The crew digs a "launch pit" near your house foundation and a "receiving pit" near the property line or city tap. This is minimal disruption compared to a full trench.
| Method | Average Cost | Time | Landscape Damage | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | $5,000 – $15,000 | 2-3 days | Severe (trench through yard) | | CIPP Lining | $4,000 – $10,000 | 4-6 hours | None (if cleanout exists) | | Pipe Bursting | $6,000 – $12,000 | 1 day | Minimal (two small pits) | replacing clay sewer pipe without digging
The old solution was horrific: rent a jackhammer, tear up your driveway, destroy your landscaping, and dig a 6-foot-deep trench through your yard. The new solution? The crew digs a "launch pit" near your
A fiberglass rod is pushed through the old clay pipe from the launch pit to the receiving pit. The new solution
The steel bursting head is attached to the rod at the receiving pit. The new HDPE pipe is attached behind the bursting head.
If your home was built before 1970, there is a good chance your main sewer line is made of vitrified clay (VCP). For decades, clay was the gold standard. It was inert, cheap, and resistant to chemical corrosion.
Note: Lining is cheaper per foot than bursting, but bursting is cheaper than a full excavation if you have a long driveway. Yes, with one warning. Trenchless pipe bursting is objectively superior to digging for most clay pipe failures. It is faster, cheaper, and leaves your patio and roses intact.