Drain Cleaning Cost in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (2026)
Snaking a single clogged tub, sink, or shower in Pittsburgh typically costs around $185 — and you can often clear it yourself first. Here's how to tell if your quote is fair, and when it's really the main line.
A single slow drain can wait. But if multiple fixtures back up at once — toilet, tub and sink together — that's a main-line stoppage and a true emergency. Stop running water and call right away.
Is Your Quote Fair?
For drain cleaning in Pittsburgh, here's what the market looks like right now:
Fair Market Range
$105 – $485
typical repair range (parts + labor)
Quote over $600?
A routine single-drain snake above $600 is high for the Pittsburgh-area market range ($105-$485); that should involve a main line or jetting.
Quote under $89?
A sub-$89 'any drain' coupon is usually a door-opener to upsell.
Every Quote Should Include:
- The specific line being cleared
- Method (cable vs. hydro jetting)
- Whether camera is included
- Flat price or capped hourly
- Cleanup
What's Actually Wrong? Common Drain Problems
Many problems are cheap DIY fixes — identify yours before you call a plumber.
DIY — Easy Slow or clogged tub/shower drain (hair) $2–$30 part · 10-20 minutes
Symptoms
- Water pools around your feet in the shower
- Tub drains slowly after a bath
- Gurgling at the drain
Likely cause
A wad of hair and soap scum caught in the drain or just below the stopper. It builds up gradually until flow chokes down. This is a local clog, not a main-line problem.
The part
Plastic hair-pull strip (e.g. drain zip) or a hand auger
$2–$30
Any hardware store/Home Depot/Lowe's/Walmart; plastic hair-pull strips ~$2-$10, a hand auger ~$15-$30
Difficulty
About as easy as it gets: pop out the stopper, slide a barbed plastic strip down, and pull the hair clog out. For a deeper one, a few feet of hand auger reaches it. No chemicals, no plumber.
Skip caustic chemical drain cleaners — they can damage older pipes and finishes, and they make a later plumber visit hazardous. Mechanical removal (strip/auger) is safer and works better on hair.
Hair in the tub drain is the #1 clog and the easiest DIY win there is. A two-dollar plastic strip beats a bottle of chemicals every time — and beats a service call entirely.
DIY vs. Pro
Do this one yourself. A tub/shower hair clog is the textbook DIY drain job — a $5 plastic strip clears most of them in two minutes. Only step up to calling someone if the drain is still slow after you've pulled the hair AND augered a few feet, which would suggest the clog is deeper than the trap.
If you hire a plumber
A plumber typically charges roughly the basic single-fixture snake rate (about $110-$280 depending on metro) — which is exactly why the $5 hair tool is worth keeping under the sink.
DIY — Moderate Clogged kitchen sink (grease/food) $0–$30 part · 20-45 minutes
Symptoms
- Sink drains slowly or backs up
- Standing water that won't go down
- Gurgling, or backup into the other basin of a double sink
Likely cause
Grease, fats, and food debris (often coffee grounds, starches, or fibrous scraps) congeal and narrow the drain line. A garbage disposal that's jammed or clogged can mimic this too.
The part
Plunger and/or hand auger; a P-trap is cheap if you remove and clean it
$0–$30
Free to plunge or clean the P-trap; plunger ~$10-$20, hand auger ~$15-$30; a replacement P-trap kit ~$8-$15 if yours is corroded
Difficulty
Plunging is easy; cleaning the P-trap under the sink is moderate (bucket, unscrew the trap, clear it, reassemble). If a disposal is involved, check it's not jammed first. Avoid chemicals — they don't dissolve grease well and sit in standing water dangerously.
Do NOT pour chemical drain opener into a sink full of standing water, then plunge — it can splash caustic liquid. Mechanical clearing is safer. If you ran a disposal, make sure it's off before reaching near it.
Kitchen clogs are usually grease and food right at the P-trap. Plunge it, and if that won't do it, put a bucket under the trap and clean it out — that's where the gunk hides. Hold the chemicals.
DIY vs. Pro
DIY-friendly for most homeowners. Plunge first; if that fails, clean the P-trap (the curved pipe under the sink), which catches a lot of clogs right there. Step up to a pro if it's still slow after the trap is clear, or if BOTH basins/multiple fixtures back up — that means the clog is past the trap in the branch or main line.
If you hire a plumber
A plumber charges the basic single-fixture snake rate (about $110-$280 by metro); a deeper branch-line clog or hydro-jetting for hardened grease costs more.
DIY — Easy Slow bathroom sink drain $0–$20 part · 10-30 minutes
Symptoms
- Bathroom sink empties slowly
- Water lingers in the basin
- Mild odor from the drain
Likely cause
Hair, toothpaste, and soap scum tangled around the pop-up stopper assembly, or caught in the P-trap just below. The pop-up pivot rod is a notorious hair-catcher.
