Quick Answer

Clogged drain cleaning covers blocked or slow kitchen sinks, bathroom sinks, tub and shower drains, and floor drains. The key decision before any cleaning method is applied: is this a branch drain clog (confined to one fixture) or a main sewer line problem (affecting multiple fixtures)? Bison Plumbing runs a Picote HD camera diagnostic before choosing a method — because a $200 snake job and a $400 hydro jet solve very different problems, and the camera tells you which situation you're actually in. Branch drain cleaning: $150–$300. Part of Bison's full Drain & Sewer Services.

A slow drain is the most common plumbing complaint Bison receives across Warren, Ferndale, Royal Oak, and the surrounding area. It's also the symptom with the widest range of causes — from a simple hair clog two feet down a bathroom drain to tree roots 55 feet into a clay sewer lateral. The cleaning method that resolves one situation does nothing for the other. That's why Bison's process starts with the camera, not the snake.

In homes built before 1980 — which describes the majority of the housing stock across Macomb and Oakland County — drain lines are cast iron or clay. Both materials accumulate buildup differently than modern PVC, respond differently to cleaning methods, and require pressure calibration when hydro jetting is used. A technician who snakes without a camera doesn't know what material they're working with, where the blockage actually is, or whether there's a structural problem hiding behind the immediate clog.

$150Starting cost — branch drain snake
50–80Years old — typical clay drain lateral in the area
#1Cause of recurring clogs: root intrusion + grease walls
24/7Emergency drain response available
Bison Plumbing drain cleaning service — clogged drain diagnosis and clearing in Warren, MI
Camera diagnosis before clearing — confirming whether the clog is in a branch drain or the main sewer line before selecting the cleaning method.

What Causes Drains to Clog in Macomb & Oakland County Homes

The causes of drain blockages in pre-1980 Southeast Michigan homes are predictable — and knowing which cause you're dealing with determines the correct fix:

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Grease Buildup — Kitchen Drains

Fats, oils, and grease coat the interior walls of cast-iron kitchen drain lines over years of use. The rough corroded surface of aging cast iron provides excellent adhesion for grease — narrowing the pipe diameter progressively until flow stops. Snaking punches through but leaves the wall coating intact. Hydro jetting removes it.

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Hair & Soap Scum — Bathroom Drains

Hair and soap scum accumulate at the drain basket and trap in tub and shower drains — the most common cause of single-fixture slow drains in residential bathrooms. Usually resolves with mechanical snaking at the branch drain level. Camera confirms no deeper issue before cleaning.

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Tree Root Intrusion — Clay Laterals

Silver maple, willow, and elm roots — dominant throughout Warren, Royal Oak, and Rochester Hills — follow moisture into aging clay pipe joints. Once inside, roots expand and can fill the pipe diameter within years. Root intrusion causes recurring clogs that return weeks after snaking because cutting the root doesn't remove it from the pipe walls.

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Mineral Scale — Hard Water Deposits

Macomb and Oakland County's hard water deposits calcium and magnesium scale on the interior of drain lines, particularly at bends and transition points. Scale narrows the effective pipe diameter over time and provides adhesion surface for other buildup — accelerating blockage formation in already-aging cast iron and clay pipe.

Is Your Clog in a Branch Drain or the Main Sewer Line?

This is the most important diagnostic question — and the answer determines whether you need a $150–$300 branch drain service or a conversation about your main sewer line. Here's how to read the symptoms:

Branch Drain vs. Main Sewer Line — Symptom Guide

Branch Drain Clog

One fixture slow or blocked

  • Only one sink, tub, or shower is affected
  • Other fixtures in the home drain normally
  • Clog is in the drain line for that specific fixture
  • No gurgling from other fixtures when this one drains
  • No odor from other drain locations in the home
→ Branch drain cleaning: $150–$300
Main Sewer Line Problem

Multiple fixtures affected

  • Two or more fixtures slow or backed up simultaneously
  • Flushing toilet causes water to rise in tub or floor drain
  • Running washing machine causes toilet to gurgle
  • Basement floor drain backing up with any fixture use
  • Sewer odor from multiple drain locations
💡 When in doubt — camera first

If you're not sure which situation applies, a Picote HD camera diagnostic ($150–$400) confirms it definitively. The inspection cost is applied toward any cleaning work Bison performs — so it's not an additional expense if the job proceeds.

How Bison Diagnoses and Clears a Clogged Drain

1

Camera Inspection — Confirm Location and Cause

The Picote Solutions HD camera confirms whether the blockage is in the branch drain or further downstream, identifies the type of buildup (grease, hair, root debris, scale), and checks for any structural issues — cracks or root damage — that may require repair after clearing.

2

Method Selection Based on Footage

Soft organic blockage (hair, grease plug): mechanical snaking. Grease wall coating: hydro jetting at calibrated PSI for the pipe age and material. Root mass: rotary cutting nozzle followed by jetting to flush debris. Structural damage alongside the clog: trenchless repair assessment after clearing.

3

Clearing — Snake or Hydro Jet

Mechanical snaking breaks up and removes soft blockages at the obstruction point. Hydro jetting at 1,500–4,000 PSI scours pipe walls clean from circumference to circumference — removing everything snaking leaves behind. Pressure is calibrated to the pipe material; aging cast iron and clay receive lower-pressure treatment to protect the pipe.

4

Post-Clearing Camera Verification

After clearing, the camera runs the section again — confirming complete clearance, checking pipe wall condition, and identifying any structural damage exposed after the debris is removed. If repair is needed, you see the footage and receive a written quote before any decision is required.

Why Recurring Drain Clogs Are So Common in Pre-1980 Macomb County Homes

The housing stock across Warren, Ferndale, Royal Oak, and the surrounding area was built primarily between the 1940s and 1970s — using clay and cast-iron drain pipe that is now 50–80 years old. Unlike smooth modern PVC, the corroded interior surface of aging cast iron provides adhesion for every grease molecule and scale particle that passes through it. The pipe literally becomes a collection surface.

Add Michigan's mature tree canopy — silver maple and willow roots throughout residential streets — and the freeze-thaw cycle that opens clay pipe joints every winter, and you have a market where recurring drain clogs are not homeowner negligence. They're a predictable consequence of infrastructure age. Bison sees this pattern every week across Macomb and Oakland County. The solution isn't repeated snaking — it's understanding the root cause and treating it directly, whether that's a hydro jet to clear grease walls or a root removal and structural assessment when roots are the recurring culprit.

Bison Plumbing technician clearing a clogged drain in Macomb County, MI
Bison's licensed technicians bring camera equipment to every drain cleaning job — confirming the clog type and location before applying any cleaning method.

Cost Ranges — Clogged Drain Cleaning

$150–$300
Branch Drain Cleaning
Single fixture — kitchen, bathroom, tub, or floor drain. Snaking. Includes camera confirmation.
$350–$650
Hydro Jetting
Grease wall or scale buildup. Scours full pipe circumference. Camera before and after.
$150–$400
Camera Diagnostic
Standalone Picote HD inspection. Applied toward cleaning cost if Bison performs the work.
⚠ About Chemical Drain Cleaners

Chemical drain cleaners should not be used on cast-iron or clay pipe — the standard drain material in most pre-1980 homes across Macomb and Oakland County. Caustic chemicals accelerate corrosion in aging metal pipe, compress grease against walls rather than dissolving it, and are completely ineffective against root intrusion. Repeated chemical treatments on pipes that are structurally compromised can accelerate failure. If a drain clog has returned after chemical treatment, a camera inspection is a better next step than another pour.