That’s why I tell people: routine maintenance isn’t a luxury. It’s insurance.
When I run a maintenance cleaning on a sewer line, I’m clearing out the stuff you don’t see building up: grease, soap scum, hair, and even tree roots creeping in from your yard. Every drop of water you use in your house goes down the same pipe — the one in your basement or underground outside that runs to the street.
Over time, that pipe narrows, the flow slows, and eventually it blocks. A maintenance cleaning resets the system before it ever gets to that point.
Here’s the straight truth:
Routine maintenance cleaning: a few hundred bucks.
Emergency sewer backup: thousands of dollars in damage — ruined floors, drywall, furniture, not to mention the health hazards of raw sewage in your home.
And if the line collapses because you ignored it? You’re looking at excavation, new pipe installation, permits, inspections. That’s tens of thousands.
Most homeowners don’t think about their sewer line until it’s already a nightmare. Out of sight, out of mind. And plenty of plumbers don’t talk about maintenance because they make more money when things break. But I’d rather see you once a year for a quick cleaning than once every five years for a disaster.
Routine sewer maintenance is like changing the oil in your car. Do it on schedule, and you avoid the breakdown. Ignore it, and you’re stuck on the side of the road with a blown engine — or in this case, ankle-deep in sewage.
Spend a little now, save a lot later. That’s the deal.
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