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Service Guide Β· Sewer Lines

The Complete Sewer Line Guide: What Happens During a Professional Service Call

You've booked sewer line service β€” now what? Our sewer specialist walks through the camera inspection process, every repair option from snaking to CIPP lining, real 2026 pricing across Los Angeles and San Diego, and the trenchless-vs-excavation decision that can save you $10,000+. The companion to our sewer line service page.

RG
Ricardo Garcia Sewer & Jetting Specialist Β· 18 yrs
11 min Reading time Mar 22, 2026 Published May 6 Updated
Licensed plumber reviewing sewer camera footage on a monitor showing root intrusion inside a clay tile sewer lateral, with push-rod camera equipment visible
Photo: Sewer specialist Ricardo Garcia reviewing camera footage of root intrusion in a North Park clay tile lateral β€” the same 80-year-old pipe we lined with CIPP the following day, preserving the avocado tree above it.

Sewer line service is the most expensive category in residential plumbing β€” and the one homeowners understand the least. A kitchen sink clog is $149 and done in an hour. A main sewer line replacement can be $18,000 and take a week. The range is enormous, the stakes are high, and the terminology is dense: CIPP lining, pipe bursting, hydro jetting, cleanouts, laterals, offsets, bellies. Most homeowners sign a quote without knowing what they're actually buying.

After 18 years running sewer and jetting crews across Los Angeles and San Diego, and personally completing over 1,800 camera inspections and 620 trenchless sewer repairs, I've written this guide as the companion to our sewer line service page. It walks you through the anatomy of your sewer system, the six issues we see most, every repair option available, the camera inspection that should always come first, and real 2026 pricing β€” so you can book with confidence and know exactly what you're paying for.

Your sewer system explained

Before diving into the service call, it helps to understand what your sewer system actually is. Most homeowners think "sewer line" means one pipe β€” but it's actually a branching system with distinct sections, each with its own failure patterns and repair approaches.

The four sections of your sewer system

  • Branch drains β€” the small pipes (1ΒΌ"–2") that carry waste from individual fixtures (sinks, toilets, showers, tubs, washing machines) to the main stack or main line.
  • Main stack β€” the vertical 3"–4" pipe that runs from your roof (where it vents) down through the home, collecting waste from every branch. Also called the soil stack.
  • House sewer (building drain) β€” the horizontal 4" pipe that runs from the base of the stack, under your foundation or through your crawlspace, to the exterior wall. This is inside your home's footprint.
  • Sewer lateral β€” the pipe that runs from your home's exterior wall to the city main, usually buried 3–6 feet underground, crossing your yard, driveway, sidewalk, and sometimes the street. This is what most people mean by "sewer line."

Why the lateral matters most

The sewer lateral is the section most likely to cause you problems β€” and the section homeowners are most often surprised to learn they own. In both Los Angeles and San Diego, the homeowner is responsible for the entire lateral, including the portion under the sidewalk, parkway, and street, all the way to the connection with the city main. The city is responsible only for the main itself.

This is why sewer line repairs can involve concrete cutting in the public right-of-way, traffic control, and coordination with the municipal public works department. It's also why trenchless methods (CIPP lining and pipe bursting) are so valuable β€” they minimize surface disruption on property you don't own.

The cleanout β€” your access point

Every sewer system should have at least one cleanout β€” a capped access point that lets a plumber insert a snake or camera without pulling a toilet or breaking concrete. In California, code requires:

  • One cleanout at the base of the main stack
  • One cleanout where the house sewer exits the building
  • One cleanout at the property line or near the city main connection (for laterals over 100 feet)
  • Additional cleanouts at every change of direction greater than 45Β°

Many older LA and SD homes are missing one or more of these cleanouts. Installing a missing cleanout ($890–$1,650) is often the first step of a sewer repair β€” it gives us access for inspection and future maintenance without destructive entry.

The five pipe materials in California sewers

Your sewer lateral is made of one of five materials, depending on when your home was built. The material determines failure patterns, repair options, and lifespan.

