The Cost of Getting It Right
Potable water-rated waterproofing for a typical 5,000 litre RCC overhead tank: ₹10,000–18,000 for materials. Labour ₹8,000–10,000. Total ₹14,000–30,000.
This protects the water supply for a building of 20-40 people for 7-10 years.
The cost of using the wrong product and contaminating the water supply: at minimum, a complete drain, cleaning, re-waterproofing with the right product, and the health consequences for building occupants during the contamination period. In a commercial building or housing society, potential legal liability.
There is no sensible argument for cutting costs on water tank waterproofing.