The part
None usually (clean the pop-up/trap) — pop-up assembly if worn
$0–$20
Free to clean; a replacement pop-up assembly ~$10-$20 at any hardware store if yours is corroded
Difficulty
Often you just lift or unscrew the pop-up stopper and pull off a surprising wad of hair. If that's not enough, the P-trap cleans out the same way as a kitchen trap. Both are quick and tool-light.
A slow bathroom sink is almost always hair on the pop-up stopper. Pull the stopper, clear the gunk, done — no parts, no plumber.
DIY vs. Pro
DIY. Pull the pop-up stopper first — nine times out of ten the clog is wrapped right around it. If the sink's still slow, clean the P-trap. There's almost never a reason to pay someone for a single slow bathroom sink.
If you hire a plumber
A plumber would charge the basic single-fixture snake rate (about $110-$280 by metro) for something you can usually clear in 15 minutes for free.
Call a Pro Multiple fixtures backing up at once
Symptoms
- Tub, toilet, and sink back up together
- Flushing the toilet makes the tub gurgle or rise
- Sewage smell or wastewater coming up in a low fixture (tub/shower)
Likely cause
A blockage in the MAIN sewer line serving the whole house — often tree roots, a collapsed/bellied pipe, or years of accumulation — not a single fixture's local clog. When water can't exit the main, it backs up into the lowest drains.
The part
None DIY — this is a main-line snake or camera job
Free / no part needed
Difficulty
This is past DIY tools. A homeowner auger reaches a single fixture's trap, not a main-line blockage dozens of feet out. Your DIY role is damage control: stop using water immediately so you don't back more sewage into the house.
SEWAGE/CONTAMINATION: wastewater backing into a tub or shower is a health hazard — avoid contact, keep kids and pets away, and stop running water until it's cleared.
This is the one drain symptom that's a genuine pro job: when the tub, toilet, and sink all back up together, it's the main line, not a single clog. Stop running water and call someone — and this time the main-line/camera upsell isn't an upsell, it's the actual fix.
DIY vs. Pro
Call a pro — this is the real exception. When several fixtures back up together, it's the main line, and that needs a main-line snake (and often a camera to find roots or a broken pipe). Don't waste money on a tech who only snakes the single fixture; this one genuinely needs the bigger service.
If you hire a plumber
A main-line snake typically runs several hundred dollars (roughly $250-$650 by metro); hydro-jetting for roots/grease and a camera inspection cost more — but here those bigger tiers are actually justified.
Call a Pro Recurring clog that keeps coming back
Symptoms
- A drain you've cleared before re-clogs within weeks or months
- Slow flow that returns after every cleaning
- Often the same line each time
Likely cause
Something deeper is the real cause: tree roots intruding through a pipe joint, a sagging/bellied section of line that collects debris, or heavy grease scale. Snaking punches a hole through but doesn't remove the cause, so it returns.
The part
None DIY — diagnosis (camera) and often hydro-jetting
Free / no part needed
Difficulty
Repeated DIY snaking treats the symptom. When a clog keeps returning, the value is in DIAGNOSIS — a camera inspection to see roots, a belly, or scale — then the right fix (hydro-jetting for grease/roots, or a spot repair for a broken pipe). That's beyond homeowner tools.
If you've snaked the same drain twice and it keeps coming back, stop snaking and get a camera down there. Recurring clogs mean roots, grease, or a sagging pipe — and that's the rare time the camera-and-jetting bill is legit, not an upsell.
DIY vs. Pro
Call a pro, but ask the RIGHT question: if a drain keeps re-clogging, request a camera inspection to find the actual cause before authorizing repeated snaking. This is the one case where a camera and possibly hydro-jetting are worth it — paying for a third blind snake is the real waste.
If you hire a plumber
A camera inspection runs roughly $150-$450 by metro; hydro-jetting roughly $350-$1,100. Pricey, but a recurring clog is exactly when those tiers earn their keep — versus paying for snake after snake.
DIY — Moderate Foreign object stuck in the drain $0–$15 part · 20-40 minutes
Symptoms
- A drain suddenly stops after something fell in
- Toy, bottle cap, jewelry, or wipe went down
- Hard stop rather than a gradual slowdown
Likely cause
A solid object lodged in the trap or stopper. Unlike a gradual hair/grease clog, this is a sudden full stop right after something went down.
The part
None usually (retrieve it) — P-trap kit if you damage the trap getting it out
$0–$15
Free to retrieve via the P-trap; replacement P-trap ~$8-$15 if needed
Difficulty
If it's near the top, a hook or the removed stopper gets it. Most often the object lands in the P-trap, so removing and emptying the trap recovers it (and your jewelry). Don't run water or chemicals trying to force it down — you may push it past the trap into the wall.