Material Era Failure pattern Repair approach
Clay tile (vitrified)1900s–1970sRoot intrusion at mortar jointsCIPP lining, pipe bursting
Cast iron1930s–1980sInternal rust, channel rot on bottomCIPP lining, replacement
Orangeburg1940s–1970sCollapse, ovaling, delaminationPipe bursting (only)
ABS (black plastic)1970s–1990sJoint separation, crackingSpot repair, CIPP
PVC (white plastic)1980s–presentRoot intrusion at joints, belliesSpot repair, CIPP

Clay tile β€” the LA and SD canyon standard

Clay tile (vitrified clay pipe, or VCP) is the most common sewer material in pre-1970 Los Angeles and San Diego homes β€” particularly in canyon and hillside neighborhoods like Silver Lake, Hollywood, North Park, Hillcrest, and Pasadena. These pipes were installed in 3-foot sections with mortar joints every 3 feet.

The failure pattern is consistent: tree roots penetrate every mortar joint, gradually filling the pipe with a dense root mat. Soil movement over decades causes joint offsets and bellies. The pipe itself (the clay) is essentially immortal β€” it's the joints that fail. CIPP lining is our default repair for clay tile because it creates a jointless, root-proof pipe-within-a-pipe without excavation.

Cast iron β€” the mid-century workhorse

Cast iron was common in mid-century homes, particularly in Long Beach, Glendale, and post-war tract developments. The material itself is strong, but cast iron corrodes from the inside out β€” particularly along the bottom, where standing water sits between uses ("channel rot"). A cast iron lateral that's 50+ years old often has a fully intact top half and a bottom half that's rusted through to paper-thin metal.

Orangeburg β€” the material that must be replaced

Orangeburg pipe is bituminous fiber β€” essentially compressed tar paper rolled into a tube. It was installed as a cheap post-war alternative to cast iron and clay, primarily in 1940s–1970s tract homes in the San Fernando Valley, Chula Vista, and parts of Long Beach. The engineered lifespan was 50 years; we're now past that, and Orangeburg is failing catastrophically β€” ovaling, delaminating, and collapsing. Orangeburg cannot be lined; it must be replaced, typically by pipe bursting.

If your home was built between 1945 and 1970 and you don't know what your sewer lateral is made of, a camera inspection will identify it in minutes. If it's Orangeburg, plan for a full replacement.

ABS and PVC β€” the modern standard

ABS (black plastic) was common in the 1970s and 80s but was largely phased out due to cracking issues at joints and UV degradation. PVC (white plastic) has been the standard since the late 1980s and is the material we install on all new sewer work. PVC failures are usually installation-related (poor glue joints, improper slope, lack of bedding) rather than material-related.

The six most common sewer line issues

After 18 years and 1,800+ camera inspections, I can tell you that 95% of sewer line calls fall into one of six categories. Here they are, in order of frequency:

1. Root intrusion (60% of calls)

The single most common sewer issue in California. Tree roots seek out the moisture and nutrients in sewer lines, penetrating at every joint, crack, or loose connection. In clay tile and cast iron laterals, roots typically enter at mortar joints or rusted fittings and grow into dense mats that restrict or fully block flow.

Symptoms: Multiple drain backups, gurgling toilets, slow drainage throughout the home, recurring clogs every 6–18 months despite snaking.

Fix: Hydro jetting to clear roots + foaming root treatment (Root-X) to kill regrowth. Long-term: CIPP lining to create a jointless, root-proof pipe.

2. Grease and FOG buildup (15% of calls)

Fats, oils, and grease (FOG) poured down kitchen drains solidify inside the sewer lateral, coating the pipe walls and gradually restricting flow. In San Diego's hard water, the grease reacts with calcium to form a concrete-like calcium stearate that's nearly impossible to remove with a snake.

Symptoms: Kitchen drain backups that return within weeks of snaking, slow drainage throughout the home, sewer smell from floor drains.

Fix: Hydro jetting with a grease-specific nozzle. Prevention: never pour grease down any drain.

3. Offset joints and bellies (10% of calls)

Soil settlement, seismic activity, and tree root pressure cause pipe sections to shift relative to each other. An offset is where two sections no longer align; a belly is where a section has sagged, creating a low point that holds standing water. Both trap debris and accelerate clogs.

