▸ Cost Guide

Sewer Line Repair Cost: The Real Numbers for 2026

Before you call a plumber, know what sewer line repair actually costs. We break down real pricing for every repair type — from a $150 snake-out to a $20,000 full replacement — so you can walk into any estimate with confidence.

10 min read By HomeSewer Editorial Team
Drain Snaking
$150–$500
Professional clearing of a single clog
Spot Repair
$500–$2,500
Localized 1–4 ft section repair
Trenchless Lining
$4,000–$14,000
CIPP lining for full 40–50 ft line
Full Replacement
$5,000–$20,000+
Open-cut full main line replacement

Sewer line repair is one of the most significant unexpected home expenses — and one of the easiest to get overcharged on. Understanding real costs before you call anyone is the single best protection you have.

1. Full Sewer Line Repair Cost Summary

Repair Type Low Typical High Best For
Professional drain snaking $150 $200–$350 $500 Basic clog
Hydro-jetting $300 $400–$700 $1,000 Grease, roots clearing
Sewer camera inspection $150 $200–$350 $400 Diagnosis (always do this first)
Spot repair (1–4 ft) $500 $1,000–$2,000 $2,500 Localized crack or joint
CIPP pipe lining (per ft) $80/ft $120–$180/ft $250/ft Cracked line, root intrusion
CIPP lining — 50 ft line $4,000 $6,000–$9,000 $14,000 Full residential line
Pipe bursting (per ft) $60/ft $80–$160/ft $200/ft Severely deteriorated pipe
Pipe bursting — 50 ft line $3,000 $4,500–$7,500 $10,000 Old clay/Orangeburg lines
Open-cut replacement (per ft) $50/ft $80–$150/ft $200/ft Collapsed pipe
Open-cut — 50 ft line (all-in) $5,000 $8,000–$15,000 $22,000 Includes restoration

2. What Drives Sewer Line Repair Costs

Two homeowners can get quotes that differ by $5,000 for the same job. Here's why:

3. Cost: Drain Snaking & Hydro-Jetting

These are your first-response tools — clearing blockages without any pipe repair.

Service Price Range What It Fixes
Drain snaking (single drain) $150–$300 Sink, tub, toilet clogs within 25 ft
Main line snaking $200–$500 Main sewer blockage up to 100 ft
Hydro-jetting (main line) $400–$900 Grease, scale, minor roots, full clearing
Hydro-jetting + camera $500–$1,100 Pre-lining prep or diagnostic combo
💡 Always Try Snaking First

If a plumber immediately recommends a $6,000 lining job without first attempting to snake or camera the line, walk away. The correct diagnosis sequence is: snake → camera → repair only if needed.

4. Cost: Spot Repair

When a camera reveals that damage is confined to a single 1–4 foot section — one cracked joint, one root entry point — a spot repair is the most cost-effective solution.

The plumber excavates just that small area, removes the damaged section, and installs a new pipe coupling. Total cost: $500–$2,500 depending on depth and access.

⚠️ Spot Repair Red Flag

Some contractors upsell from a $300 camera inspection to a "$1,800 spot repair" without genuine evidence. Always ask to see the camera footage and the exact location of the damage before approving spot work.

5. Cost: Trenchless Repair (CIPP Lining & Pipe Bursting)

Trenchless repair preserves your yard and hardscaping. The per-foot cost is higher, but restoration costs are near zero.

CIPP Pipe Lining Cost

Line Length Low Average High
30 ft $2,400 $3,600–$5,400 $7,500
50 ft $4,000 $6,000–$9,000 $12,500
75 ft $6,000 $9,000–$13,500 $18,750
100 ft $8,000 $12,000–$18,000 $25,000

Pipe Bursting Cost

Line Length Low Average High
30 ft $1,800 $2,400–$4,800 $6,000
50 ft $3,000 $4,000–$8,000 $10,000
75 ft $4,500 $6,000–$12,000 $15,000
100 ft $6,000 $8,000–$16,000 $20,000

6. Cost: Open-Cut (Trench) Replacement

Traditional dig-and-replace. Lower per-foot labor cost, but adds significant excavation and restoration expenses that are often excluded from initial quotes.

Cost Component Low Typical High
Pipe + labor (per ft) $50 $80–$150 $200
Excavation equipment $500 $800–$2,000 $3,000
Concrete cutting + repair $0 $500–$2,000 $5,000
Lawn/landscaping restoration $200 $500–$2,500 $4,000
Permit $100 $200–$400 $500
Total (50 ft typical home) $4,850 $7,000–$14,000 $22,500

7. Hidden Costs to Budget For

🚨 The "Scope Creep" Scam

A common tactic: quote a low price, start digging, then tell you they "found much worse damage." Always get camera documentation of any new damage before approving expanded scope — and walk away if they can't provide it.

8. Trenchless vs. Open-Cut: True Total Cost

Item Trenchless Open-Cut
Pipe repair/replacement (50 ft) $5,000–$10,000 $3,000–$8,000
Excavation $0 (access pits only) $800–$3,000
Lawn restoration $0–$300 $500–$3,000
Driveway/concrete repair $0 $0–$5,000
Permit $100–$500 $100–$500
Realistic total $5,100–$10,800 $4,400–$19,500

For most residential jobs, trenchless comes out equal or cheaper when yard and driveway restoration is included. The gap widens significantly if your sewer line runs under a concrete driveway.

9. How to Save Money Without Cutting Corners

10. Frequently Asked Questions

The average homeowner spends $2,500–$7,000 on sewer line repair. Minor jobs (snaking + spot repair) run under $1,000. Trenchless repairs for a full 50-ft line typically run $5,000–$10,000. Full open-cut replacement with restoration averages $8,000–$15,000.
Not always on the sticker price — trenchless runs $80–$250/ft vs open-cut's $50–$150/ft. But open-cut adds $2,000–$8,000 in yard, driveway, and landscaping restoration costs. When those are included, trenchless is typically comparable or cheaper for homes with concrete driveways or significant landscaping over the sewer path.
A sewer under a concrete driveway adds $1,500–$5,000 in concrete cutting and replacement to open-cut jobs. This is exactly where trenchless pipe lining (which only requires two small access pits) delivers massive cost savings — no concrete demolition at all.
Standard homeowners insurance does NOT cover sewer line repair. You need a "service line protection" endorsement (typically $50–$150/year added to your policy). Some home warranty plans include sewer lines but with significant caps and exclusions — read the fine print carefully.
The only way to get an accurate estimate is: (1) get a professional camera inspection first ($150–$400), then (2) get 3 written quotes based on the inspection findings. Every quote should specify: pipe footage, repair method, pipe grade/brand, permit inclusion, warranty terms, and what restoration (if any) is included.