Drain Clearing in Maine

HD camera inspection that shows you exactly what’s inside your sewer lateral — before you buy a home, before you approve a repair, and before a surprise backup costs you $15,000. Most inspections completed in 30 to 60 minutes with same-day digital reports.

$150–$300

Typical residential inspection cost

30–60 min

On-site inspection time

Same-day

Digital reports for real estate timelines

Camera-Inspection

A Camera Shows What a Home Inspection Can't

A slow drain or sudden backup is almost always a symptom of something specific: grease in the kitchen line, hair and soap scum in the bathroom drain, root intrusion in the main lateral, a partial collapse, or a structural failure. Clearing without diagnosing means you’ll be calling again in six months for the same problem.

Our drain clearing service starts with a quick camera inspection where appropriate, then applies the right clearing tool for the actual cause. Sometimes it’s mechanical snaking. Sometimes it’s hydro jetting. Sometimes the camera reveals structural damage that needs CIPP lining instead of repeated clearing. We tell you what we see.

We work on residential kitchen, bathroom, laundry, and main sewer lines, plus commercial floor drains, grease trap lines, and main sewer laterals. Service is prompt, pricing is transparent, and we don’t upsell work you don’t need.

The Maine buyer math: A sewer scope costs $150 to $300. A failed sewer lateral in Maine costs $5,000 to $25,000 to repair and is typically not covered by homeowners insurance. For any home built before 1980 in Portland, Bangor, Lewiston, Augusta, or similar Maine cities, a scope is the highest-ROI due diligence you can do before closing.

When a Sewer Scope Inspection Is Worth the Money

Not every home needs one. Here are the situations in Maine where a scope is either essential or strongly recommended.

Buying any Maine home built before 1980

Sewer laterals from this era are typically clay tile, cast iron, or Orangeburg pipe — all at or past design life. Portland’s post-1866 neighborhoods, Bangor’s pre-1911 fire zone, and Lewiston/Auburn’s mill-era housing are particularly high-risk. A scope is the single best-value contingency inspection you can add.

Slow drains or recurring backups

If multiple drains run slowly, or your basement floor drain has backed up more than once, the problem is very likely in the main lateral – not at individual fixtures. A scope identifies whether you need simple clearing, hydro jetting, or structural repair.

Before approving any sewer repair quote

Multiple contractors recommending different work? Camera footage settles the question. A scope gives you documented evidence of what’s wrong so you can evaluate quotes honestly and avoid upsells on work you don’t need.

After large tree installation or removal

Root intrusion is one of the top failure causes for older Maine sewer laterals, especially in Portland’s Deering neighborhood and similar tree-lined streets. If you’ve added or removed mature trees within 15 feet of your lateral, a baseline scope is worth the visibility.

Insurance or legal documentation

Documented video footage is often required for insurance claims after basement floods, or for liability disputes involving shared sewer laterals in multi-family properties. Our recordings are timestamped and archived.

Pre-listing if you're selling a Maine home

Proactive sewer scopes are becoming standard in Maine’s competitive markets. A clean scope report removes a major buyer objection. If the scope finds problems, you’d rather know and price accordingly than have a buyer find it during their inspection and renegotiate.

What Our Camera Finds in Maine Sewer Lines

Maine’s housing stock spans 300 years. Your pipe material tells us almost everything about what to expect.

Pipe MaterialEra InstalledLife Expectancy2026 Status
Clay tile1850s–1950s50–60 yearsPast life — expect root/joint failures
Cast iron1900–197550–100 yearsCorroding from inside out
Orangeburg1945–197230–50 yearsAll past life — deforming/collapsing
ABS plastic1970s–1990s50–80 yearsGenerally OK — watch joints
PVC1980s–present100+ yearsModern standard
The scope confirms which material is in the ground. It also shows what’s happening inside: root intrusion, joint offsets from frost heave, bellies (low spots that hold water and debris), scale buildup, fractures, and collapses. In Portland and the West End, we routinely find 1880s-1920s clay with heavy root mats. In post-war neighborhoods from South Portland to Scarborough to Auburn, we find corroded cast iron and failing Orangeburg. In Falmouth and Yarmouth newer builds, we usually find PVC in good condition — and tell you so.