Turn off the water to the fixture before working so nothing washes the object deeper. Watch for sharp edges when reaching into a trap.
Dropped a ring or a toy down the drain? Don't run water — that pushes it deeper. The P-trap under the sink catches most things, so open it over a bucket and you'll likely fish it right back out.
DIY vs. Pro
DIY for a handy person — and the smart move if the object has any value (rings end up in traps constantly). Resist plunging or flushing it deeper; the trap is your friend here because it catches the object. If it's already past the trap, that's when a pro with an auger or camera helps.
If you hire a plumber
A plumber charges the basic snake/retrieval rate (about $110-$280 by metro) — worth it if the object is past the trap, but a trap you can open yourself is free.
DIY — Easy Sewer-gas / rotten smell from a drain $0–$10 part · 5-15 minutes
Symptoms
- Sewer or rotten-egg smell near a drain
- Worse in a rarely-used sink, tub, or floor drain
- No actual clog, just odor
Likely cause
Most often a dried-out trap: the P-trap's water seal in a seldom-used fixture has evaporated, letting sewer gas up. Less often it's biofilm/gunk in the overflow or a venting issue.
The part
None usually (run water to refill the trap) — cleaning supplies
$0–$10
Free to refill a dry trap; a drain brush or cleaner ~$5-$10 for biofilm
Difficulty
Often the fix is literally running water for 30 seconds to refill a dry trap, plus a little down a rarely-used floor drain monthly. For biofilm smell, clean the stopper/overflow. No specialist needed.
If you smell gas (natural gas, not sewer), that's different — leave and call the gas company. Sewer-gas odor from a drain is unpleasant but the immediate fix is usually just water in the trap.
A stinky drain with no clog is usually a dried-out trap, especially in a guest bath you never use. Run the water for half a minute and the smell usually goes — free.
DIY vs. Pro
DIY. A smelly-but-not-clogged drain is usually a dried trap — run water and wait. If the smell persists across multiple drains or comes with gurgling, that can signal a venting problem, which is when a pro helps. But start with the free fix.
If you hire a plumber
If it turns out to be a venting issue a plumber diagnoses, that's a service call (low hundreds); but a dry trap costs nothing to fix.
Homey's Take
Here's the deal: snaking a drain in Pittsburgh runs about $105-$290, and drain cleaning NEVER needs a permit. Classic red flag: a cheap coupon that balloons into a four-figure sewer job the second they arrive. Get the camera footage and a flat price before anyone starts.
Drain Cleaning Costs in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
All prices include labor for a licensed plumber. A single slow tub, sink, or shower almost always clears with a basic snake — the bottom rows (main-line snake, hydro jetting, camera inspection) are bigger jobs that should only be needed when multiple fixtures back up or a basic snake fails.
| Service | Low | Average | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tub / Sink / Shower — Basic Snake | $105 | $185 | $290 |
| Toilet Drain — Basic Snake | $125 | $220 | $340 |
| Main Line Snake | $170 | $290 | $485 |
| Hydro Jetting | $340 | $485 | $875 |
| Camera Inspection | $195 | $315 | $435 |
Service Fees, Timing & Emergency Pricing
Service Call / Diagnostic Fee
Camera may be bundled with a main-line cleaning.
When to Book in Pittsburgh
Best months to book
February, March, April, September
Typical wait
same day to 2 days
Emergency: same day
Holiday grease and houseguests drive kitchen and main-line clogs in late fall; root intrusion spikes after wet spells, and Pittsburgh's aging Rust Belt sewer lines back up more under heavy rain.
Emergency & After-Hours Pricing
A single slow drain can wait. But if multiple fixtures back up at once — toilet, tub and sink together — that's a main-line stoppage and a true emergency. Stop running water and call right away.
How to Choose a Plumber in Pittsburgh
The 10-Minute Hiring Checklist
Run any Pittsburgh plumber through this before you sign.
Knowing the fair price is only half the job. The other half is making sure the person you hand it to is licensed, insured, and won't leave you with a mess. Run any plumber through this checklist before you sign — it takes about ten minutes, and a good one will pass every line without blinking.
-
Active state license
Look them up by name or license number and confirm the license is current — not expired, lapsed, or suspended.
Look up a license →Good sign: The license is active and the name matches the business that's quoting you.
Red flag: No license number on the quote, truck, or website — or a number that doesn't match when you search it.
-
Proof of insurance
Ask for a Certificate of Insurance (COI) showing general liability — plus workers' compensation if they bring a crew. A legitimate contractor can have their insurer email it to you directly.
Good sign: They send a current COI without hesitation, ideally with your name listed on it.
Red flag: They wave it off, say they don't need it, or promise to 'send it later.' If an uninsured worker is hurt on your property, you can be the one on the hook.
