Line — Clogged Sewer

Because in the battle between a homeowner and a sewer line, the pipe always wins. Your only real power is to catch the problem before it catches you.

It starts subtly. A gurgle from the toilet after you flush. Water taking an extra few seconds to drain from the shower. A faint, foul smell in the basement. These small annoyances are easy to ignore—until they aren’t. clogged sewer line

A heavy-duty motorized snake with a cutting blade can chop through roots and break up dense clogs. It’s faster than hydro-jetting but less thorough—it punches a hole through the clog rather than cleaning the pipe walls. It’s a good first response for an emergency backup. Because in the battle between a homeowner and

This is the number one cause of sewer line clogs in older homes. Tree roots crave moisture and nutrients. Even a hairline crack in a clay or cast-iron pipe emits warm, nutrient-rich water vapor. Roots sense this from yards away. They tunnel toward the pipe, grow inside, and create a net-like mesh that catches toilet paper, grease, and debris. Over months or years, that mesh becomes a solid dam. By the time you notice a problem, the roots may have already cracked the pipe apart. A gurgle from the toilet after you flush

When that pipe gets blocked, the waste backs up. The lowest point in your home—often a basement toilet, floor drain, or utility sink—becomes the overflow point. Within minutes, you can have inches of contaminated water spreading across your floors, ruining carpets, drywall, and irreplaceable belongings.

Depending on what the camera finds, your options range from simple to invasive: