Written by Steven Shipler, Texas Licensed Master Plumber, Responsible Master Plumber (RMP), MBA, and host of The 4 Guys Education on YouTube.
Buying a home in Plano, TX? Before you close, inspect the sewer line. A $189 sewer camera inspection can help reveal hidden sewer problems before they become your responsibility.
Buying a home in Plano, TX is exciting.
It is also one of the biggest financial decisions most people will ever make.
Most buyers look closely at the roof, foundation, HVAC system, water heater, appliances, electrical panel, flooring, paint, windows, doors, and visible plumbing fixtures.
That is smart.
But there is one major system that is usually underground and out of sight.
The sewer line.
A home can look clean. The toilets can flush. The sinks can drain. The seller may say everything works fine.
But none of that proves the underground sewer line is in good condition.
That is why a sewer camera inspection before closing can be one of the smartest decisions a Plano homebuyer makes.
At The Sewer Inspection Company, we provide sewer camera inspections for homebuyers, homeowners, real estate agents, investors, and sellers throughout Plano and surrounding North Dallas / Collin County areas.
Current Sewer Inspection Pricing
Standard sewer camera inspection: $189
Toilet removal add-on if no cleanout is available: $50
Typical total if toilet removal is needed: about $239
Before you buy the house, inspect the pipe.
The problem: homebuyers cannot see the sewer line
The biggest problem with buying a home is simple.
You cannot see everything you are buying.
You can walk through the kitchen. You can look at the bathrooms. You can inspect the roof. You can check the air conditioner. You can test the lights.
But the sewer line is buried underground.
It may run under the yard, under the driveway, under landscaping, under the slab, or toward the city connection.
If the sewer line has roots, standing water, a belly, a separation, a crack, a broken section, or older pipe deterioration, the buyer may not know until after closing.
That is a bad time to find out.
After closing, the problem usually belongs to the new homeowner.
Why a standard home inspection may not be enough
A standard home inspection is important.
But a standard home inspection does not always include a sewer camera inspection. Texas inspection standards describe real estate inspections as minimum requirements and identify sewer-line camera tools as specialized equipment.[1]
The inspector may run water at fixtures, flush toilets, and check visible plumbing. That can confirm that water drained during the inspection.
But it does not prove the condition of the underground sewer line.
A sewer line can still have:
- Root intrusion
- Standing water
- Sewer bellies or low spots
- Offset joints
- Separated fittings
- Cracked pipe
- Broken pipe
- Collapsed sections
- Grease buildup
- Sludge
- Cast iron deterioration
- Clay pipe separation
- Poor slope or back-pitch
- Previous repairs that were never verified by camera
That is why a sewer camera inspection is different.
It shows what is happening inside the pipe.
What a sewer camera inspection actually does
A sewer camera inspection uses a waterproof camera to inspect the inside of the sewer line.
The camera is usually inserted through an exterior cleanout. If there is no usable cleanout, access may require pulling a toilet.
A sewer scope report should identify the portions of the sewer line that were inspected and note areas that were not inspected, when applicable.[2]
During the inspection, the plumber looks for:
- Pipe material
- Root intrusion
- Standing water
- Bellies or low spots
- Offsets
- Separated joints
- Broken pipe
- Cast iron corrosion
- Grease buildup
- Sludge
- Collapsed sections
- Improper fittings
- Flow restrictions
- Location of the problem when repair is needed
For homebuyers, the point is simple:
The camera gives you evidence before you close.
That evidence can help you decide whether the sewer line looks serviceable, questionable, or in need of repair, cleaning, jetting, replacement, or further evaluation.
Why this matters before closing
Before closing, the buyer still has options.
That is the key.
If the sewer camera inspection finds a serious problem, the buyer may be able to:
- Ask the seller to repair the issue
- Request a seller credit
- Renegotiate the purchase price
- Get additional plumbing bids
- Ask for more documentation
- Extend the inspection discussion if the contract allows it
- Decide whether the home is still worth buying
- Walk away if the contract allows it
After closing, that leverage is usually gone.
