Hear from Our Customers
You’ve probably dealt with this before. A slow drain turns into standing water. You try the store-bought stuff, maybe even a plunger, and it works for a day or two. Then it’s back, sometimes worse than before.
That’s because most clogs don’t start where you think they do. Hair and soap in the bathroom, grease in the kitchen, roots working into your main line—they build up over time, and surface fixes don’t reach them.
When we handle a clogged drain repair, we’re not just clearing what’s visible. We use camera inspection to see what’s actually happening in your pipes. Then we remove it—completely. That means hydro jetting for stubborn buildup, rooter service for tree intrusions, and real solutions that address why the clog formed in the first place.
What you get is water flowing the way it should. No backup in the shower while you’re getting ready. No standing water in the sink when you’re cleaning up. Just drains that work, and stay working, because the job was done right.
We’ve been serving Brevard County since 2007. Carl, our owner and master plumber, started learning this trade at 16 and brought over 40 years of combined plumbing experience to Florida’s Space Coast.
We’re not a call center dispatching whoever’s available. We’re a family-owned operation where the same licensed, insured plumbers handle your job from start to finish. That matters in Frontenac, FL, where Florida’s heat and humidity create drainage issues that don’t exist up north—faster buildup, more aggressive root growth, and clogs that escalate quickly if you don’t know what you’re looking at.
We do. And we’ll walk you through exactly what’s wrong, what it takes to fix it, and what it costs before we start. No surprise fees. No upselling you on work that doesn’t need doing.
First, we listen. You tell us what’s going on—where the backup is, how long it’s been happening, what you’ve already tried. That gives us a starting point before we even arrive.
When we get there, we inspect the drain. For most clogs, that means running a camera line to see exactly where the blockage is and what’s causing it. Tree roots look different than grease buildup. A collapsed pipe needs a different fix than a wad of hair.
Once we know what we’re dealing with, we explain it. We’ll show you the camera footage if it helps. Then we give you a clear price for the work—not an estimate that balloons later, an actual number.
Then we clear it. Depending on what’s blocking your drain, that might mean snaking it, hydro jetting it, or in some cases, accessing the line from a cleanout. We use the method that actually solves the problem, not just the fastest one.
Before we leave, we test it. Water should drain fast and stay draining. If it doesn’t, we’re not done.
Ready to get started?
Every drain cleaning service we do in Frontenac, FL starts with a full assessment. We don’t guess. We inspect with a camera if needed, locate the clog, and figure out whether it’s something simple or part of a bigger issue downstream.
From there, we clear the line using the right tool for the job. Cable snaking works for most household clogs—hair, soap, small debris. Hydro jetting is what we use for grease, mineral buildup, or roots that have worked their way into your sewer line. It’s high-pressure water that scours the pipe clean, not just pokes a hole through the blockage.
If we find damage—a cracked pipe, a sagging section, a joint that’s separated—we’ll tell you. You’re not required to fix it right then, but you should know it’s there. A lot of repeat clogs happen because there’s a structural problem nobody addressed.
Florida’s climate accelerates drain problems. Grease solidifies slower in the heat, which means it travels further into your system before it hardens. Roots grow year-round here, not just in spring. And the sandy soil shifts, which can stress older pipes. We account for that when we’re diagnosing your drain, because what works in other states doesn’t always apply here.
Most residential drain cleaning in Brevard County runs between $150 and $400, depending on where the clog is and what’s causing it. A simple bathroom sink or shower drain usually falls on the lower end. Main sewer line cleaning or jobs that need hydro jetting cost more, typically $250 to $400.
We give you the price upfront, before we start. That includes the service call, the diagnostic work, and the actual cleaning. If we find something unexpected—like a broken pipe or a clog further down the line than we thought—we’ll tell you what it’ll take to handle it and let you decide.
The cheapest option isn’t always the best one. If a company quotes you $89 for drain cleaning, they’re either not doing a thorough job or they’re planning to upsell you once they’re in your house. We charge what the work actually costs, and we do it right the first time.