-
Clean track record
When you look up their license, check for any disciplinary actions or complaints. Some states list these right on the license result; others keep them on a separate board 'enforcement' or 'complaints' page.
Good sign: An active license with no disciplinary history.
Red flag: Open complaints, a suspension, or a pattern of actions resolved against them.
-
Recent references
Ask for three references from jobs in the last six months — ideally the same kind of work you need done.
Good sign: They hand over recent names readily, and those customers would hire them again.
Red flag: Only years-old references, vague answers, or 'my customers are too busy to talk.'
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Reviews that hold up
Don't stop at the star number — look at how many reviews there are, how recent they are, and how the company replies to the negative ones.
Good sign: A steady stream of recent reviews, with professional, specific replies to complaints.
Red flag: A burst of five-star reviews all posted the same week, or generic one-liners with no detail.
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An itemized quote
Every quote should spell out parts, labor, the permit, old-unit haul-away, and any code upgrades — in writing. Two quotes aren't comparable unless they cover the same scope.
Good sign: A written, line-by-line quote that names the brand/model and exactly what's included.
Red flag: A single lump sum, a verbal-only price, or a 'cheap' quote that quietly leaves out the permit or haul-away.
-
Reasonable payment terms
For a standard job, expect little or no money down, with the balance due when the work is finished — and, on permitted jobs, once it passes inspection.
Good sign: No deposit or a small one, and they're comfortable being paid on completion.
Red flag: A large upfront deposit, cash only, or pressure to pay in full before work starts.
Permits & Inspections
Permit Requirement
Jurisdiction details
Allegheny County Health Department Plumbing Program (only if work becomes a sewer-line repair)
Open permit portal ↗Drain cleaning (snaking/augering/jetting) NEVER requires a permit. A permit only applies if the work becomes a sewer-line repair or replacement — if a 'drain cleaning' quote includes a permit, ask what's actually being done.
Before You Hire
Red Flags — Walk Away If You See These
- A 'permit fee' on a drain cleaning — none is required
- Coupon bait-and-switch to a four-figure main-line job on the spot
- Recommending a full dig from one camera pass
- No flat price before starting
Questions to Ask Before You Hire
Screenshot this list before you call.
- Single-fixture clog or main-line?
- Will you camera the line?
- Flat or hourly?
- Do I really need jetting?
What's Different About Pittsburgh
- Pittsburgh has one of the nation's oldest housing stocks: the median home sold in 2024 was 68 years old (Redfin), and a significant share of homes predate 1950.
- Heavy renter/investor market: 52.3% of Pittsburgh's occupied housing units are renter-occupied (about 72,300 of 138,188 units) per US Census Bureau ACS data, and the city's hilly terrain plus aging stock make it popular for BRRRR and buy-and-hold investors near UPMC, Pitt and Carnegie Mellon.
- Cold-winter market: this 'eds and meds' Steel City sits in the Appalachian snowbelt where January cold snaps and freeze-thaw cycles stress aging boilers, furnaces and water lines.
What Affects the Final Price
- Distance from a cleanout and access
- Cable snaking vs. hydro jetting
- Pittsburgh's old clay/cast-iron sewers and root intrusion can escalate a simple snake to a main-line job
Negotiating tip: Lock in a flat price before the cable goes in and ask to see the camera footage — a reputable plumber shows you the blockage rather than just declaring the sewer shot.
License Verification
Verify Your Contractor's License
Pennsylvania requires plumbers to be licensed. Before you hand over a deposit, look them up — it takes 60 seconds.
- Licensing body
- Allegheny County Health Department Plumbing Program (Pennsylvania has no statewide plumber license)
- License type
- Allegheny County Registered Master Plumber
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Use the pricing ranges above to benchmark every bid. Ask each plumber for an itemized written quote — unit, labor, permit, and any code upgrades listed separately.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about drain cleaning in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
- How much does drain cleaning cost in Pittsburgh?
- The Pittsburgh-area market range is about $105-$290 to snake a sink, tub or shower, $170-$485 for a main-line auger, and $340-$875 for hydro jetting.
- Do I need a permit for drain cleaning in Pittsburgh?
- No. Snaking, augering and jetting never need a permit. A permit only applies if the job becomes an actual sewer-line repair or replacement.
- When should I use hydro jetting instead of snaking?
- Snaking clears most single-fixture clogs. Jetting scours the whole pipe and is worth it for grease and recurring roots in main lines.
- Multiple drains are backing up — is that an emergency?
- Yes. Several fixtures backing up at once means a main-line stoppage. Stop running water and call right away.
- How do I know if my drain cleaning quote is fair?
- Check against the Pittsburgh-area market range ($105-$485 for most jobs). A single-drain snake over ~$600, or a big 'sewer replacement' off one camera pass, deserves a second opinion.