That is why timing matters.
The best time to inspect the sewer line is during the option period or inspection period, before the deal is final.
The expensive surprise buyers want to avoid
A sewer problem after closing can get expensive fast.
A buyer may move into the home and then discover:
- Toilets are gurgling
- Showers are draining slowly
- Sewage is backing up into a tub
- The laundry drain is overflowing
- There is a sewer smell inside the home
- The cleanout outside is overflowing
- Multiple drains are backing up at the same time
That can lead to:
- Emergency drain cleaning
- Sewage cleanup
- Flooring damage
- Baseboard or wall damage
- Odor problems
- Hydro jetting
- Excavation
- Spot repair
- Under-slab plumbing work
- Full sewer line replacement
- Yard and landscaping repair
A $189 sewer camera inspection is small compared to the cost of discovering a major sewer problem after closing.
Common Plano sewer line problems
Plano homes can have many different types of sewer line issues.
Some homes are older. Some have mature trees. Some have had foundation movement. Some have had prior sewer repairs. Some have old cast iron or clay pipe.
Some have newer PVC that may have shifted, settled, or been installed with poor slope.
Common sewer problems in Plano and North Dallas homes may include:
- Tree roots growing into older pipe joints
- Soil movement causing pipe separation
- Low spots holding standing water
- Older cast iron pipe deterioration
- Clay pipe separation
- PVC pipe that shifted or settled
- Grease buildup from years of kitchen use
- Poorly documented previous repairs
- Sewer lines damaged during landscaping or excavation
- Pipe transitions from old material to newer PVC
The only way to know what is happening inside the line is to inspect it with a sewer camera.
Do newer homes need sewer camera inspections?
Yes, sometimes they do.
A newer home can still have sewer line problems.
Newer sewer lines can have:
- Poor slope
- Low spots
- Construction debris
- Separated fittings
- Improper installation
- Soil movement damage
- Damage from landscaping or utility work
- Problems near the city connection
Age matters, but age is not everything.
The real question is simple:
Do you want to know the condition of the sewer line before you buy the house?
Do older homes need sewer camera inspections?
Yes.
Older homes are usually higher-risk because they may have older pipe materials, mature trees, more repair history, and decades of use.
Older sewer lines may have:
- Cast iron corrosion
- Clay pipe separation
- Root intrusion
- Scale buildup
- Cracks
- Offsets
- Bellies
- Poor pipe transitions
A sewer line can still drain while having problems that may become expensive later.
That is why older Plano and North Dallas homes should be camera-scoped before closing.
What if the seller says the sewer line is fine?
The seller may be telling the truth based on what they know.
But most sellers do not know the full condition of the underground sewer line.
They may only know that the toilets flushed and the drains worked while they lived there.
That does not mean the pipe is free from roots, bellies, cracks, separations, standing water, or older pipe deterioration.
A sewer camera inspection removes the guesswork.
It turns opinion into evidence.
What if the sewer line was recently cleaned?
Recent drain cleaning does not replace a sewer camera inspection.
Drain cleaning may open the line, but it does not always explain why the line clogged in the first place.
The backup may have been caused by:
- Roots
- Grease
- A sewer belly
- A separated joint
- A broken pipe
- A collapsed section
- Heavy debris
- Poor slope
If the line was recently cleaned, that can actually be a reason to inspect it.
The camera can help show whether the cleaning solved the problem or only opened the line temporarily.