Symptoms: Recurring clogs at the same location, slow drainage even after jetting, gurgling sounds.

Fix: Minor offsets can be lined with CIPP. Severe bellies require excavation and re-grading β€” trenchless methods can't fix slope issues.

4. Cracks and fractures (8% of calls)

Longitudinal cracks (running along the pipe length) are common in old clay tile and cast iron. They're typically caused by soil pressure, root pressure, or ground movement. Circumferential cracks (around the pipe) are more serious and indicate structural failure.

Symptoms: Sewer smell in the yard, sinkholes or lush patches above the lateral, root intrusion at the crack.

Fix: CIPP lining for longitudinal cracks. Excavation or pipe bursting for circumferential cracks.

5. Collapsed sections (5% of calls)

The most severe failure β€” the pipe has fully collapsed, blocking flow completely. Common in Orangeburg, severely corroded cast iron, and clay tile under heavy loads (driveways, mature trees).

Symptoms: Complete sewer backup, no flow through the line, sinkholes in the yard.

Fix: Pipe bursting (trenchless replacement) or excavation.

6. Foreign objects and construction debris (2% of calls)

Less common but memorable: toys flushed down toilets, wipes accumulated into "fatbergs," roots dragging in soil, and (rarely) construction debris from remodels. Camera inspection reveals these immediately.

Fix: Retrieval with a snake and retrieval head, or hydro jetting to break up and flush.

🎯 The diagnostic shortcut

If multiple drains are backing up at the same time (toilets, showers, and sinks on different sides of the house), the problem is in the main sewer lateral. If one drain is backed up while others work fine, the problem is in that fixture's branch line. This is the single most useful diagnostic signal homeowners can give us when booking.

Step 1: The camera inspection (always first)

Every sewer line service call at Pacific Line starts with a camera inspection β€” and we include it in the price at no extra charge on main-line jobs. This is the single most important step in the entire process. Without a camera, any plumber is guessing.

What a camera inspection actually does

We insert a high-definition, self-leveling camera mounted on a push rod into your sewer line β€” typically through an existing cleanout or, if necessary, by pulling a toilet. The camera transmits live video to a monitor while a locator transmitter on the camera head lets us trace the exact path and depth of the pipe from the surface above.

The camera reveals things no snake can diagnose:

  • Root intrusion β€” hair-like root tips or full root mats at joints
  • Grease buildup β€” layered coating narrowing the pipe
  • Mineral scale β€” particularly in SD's hard water
  • Offset joints β€” from soil settlement
  • Cracks β€” longitudinal or circumferential
  • Bellies β€” sagged sections holding standing water
  • Collapsed sections β€” pipe has fully failed
  • Foreign objects β€” toys, wipes, construction debris
  • Pipe material β€” clay tile, cast iron, Orangeburg, PVC, ABS
  • Pipe size β€” typically 3" or 4" for residential laterals

What you get with every inspection

  • Live walkthrough of the footage with the technician (you see what they see)
  • A full copy of the video on a USB drive or emailed link
  • A written report documenting each finding
  • A diagram showing the exact location of every defect, measured in feet from the cleanout
  • Depth readings for each defect (so repair can be planned accurately)
  • Material identification and remaining life estimate
  • A prioritized repair recommendation with flat-rate pricing

The inspection typically takes 45–75 minutes on a single-family home. Cost is $189–$289 for a standalone inspection β€” waived if you proceed with any repair.

Why the camera comes first

Without a camera, a plumber is guessing. They run a snake, feel resistance, push through it, and hope the clog is cleared. Maybe it is. Maybe the snake punched a small hole through a much larger root mass that will reform in 3 months. Maybe the line has a break that the snake made worse. Maybe hydro-jetting would have been the better tool, but the plumber didn't know because they never looked inside.

The camera answers every question before a tool goes into the pipe. It's the difference between a $289 auger that buys 6 months and an $849 jetting pass that buys 4 years. It's the difference between "your drain is clear" and "your drain is clear, but the pipe has 15 feet of heavy root intrusion that will return in 18 months β€” here are your options."

