Blender Leaking from the Bottom? Here’s the Quick Fix
Every time you blend, liquid pools under the jar and drips down the base — and it’s getting worse.
Blender leaks at the bottom are almost always caused by a worn blade gasket, a loose blade assembly, or a cracked jar. All are fixable without a repair shop.
Find your symptom in the table and go straight to the right fix.
| What you see | What it means | Go to |
|---|---|---|
| Leaks every time, right at the base | Blade assembly gasket worn or cracked | Fix 1 → |
| Only leaks during heavy blending | Blade assembly not fully tightened | Fix 2 → |
| Leak appears mid-jar, not at base | Hairline crack in jar body | Fix 3 → |
Inspect and Replace the Blade Assembly Gasket
💰 Free – Under $10Every blender has a rubber gasket (o-ring) that seals the blade assembly to the bottom of the jar. It takes a beating from heat, detergent, and constant twisting — and once it cracks or deforms even slightly, liquid seeps out every time you blend.
Replacement gaskets are the most common blender repair part. Search your blender model number plus ‘gasket’ or ‘o-ring’ — most arrive in 2 days.
Check That the Blade Assembly Is Fully Tightened
💰 FreeA blade assembly that’s hand-tightened but not fully seated allows liquid to work its way through the threads under the pressure of blending. It leaks at the base every time and gets worse the longer you blend.
After washing, dry the threads before reassembling. Wet threads with soap residue are slippery and make it easy to under-tighten without realizing it.
Replace a Cracked Jar
💰 Free – Under $25Hairline cracks at the base of the blender jar — especially around the blade assembly opening — are invisible until liquid finds them under pressure. They often develop from thermal shock (hot liquid in a cold jar) or from over-tightening the blade assembly.
Never pour boiling liquid directly into a cold blender jar. Let hot liquids cool to at least 140°F first, and always hold the lid firmly when blending warm liquids.
🤔 Still Not Working After All the Fixes?
If you’ve replaced the gasket, confirmed the blade assembly is tight, and the jar has no visible cracks — and it still leaks — the blade assembly housing itself may be warped or cracked from heat damage.
Blade assemblies run $15–$25 for most brands and are worth replacing. If the blender is more than 5 years old, a new Vitamix or Ninja in the $80–$150 range will outperform and outlast the repair.
Did This Guide Save You Money?
I write every guide myself so people don’t throw away perfectly fixable appliances. If this helped you today, a coffee means a lot.