Signs Your Sewer Line Is Failing — Delaware County, PA

Signs Your Sewer Line Is Failing in Delaware County, PA

Know the Warning Signs Before a Slow Drain Becomes a Sewer Emergency

Most sewer line failures in Delaware County don’t happen overnight. The pipe deteriorates over months or years — clay tile joints crack, roots intrude, Orangeburg pipe deforms — and sends warning signs the whole time. The homeowners who catch it early pay for a lining job. The ones who wait pay for an emergency excavation and a flooded basement.

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Warning Signs Your Sewer Line Needs Attention

1. Multiple Slow Drains at the Same Time

One slow drain is usually a fixture-level clog. Multiple slow drains simultaneously — kitchen, bathroom, and laundry all backing up — means the blockage is in the main sewer line downstream of where all those fixtures connect. This is a main line problem, not a drain problem.

2. Gurgling Sounds From Toilets

When water drains from your sink or tub, you hear gurgling from the toilet. That gurgling is air being pushed back through the system by a partial blockage or venting problem downstream in the main line.

3. Sewage Smell in the Basement or Yard

A sewage smell without an active backup means the pipe has cracked and is leaching effluent into the surrounding soil. The smell rises through the ground or into the basement through floor drain traps. Crack in the pipe, not a clog.

4. Wet Spots or Unusually Green Grass Over the Sewer Line

A strip of unusually lush, green grass running from your house toward the street — or a soft, wet spot in the yard that doesn’t dry out — is sewage fertilizing the soil from a leaking lateral. The ground absorbs it; the grass loves it. You won’t smell it yet. The camera will show it.

5. Recurring Backups That Return Every 6-18 Months

A snake clears the backup. A few months later it returns in the same location. That pattern means the root intrusion point or structural defect was never fixed — just punched through temporarily. The problem is in the pipe wall, not the debris.

6. Foundation Cracks or Settling Near the Sewer Line Path

A leaking sewer lateral saturates the soil around the pipe. Saturated soil under a foundation causes settling. If you have new foundation cracks and a sewer line running nearby, the two may be connected.

7. Rodents or Insects in the Basement

Rats and cockroaches travel through sewer lines. A cracked or offset pipe gives them access points into the foundation. A sudden rodent problem in an older Delaware County home is sometimes a sewer pipe problem first.

What to Do When You Notice These Signs

Camera inspection is the only definitive answer. We run an HD camera through the full lateral, show you the footage, identify the exact location and cause of the problem, and give you a repair quote on the same visit. No guessing. No unnecessary digging to “see what’s going on.”

Sewer Line Lifespans in Delaware County

Pipe Material Common in Delaware County Expected Lifespan Current Status
Clay Tile Pre-1960 homes 50-100 years Most are past midlife, cracking at joints
Orangeburg 1945-1965 homes 50 years All are past design life, collapsing
Cast Iron Pre-1970 homes 80-100 years Corroding from inside
PVC Post-1980 homes 100+ years Generally sound

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