How a Trenchless Maine Sewer Scope Works

Schedule usually same-week

Call (207) 401-7622 or book online. For real estate contingency deadlines we prioritize same-day or next-day appointments. Tell us the property address, age of home if you know it, and whether you have an accessible cleanout.

On-site: 30 to 60 minutes

A technician arrives with a self-leveling HD camera and locator. We access the lateral through an existing cleanout where possible. For homes without a cleanout, we may pull a toilet (re-sealed at no charge) or access through a basement stack. The camera travels to the municipal main or until it hits a blockage.

Real-time review with you

You watch the footage as we're inspecting. We point out pipe material, any problems, and what each image means in plain English. If you're the buyer and not yet at the property, we can do this by video call or phone.

Written report + digital recording

Within 24 hours (often same-day) you receive the full video recording as a digital file, pipe-material identification, and a written summary of findings. If repair is needed, you get a written estimate — with absolutely no obligation to use us.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a sewer scope inspection cost in Maine?

Sewer scope inspections in Maine typically cost $150 to $300 for a standard residential inspection. The price depends on access, pipe length, and whether the property has an existing cleanout. Commercial and multi-unit inspections are priced on request. Compared to the $5,000–$25,000 cost of a surprise sewer repair, a scope is the cheapest due diligence you can do on a Maine home.

Most residential sewer scope inspections take 30 to 60 minutes on site. You receive the digital video recording and a written summary within 24 hours, often same-day for real estate contingency deadlines.

For any home built before 1980 in Maine, yes. Maine’s older housing stock in Portland, Bangor, Lewiston, and similar cities includes significant numbers of clay, cast iron, and Orangeburg sewer laterals that are near or past their design life. A standard home inspection does not include the sewer lateral. A failed sewer line is typically a $5,000–$25,000 surprise and not covered by homeowners insurance. A $200 scope inspection is the single highest-value due diligence item for Maine buyers.
A high-resolution, self-leveling camera travels through the sewer lateral from the cleanout (or toilet) to the municipal main. It reveals pipe material (clay, cast iron, Orangeburg, PVC), any cracks or fractures, root intrusion, joint offsets, bellies (sagging sections that hold water), buildup (grease, scale, debris), and collapsed sections. You receive a video recording, pipe-material identification, and a plain-English summary of what you’re looking at.
Yes and it’s one of the most valuable things a scope does. Orangeburg pipe (tar-impregnated wood fiber) was installed in Maine homes primarily from 1945 to 1972 and has a 30–50 year life expectancy. By 2026, all Orangeburg is beyond design life and actively failing. A camera scope identifies Orangeburg immediately by its oval, deformed cross-section. If your Maine home has Orangeburg, you are looking at repair or replacement, not maintenance.
Yes. Every Trenchless Maine sewer scope includes the full video recording (digital file you keep), pipe-material identification, a written finding summary, and — if repairs are needed — a clear, no-pressure recommendation. If your line is in good condition, we tell you that too. We do not upsell inspections into unnecessary repairs.
Yes. We work regularly with Maine home inspectors and realtors on pre-purchase sewer scopes. We accommodate inspection contingency timelines and can produce same-day reports for closing deadlines. Ask about our referral program.

You get options, not pressure. Depending on what the camera finds, repair might mean a spot liner, full CIPP lining, root removal via hydro jetting, or in rare cases traditional excavation. We give you a written estimate with the findings. You are free to get other quotes. The scope is independent of any repair work.

Stop Guessing. See What's in Your Sewer Line.

Book a sewer scope inspection anywhere in southern or central Maine. Same-day appointments available for real estate contingency deadlines. Digital recording and written summary included.