Snaking uses a cable with a blade or auger on the end to break through a clog. It’s effective for most household blockages—hair, soap buildup, small debris. The cable spins, cuts through the obstruction, and opens the line so water can flow again. It’s the go-to method for routine clogs in sinks, tubs, and toilets.
Hydro jetting uses high-pressure water to scour the inside of the pipe. It doesn’t just poke a hole through the clog—it removes everything clinging to the pipe walls. That includes grease, mineral deposits, roots, and years of buildup. It’s what we use for recurring clogs, slow drains that keep coming back, or main sewer lines that need a full cleaning.
If your drain keeps clogging even after it’s been snaked, hydro jetting is usually the next step. It costs more, but it also lasts longer because it actually cleans the pipe instead of just opening a path through the blockage.
If water’s backing up into your home, that’s an emergency. Sewage coming up through floor drains, toilets overflowing when you run the washing machine, or multiple drains backing up at once—those are signs your main sewer line is blocked, and it needs attention now.
A slow drain isn’t usually an emergency, but it can turn into one fast. If you’re noticing gurgling sounds when you flush, water pooling around floor drains, or a smell coming from your drains, don’t wait. Those are early warnings that a bigger backup is coming.
We offer same-day service for situations like this in Frontenac, FL. Plumbing problems escalate quickly in Florida’s heat, and a partial clog can turn into a full blockage faster here than it would in cooler climates. If you’re not sure whether it’s urgent, call us. We’ll ask the right questions and let you know whether it can wait or needs immediate attention.
You can, but it’s usually not a good idea. Most store-bought drain cleaners use harsh chemicals that sit in your pipes and eat away at whatever’s blocking them. The problem is they also eat away at your pipes, especially if you have older plumbing or PVC. Over time, that leads to leaks, corrosion, and bigger problems than the clog you started with.
They also don’t work on serious blockages. If tree roots are in your line, or there’s a solid grease clog, or the pipe’s partially collapsed, no amount of liquid is going to fix it. You’ll waste money on products that don’t solve the problem, and you’ll still need to call someone.
If you’ve got a minor slow drain and you want to try something before calling, a plunger or a basic hand snake is safer than chemicals. But if it’s not clearing after a couple tries, stop. You might be pushing the clog deeper, or there’s something else going on that needs a camera inspection. We’ve seen a lot of DIY attempts that turned a $150 fix into a $500 one.
For most homes in Frontenac, FL, once every 18 to 24 months is a good baseline. That’s especially true if you’ve got older pipes, a lot of trees near your sewer line, or a history of slow drains. Regular cleaning prevents buildup from turning into a full blockage, and it gives us a chance to catch problems early—like root intrusion or pipe damage—before they become expensive emergencies.
If you run a business, the timeline’s shorter. Restaurants, salons, medical offices—anywhere with heavy daily use—should have drains cleaned every 6 to 12 months. Grease, hair, and debris accumulate faster in commercial settings, and a backup during business hours costs you more than the cleaning would have.
You’ll know it’s time if your drains are slower than they used to be, if you’re smelling sewer gas, or if you’re hearing gurgling when water goes down. Those are signs that buildup is restricting flow, and it’s only going to get worse. Waiting until it’s fully clogged means you’re dealing with an emergency instead of a maintenance call, and that’s always more disruptive and more expensive.
Yes. If the same clog comes back within 30 days of us clearing it, we’ll come back and take care of it at no additional charge. That covers situations where the blockage wasn’t fully removed or where there’s something we missed during the initial service.
What it doesn’t cover is new clogs caused by misuse—like flushing things that shouldn’t go down the drain, pouring grease down the sink, or ignoring a problem we told you about (like roots or a damaged pipe). If we cleared your kitchen drain and you immediately dump a pan of bacon grease down it, that’s a new clog, not a warranty issue.
We also stand behind our work in a broader sense. If we tell you a drain is clear and it’s not, we make it right. If we say a repair will solve the problem and it doesn’t, we figure out why and fix it. That’s not always a formal warranty—it’s just how we operate. We’re local, we’re licensed, and our reputation matters more than charging you twice for the same job.
Other Services we provide in Frontenac