For a deeper look at the five warning signs that should prompt a camera inspection, see our 5 signs your sewer line needs repair guide.

Step 2: Cleaning options

Once the camera has documented the clog's cause, the technician selects the appropriate cleaning method. There are two primary options, plus a root treatment add-on:

Option 1: Auger / snaking ($289–$549)

A motorized steel cable with a cutting head is fed into the line to cut through roots and break up clogs. Effective for moderate root intrusion at 1–3 joints, grease clogs, and foreign objects.

What it does: Punches a hole through the clog, restoring flow. The cutting head clears roughly its own diameter through the blockage β€” but the surrounding pipe wall retains whatever buildup was already there.

How long it lasts: Typically 6–18 months before the clog returns.

When it wins: First-time backups, localized single-point clogs, budget-constrained situations, old fragile pipe that can't handle jetting pressure.

Option 2: Hydro jetting ($549–$989)

A specialized nozzle blasts 4,000 PSI water in all directions, scouring the entire pipe wall clean β€” roots, grease, scale, and debris.

What it does: Restores the pipe to near-original diameter, not just a tunnel through the clog.

How long it lasts: Typically 2–5 years before regrowth.

When it wins: Recurring main line backups, heavy grease buildup, root intrusion at multiple joints, hard water scale, pre-lining preparation.

When it's risky: Broken or collapsed pipe, severely corroded cast iron with thin walls, Orangeburg pipe. The 4,000 PSI water can damage structurally unsound pipes. This is exactly why the camera inspection comes first β€” to verify the pipe can handle jetting.

For the full breakdown of when snaking wins vs. hydro jetting, see our hydro jetting vs snaking guide.

Add-on: Foaming root treatment ($120–$180)

After mechanical root cutting (by snake or jetting), we apply a foaming root-killing treatment (Root-X or similar) that coats the entire pipe wall with a copper-based herbicide. The foam kills root tips at every joint without harming the tree above ground. This extends the interval between root cuttings from 12 months to 3–5 years.

For root-prone lines (mature trees near the lateral), we recommend annual root treatment as long-term maintenance β€” much cheaper than annual jetting.

Step 3: Repair options

If the camera reveals structural damage β€” cracks, offsets, bellies, collapsed sections, or failing Orangeburg β€” cleaning won't solve the problem. You need a repair. Here are the four options, from least to most invasive:

Option 1: Spot repair ($1,800–$3,400)

Excavate at the exact location of the damage, replace the affected section (typically 3–10 feet), and backfill. Appropriate when the damage is limited to one or two specific points and the rest of the line is sound.

Pros: Lowest cost for limited damage, permanent fix at that location.

Cons: Requires excavation at the damage site β€” which may be under a driveway, sidewalk, or mature landscaping. Doesn't address the rest of the line.

Option 2: CIPP trenchless lining ($95–$165 per foot)

Cured-in-place pipe (CIPP) is our default repair for 70% of sewer line issues. A resin-saturated felt tube is inverted into the existing pipe and cured with hot water or steam, creating a "pipe-within-a-pipe" that's jointless, root-proof, and structural.

How it works: We hydro-jet the host pipe clean, inspect with camera, then invert a custom-sized felt liner saturated with epoxy or polyester resin into the pipe using air or water pressure. The liner is cured in place (typically 2–4 hours) to form a rigid, jointless new pipe inside the old one. We reinstate any branch connections with a robotic cutter.

What it fixes: Cracks, root intrusion, offset joints, corrosion, minor bellies.

What it doesn't fix: Collapsed sections, severe bellies requiring re-grading, Orangeburg pipe.

Lifespan: 50+ years.

Warranty: 50 years on the liner, 2 years on workmanship.

Pros: No excavation (only two small access pits), preserves landscaping, driveways, and sidewalks, typically 30–50% less than open-trench once restoration is factored in, can be completed in a single day.

Cons: Slightly reduces internal diameter (about ΒΌ"), not suitable for all failure modes.

Option 3: Pipe bursting ($140–$220 per foot)

A trenchless replacement method where a bursting head is pulled through the old pipe, fracturing it outward while simultaneously pulling in new HDPE pipe. Used when the old pipe is fully collapsed, severely misaligned, or needs to be upsized (e.g., from 3" to 4").

