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Sewer camera

Short definition

A sewer camera (or sewer scope) is a flexible push-rod with a small high-resolution camera at the tip and a screen at the operator end. The cable feeds into a cleanout or drain to record a video tour of the line — pipe condition, root intrusion, bellies, joint offsets, material identification. It is the diagnostic that makes side-sewer trouble visible before you dig.

What it is

A residential sewer-camera setup has a few elements. The camera head (about 1 to 2 inches across) sits at the end of a push-rod cable, 100 to 300 feet long for mainline work. A monitor at the operator end displays live video. Pro-grade cameras include a sonde — a small radio transmitter at the head that pairs with a surface locator, so a tech can mark exactly where the camera sits underground. That’s how you know where to dig when the scope finds Orangeburg or a collapsed section.

DIY borescopes (push, 30 to 50 feet, $80–$300) handle branch drains. They do not reach a side sewer at full distance. Pro systems (Ridgid SeeSnake, Spartan Vision) run $4,000–$12,000 and are typically operated by service contractors rather than rented.

Why it matters to a homeowner

In Puget Sound, the sewer scope is the single most useful inspection a buyer can add to a pre-purchase contingency, especially for homes built before 1972. Finding Orangeburg, clay-tile offsets, or root mass before closing routinely turns into a five-figure credit at the table.

Three rules protect you on every scope:

  • Always ask for the recorded video. Every contemporary scope camera records. “We don’t record” or “the camera doesn’t save video” is no longer reasonable in 2026 — that’s a flag. Save the file for second-opinion quotes and for real-estate negotiations.
  • Confirm where the scope started. It must run from the lowest accessible cleanout — typically the 4-inch outdoor cleanout near the foundation or property line — not a 1.5-inch vanity drain. A scope of a kitchen branch doesn’t see the side sewer.
  • Don’t accept “minor roots = $20,000 trenchless.” Spot dig, lining, and targeted root removal can be far cheaper. Get three quotes when a contractor proposes major work off a single scope.

When you’ll encounter this term

  • Pre-purchase home inspection contingency in a Seattle, Tacoma, Olympia, or Everett offer.
  • Recurring slow drains throughout the house, when a plumber wants to confirm a side-sewer issue.
  • Real-estate seller proactively scoping before listing in a pre-1972 neighborhood.
  • Shopping a side-sewer replacement quote — the original scope video is what a second-opinion contractor wants to see.

Common variants and not the same as

  • Sewer camera vs. drain camera. Same tool, different cable length and head size. A 1-inch head is for branch drains; a 1.5- to 2-inch head with a longer cable is for the side sewer.
  • Sonde vs. no-sonde. Sonde is the locator transmitter. Required to answer “where do we dig?”

Washington note

Pre-purchase sewer-scope inspection is a standard add-on in Puget Sound real-estate transactions, especially for homes built between 1945 and 1972 — the Orangeburg installation window. King County, Seattle, Tacoma, Olympia, and Everett all have substantial Orangeburg inventories. Typical 2026 scope cost in Seattle and Tacoma is $250–$550 for a single scope; combined snake-plus-scope service runs $500–$1,200. The scope-first sequence (scope before any major work) saves money and prevents unnecessary trenchless quotes.