Sewer inspection vs. home inspection vs. drain cleaning
| Service | What it does | When it makes sense | What it does not prove |
|---|---|---|---|
| Home inspection | Checks visible systems and general condition | Buying or selling a home | Does not usually show the inside of the sewer line |
| Drain cleaning | Opens a blocked drain or main line | Active stoppage or slow drain | Does not prove pipe condition |
| Sewer camera inspection | Shows the inside of the sewer line | Home purchases, recurring backups, repair estimates, second opinions | Does not clean the pipe by itself |
| Hydro jetting | Uses high-pressure water to clean the pipe wall | Grease, sludge, buildup, roots when pipe condition allows | Not always safe for badly damaged pipe |
| Spot repair | Replaces a damaged section | Localized break, offset, root entry, or separation | Does not fix defects elsewhere |
| Sewer line replacement | Replaces a larger section or full line | Widespread failure, collapse, severe deterioration | More invasive and higher cost |
| Trenchless repair | Repairs or replaces pipe with reduced digging in some cases | Certain layouts and pipe conditions | Not right for every defect or pipe material |
Why a Texas Licensed Master Plumber and RMP matters
A sewer camera is a tool.
The camera does not make the diagnosis by itself.
The value comes from the person interpreting the video.
A proper sewer inspection should be reviewed by someone who understands:
- Drainage
- Pipe materials
- Slope
- Flow
- Roots
- Bellies
- Cast iron deterioration
- PVC separations
- Repair methods
- Hydro jetting
- Spot repair
- Full replacement
- When more testing is needed
Steven Shipler is a Texas Licensed Master Plumber, Responsible Master Plumber (RMP), MBA, and host of The 4 Guys Education on YouTube.
That experience matters when a homebuyer is trying to understand whether a sewer line issue is minor, serious, negotiable, or a major concern before closing.
Our sewer inspection process
Here is how The Sewer Inspection Company approaches a sewer inspection for a Plano homebuyer.
Step 1: Listen to the situation
We ask why the inspection is being requested.
Is this a home purchase? Was there a disclosure about prior drain cleaning? Did the home inspector notice slow drains? Did the seller mention past plumbing work? Are there mature trees, foundation repairs, or older plumbing materials?
The situation helps us understand what to look for.
Step 2: Find the best access point
The best access is usually an exterior cleanout.
If there is no usable cleanout, the inspection may require pulling a toilet.
Step 3: Run the camera
We inspect the inside of the line slowly enough to identify defects, restrictions, pipe material, and flow conditions.
Step 4: Identify what the video shows
We look for roots, standing water, bellies, offsets, separations, corrosion, cracks, grease, broken pipe, collapsed pipe, and poor slope.
Step 5: Locate the issue if needed
If the video shows a repair area, locating equipment can help identify the approximate location and depth.
Step 6: Explain the findings in plain English
The customer should not need to be a plumber to understand the video.
We explain what is normal, what is not normal, what needs attention, and what does not justify major work.
Step 7: Provide options
Sometimes the right next step is simply monitoring.
Sometimes it is drain cleaning. Sometimes it is hydro jetting. Sometimes it is a spot repair. Sometimes the line needs replacement.
But the recommendation should match the evidence.
Step 8: Help the buyer make a better decision before closing
That is the purpose of the inspection.
It helps the buyer understand the sewer line before the buyer owns the problem.
What does a sewer inspection cost?
For The Sewer Inspection Company, current pricing is:
- Standard sewer camera inspection: $189
- Additional charge if toilet removal is required because there is no usable cleanout: $50
- Typical total if toilet removal is needed: about $239
Larger sewer repair pricing depends on the facts:
- Depth
- Location
- Access
- Pipe material
- Pipe length
- Concrete
- Landscaping
- Excavation conditions
- Under-slab conditions
- Permit requirements
- City inspection requirements
No honest plumber should quote a permanent sewer repair without understanding those variables.
What should a buyer ask before closing?
Before buying a home, ask:
- Has the sewer line been camera-inspected?
- Can I see the video?
- Where is the cleanout?
- What pipe material is the sewer line?
- Are there mature trees near the sewer path?
- Has the home had prior sewer work?
- Has the home had foundation work?
- Has the seller had recurring backups?
- Has the line been snaked or hydro jetted?
- Are there any signs of standing water, roots, bellies, or separations?