What it fixes: Everything CIPP can't β€” collapses, major offsets, Orangeburg, upsizing needs.

Lifespan: 50–100 years (HDPE).

Warranty: 25 years on the pipe, 2 years on workmanship.

Pros: Full replacement without excavation, only two access pits, can upsize the pipe, suitable for Orangeburg.

Cons: More expensive than CIPP, requires pulling force that may disturb nearby utilities, not suitable near foundations or under structures.

Option 4: Open-trench replacement ($6,500–$18,000+)

A backhoe digs a trench from house to street, exposing the entire line for removal and replacement. This is the last resort β€” necessary only when:

  • The line has a severe belly that needs re-grading
  • Multiple sections are fully collapsed
  • The line runs under structures that can't be tunneled under
  • Utility conflicts prevent trenchless methods
  • The homeowner prefers traditional replacement

Pros: Permanent fix, addresses slope issues, suitable for any failure mode.

Cons: Most expensive option, destroys landscaping, driveways, and sidewalks, takes 3–7 days plus restoration time, often doubles in cost once restoration is factored in.

⚠ The open-trench trap

We've seen homeowners accept a $7,500 open-trench quote only to discover the final bill was $16,000 after driveway replacement, sidewalk replacement, and landscaping restoration. Always ask: "Does this quote include full restoration to pre-existing condition?" If the answer is no, get the restoration cost in writing before signing.

Trenchless vs. excavation: the decision framework

The default for any sewer line repair should be trenchless β€” CIPP lining or pipe bursting. Open-trench excavation should only be considered when trenchless methods aren't suitable. Here's our decision framework:

Choose trenchless when:

  • The line has cracks, root intrusion, offset joints, or corrosion but intact structure
  • The line runs under landscaping, driveways, sidewalks, or hardscape you want to preserve
  • Mature trees are above the line and you want to preserve them
  • The line runs under the street or sidewalk (avoiding traffic control and municipal restoration)
  • The line is Orangeburg (use pipe bursting)
  • The line needs upsizing (use pipe bursting)
  • Budget is a factor β€” trenchless is typically 30–50% less once restoration is included

Choose open-trench when:

  • The line has a severe belly that needs re-grading (trenchless can't fix slope)
  • Multiple sections have fully collapsed
  • The line runs under a structure that can't be tunneled under
  • Utility conflicts prevent trenchless methods (rare but possible)
  • The homeowner is already doing major landscaping and trench cost is marginal

On a typical 60-foot sewer lateral in North Park, the cost comparison looks like this:

Method Repair cost Restoration Total
CIPP lining$5,700–$9,900$0 (no excavation)$5,700–$9,900
Pipe bursting$8,400–$13,200$500–$1,500 (access pits)$8,900–$14,700
Open-trench$6,500–$12,000$4,500–$12,000$11,000–$24,000

The restoration column is what most homeowners miss. Open-trench repair quotes often exclude driveway replacement, sidewalk replacement, landscaping, and irrigation system repair β€” which can double or triple the final price. Trenchless methods preserve everything above the pipe.

2026 sewer line pricing

Real numbers from Pacific Line's last 380 sewer line service calls (May 2025–May 2026). All prices are flat-rate, include labor and materials, and come with written warranties:

Service LA & SD price Time on site
Sewer camera inspection (standalone)$189–$28945–75 min
Main line auger / snaking$289–$5491–2 hrs
Hydro jetting main line$549–$9892–4 hrs
Root cutting + foaming root treatment$389–$6891.5–2.5 hrs
Spot repair (single section, excavated)$1,800–$3,4001–2 days
CIPP trenchless lining (per foot)$95–$165 / ft1 day
Pipe bursting (per foot)$140–$220 / ft1–2 days
Sewer cleanout installation$890–$1,6504–6 hrs
Full lateral replacement (open trench)$6,500–$18,000+3–7 days

Camera inspection is included free with any main line cleaning or repair. All prices include LADBS or DSD permit handling where required, materials, labor, and a written warranty.

