Frozen Bath Drain ((install)) -

Fill a hot water bottle (not boiling) and press it directly over the drain opening. Alternatively, pour ½ cup of rock salt or table salt into the drain—salt lowers the freezing point of water and can slowly melt the ice.

Here’s a blog post draft for your site, written to be helpful, clear, and engaging for homeowners dealing with a frozen bath drain. Help! My Bath Drain Is Frozen – How to Thaw It Fast (Without Breaking Pipes) frozen bath drain

But don’t panic—and absolutely don’t pour boiling water down the drain (that can crack pipes). Here’s how to safely thaw a frozen bath drain and prevent it from happening again. Fill a hot water bottle (not boiling) and

Once you see slight drainage, slowly pour warm water—not boiling—down the overflow plate or drain. Start with a cup at a time. Boiling water can shatter PVC or crack old metal pipes. Once you see slight drainage, slowly pour warm

Turn up the heat in the house and close the bathroom door. Place a small space heater (safe distance from water) near the tub for 30–60 minutes. Often, just raising the room temperature will start melting the ice.