- Is there any under-slab plumbing concern?
If the answers are vague, slow down.
A major home purchase should be based on evidence.
Local trust matters
The Sewer Inspection Company serves Plano, Allen, McKinney, Richardson, Frisco, North Dallas, Carrollton, Addison, Murphy, Parker, Fairview, Lucas, and nearby Collin County / North Dallas areas.
Our approach is simple:
- Video first
- Evidence first
- No scare tactics
- No fake urgency
- No replacing sewer pipe unless the inspection supports it
- Texas Licensed Master Plumber review
- Responsible Master Plumber accountability
- Written report when needed
- Practical repair options
- Clear homeowner education
Watch The 4 Guys Education on YouTube
Want to understand what plumbers look for before you buy a home or approve a sewer repair?
Watch The 4 Guys Education on YouTube, hosted by Steven Shipler, Texas Licensed Master Plumber, Responsible Master Plumber (RMP), and MBA.
Watch The 4 Guys Education on YouTube
Buying a Home in Plano?
Do not wait until after closing to find out there is a sewer line problem.
Schedule a $189 sewer camera inspection with The Sewer Inspection Company.
Schedule Sewer InspectionOr call 972-333-5448
Final answer: get the inspection before closing
Buying a home in Plano is a big decision.
Do not leave the underground sewer line to chance.
A sewer camera inspection gives the buyer proof before closing.
It can show roots, standing water, bellies, offsets, separations, cracked pipe, broken pipe, cast iron deterioration, grease buildup, and other hidden sewer problems.
Before you close, inspect the sewer line.
Call The Sewer Inspection Company today for a sewer camera inspection in Plano, TX.
We will show you what is happening inside the line before you own the repair.
FAQs
How much does a sewer camera inspection cost in Plano, TX?
The Sewer Inspection Company currently charges $189 for a standard sewer camera inspection. If there is no usable cleanout and a toilet must be removed, an additional $50 charge may apply.
Should I get a sewer inspection before buying a home?
Yes. A sewer camera inspection before closing can reveal hidden underground problems that may not show up during a standard home inspection.
Does a standard home inspection include a sewer camera inspection?
Usually, no. A standard home inspection may check visible plumbing fixtures, but it does not usually show the inside of the underground sewer line.
What does a sewer camera inspection show?
It can show roots, standing water, bellies, offsets, separations, broken pipe, collapsed pipe, cast iron deterioration, grease buildup, sludge, and other restrictions.
Can a sewer inspection help with home purchase negotiations?
Yes. If the inspection shows a serious sewer line problem, the buyer may be able to use the findings during repair negotiations, depending on the contract and timing.
Do newer homes need sewer camera inspections?
Sometimes, yes. Newer homes can still have sewer problems caused by poor slope, construction debris, soil movement, separated fittings, or installation issues.
What if there is no sewer cleanout?
A cleanout is the preferred access point. If there is no accessible cleanout, the camera may need to be run through another access point. In some cases, a toilet must be removed, which adds $50 to the inspection.
What areas do you serve?
The Sewer Inspection Company serves Plano, Allen, McKinney, Richardson, Frisco, North Dallas, Carrollton, Addison, Murphy, Parker, Fairview, Lucas, and nearby Collin County areas.
Sources
These sources are provided for homeowner education and to support the information discussed in this article.
- Texas Real Estate Commission — Real Estate Inspector Standards of Practice: https://www.trec.texas.gov/online-sops
- InterNACHI — Sewer Scope Inspection Standards of Practice: https://www.nachi.org/sewer-scope-sop.htm
- InterNACHI — Home Inspection Standards of Practice: https://www.nachi.org/sop.htm
- Google Search Central — Local Business Structured Data: https://developers.google.com/search/docs/appearance/structured-data/local-business
- Google Search Central — FAQPage Structured Data: https://developers.google.com/search/docs/appearance/structured-data/faqpage
- Schema.org — Plumber Schema Type: https://schema.org/Plumber