What affects the final price

  • Line length β€” most SD and LA laterals run 40–100 feet; longer lines cost more for trenchless
  • Pipe diameter β€” 4" is standard residential; 6" multi-family costs more to line
  • Access conditions β€” existing cleanouts reduce cost; missing cleanouts add $890–$1,650
  • Depth β€” lines deeper than 6 feet require more excavation for access pits
  • Location β€” lines under driveways, sidewalks, or streets require traffic control and municipal coordination
  • Number of defects β€” multiple spot repairs vs. single full lining
  • Time of service β€” after-hours emergency calls carry a $149 dispatch fee

Financing

Most sewer line repairs over $1,000 qualify for 0% APR financing for 12–18 months through our GreenSky partnership. Application takes 90 seconds with a soft credit pull, and approval is instant. For a $9,000 CIPP lining on an 18-month 0% plan, that's $500/month with no interest.

For the full service-by-service pricing breakdown across all our offerings, see our 2026 LA pricing guide.

Permits and responsibility

Who owns the sewer lateral?

You do β€” the homeowner. This surprises many people. In both Los Angeles and San Diego, the homeowner is responsible for the entire sewer lateral from the house to the point where it connects to the city main β€” including the portion under the sidewalk, parkway, and street. The city is responsible only for the main itself.

This means that a repair under the street or sidewalk is still your cost, and still requires city permits and traffic control in some cases. This is why trenchless methods (CIPP, pipe bursting) are so valuable β€” they minimize surface restoration and avoid lengthy permitting for work in the public right-of-way.

When permits are required

Sewer line repairs almost always require a permit from LADBS (Los Angeles), DSD (San Diego), or the relevant municipal building department. Permits are required for:

  • Any replacement of sewer pipe (even a single section)
  • CIPP trenchless lining (most jurisdictions)
  • Pipe bursting (all jurisdictions)
  • Open-trench excavation
  • Cleanout installation
  • Work in the public right-of-way (requires additional encroachment permit)

Permits are typically not required for snaking, hydro jetting, or root treatment β€” those are considered maintenance, not repair.

We handle all permit applications, scheduling, and inspection coordination as part of our quoted price. Permit fees typically run $280–$520 depending on jurisdiction and scope, and are already factored into our estimates.

Insurance coverage

Most California homeowner's insurance policies exclude sewer line repair as maintenance. However, many policies cover the resulting damage inside your home from a sewage backup (flooring, drywall, furniture) up to a sub-limit. Some policies offer a "sewer lateral endorsement" or "service line coverage" rider for $50–$100/year that covers $5,000–$15,000 in repair costs β€” a very worthwhile addition. Call your agent and ask specifically about sewer lateral coverage before you need it.

Sewer lateral compliance at sale time

In the City of Los Angeles, a sewer lateral inspection is required at the time of property sale β€” the Private Sewer Lateral Compliance Program. The seller must provide either a current (within 6 months) camera inspection showing no defects, or documentation of repairs. Many sellers discover their lateral needs repair during escrow β€” we handle these time-sensitive repairs regularly and can complete most within 5–7 business days.

The camera inspection is the single most cost-effective diagnostic in plumbing. For $189, you get a complete picture of your sewer line's condition, a prioritized repair plan, and documentation for insurance and sale purposes. Skip the camera and you're paying for guesswork β€” and guesswork is always more expensive in the long run. Ricardo Garcia, Sewer & Jetting Specialist Β· Pacific Line Plumbing

Frequently asked questions

Don't wait for the backup

Let's look inside your sewer line before it fails.

Book a $189 sewer camera inspection with a licensed specialist. You'll get a full video, written report, and a prioritized repair plan β€” and the fee is waived if you proceed with any repair. Same-day appointments available.

RG
About the author

Ricardo Garcia

Sewer and Jetting Specialist at Pacific Line with 18 years of field experience. Ricardo has personally completed over 1,800 sewer camera inspections and 620 trenchless sewer repairs across LA and SD, and holds factory certification from HammerHead (pipe bursting) and Perma-Liner (CIPP). He lives in East LA with a 70-year-old clay tile sewer lateral that he lined in 2019 β€” and has only done camera inspections on since.

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