Quick Answer

Pipe patching is a targeted trenchless repair that installs a short CIPP liner only at the confirmed damage location — not along the full lateral. A Picote HD camera locates and measures the damage before any patch is cut. ASTM F1216 compliant. Single-point patch: $1,500–$2,500. Two to three locations in one visit: $2,500–$4,000. When camera reveals four or more damage points distributed along the lateral, full CIPP lateral lining typically becomes more cost-effective. Part of Bison’s Trenchless Sewer Repair services.

Not every sewer lateral needs full rehabilitation. When a homeowner’s camera inspection reveals a single crack at a pipe joint, or a small root entry point at one location on an otherwise sound lateral, lining the entire 60-foot pipe run would be the right structural solution — but a disproportionate one. Pipe patching exists precisely for this situation: camera-confirmed, isolated damage on a pipe that is structurally sound everywhere else.

The economics are straightforward. A pipe patch at a single confirmed damage point costs $1,500–$2,500. Full lateral lining for the same pipe costs $6,500–$15,000. If the camera shows one point of concern and eight feet of sound pipe on either side of it, patching is the correct and proportionate response. Bison never recommends full lining when footage confirms a patch will resolve the problem.

$1,500Starting cost — single-point pipe patch
vs.
$6,500
Full lateral CIPP lining starting cost
50 yrDesign life — CIPP patch liner, ASTM F1216
1 DayTypical patch installation — no excavation

Pipe Patching vs. Full CIPP Lining — Side by Side

📌 Spot Repair — Isolated Damage

Pipe Patching

$1,500–$4,000
Liner coverageDamage location only — 12” overlap each side
ExcavationNone — accessed via cleanout
TimelineCompleted same day in most cases
Best for1–3 isolated damage points on sound lateral
ASTM standardF1216 compliant — same as full lining
Design life50 years at patched section
Full Rehabilitation — Distributed Damage

Full CIPP Lateral Lining

$6,500–$15,000
Liner coverageFull lateral — cleanout to municipal connection
ExcavationTwo small access pits — no open trench
TimelineOne day for most residential laterals
Best for4+ damage points or root intrusion throughout lateral
ASTM standardF1216 / F1743 compliant
Design life50 years — full lateral

When Pipe Patching Is the Right Answer

The camera footage makes this determination — not the surface symptoms. These are the conditions that confirm a patch is appropriate:

Single Isolated Crack or Fracture

Camera shows a crack at one specific location — a circumferential fracture at a joint or a longitudinal crack in the pipe wall — with sound pipe on either side. One patch resolves it.

One Failed or Offset Joint

A single joint has separated or offset — allowing root entry or groundwater infiltration — while the rest of the lateral’s joints are intact. Patch bridges the offset and seals the gap.

Small Root Entry Point — Pipe Wall Intact

Root mass removed by cutting, and post-removal camera confirms roots entered through one joint gap with no additional wall damage. Patch seals the entry point permanently.

Pre-Purchase Inspection — Isolated Finding

A buyer’s sewer scope reveals one deficiency in an otherwise sound lateral. Patch cost ($1,500–$2,500) is specific, documentable, and proportionate for use as a seller credit negotiation item.

Two to Three Damage Points — Sound Pipe Between

Camera reveals 2–3 isolated damage locations with structurally intact pipe sections between them. Multi-point patching in one mobilization remains significantly less expensive than full lining.

Post-Root-Removal Structural Confirmation

After root removal, camera confirms that only 1–2 joint locations were structurally compromised. Those joints are patched to seal entry points — full lining is not warranted.

When the Camera Points to Full Lining Instead

Patch vs. Full Lining — The Camera Decides

📌 Patch Is Appropriate

  • 1–3 isolated damage points on the lateral
  • Pipe structurally sound between damage locations
  • Post-root-removal: 1–2 entry points confirmed
  • Patch cost well below full lining cost
  • No widespread corrosion or wall thinning
  • Single joint offset within bridging tolerance

🔨 Full Lining Is Better

  • 4+ damage locations distributed along lateral
  • Root intrusion at multiple joint locations
  • Widespread corrosion — pipe wall compromised throughout
  • Cumulative patch cost approaches full lining cost
  • Camera reveals damage at unpredictable intervals
  • Pipe age and condition suggest more failures imminent

The Pipe Patching Process

1

Picote HD Camera — Locate and Measure the Damage

The Picote Solutions HD camera feeds from the cleanout and locates the damage precisely — recording the exact footage distance from the cleanout, confirming damage type (crack, joint offset, root entry point), measuring the damage length, and assessing pipe condition on either side. This footage defines the patch length and confirms that patching — rather than full lining — is the appropriate solution.

2

Pipe Cleaning at the Damage Location

The damaged section and the pipe wall immediately surrounding it must be clean before patch insertion. If root mass is present, it is removed by mechanical cutting and hydro jetting before the patch is installed. Clean pipe wall contact is critical to patch liner adhesion and structural integrity after cure.

3

Patch Liner Cut to Confirmed Damage Length + Overlap

The patch liner is cut to the damage length plus a minimum 12-inch overlap on each side of the damage zone — ensuring the cured patch fully covers the damage and bonds to structurally sound pipe wall on each end. The liner is saturated with two-part thermosetting resin and prepared for insertion.

4

Patch Insertion and Positioning

The resin-saturated patch liner is inserted through the cleanout and positioned at the confirmed damage location using a calibrated delivery system. The camera footage distance measurement from Step 1 guides precise placement. An inflatable bladder holds the liner pressed against the pipe wall during curing.

5

Cure and Post-Installation Camera Verification

Resin is cured with the bladder inflated. After cure is confirmed, the bladder is removed and the Picote camera runs the patched section — verifying patch seating against the pipe wall, overlap coverage on both ends of the damage, and absence of voids. Camera documentation is provided to the homeowner. ASTM F1216 compliance confirmed. Job closed.

Cost Ranges — Pipe Patching

ServiceCost RangeNotes
Camera Diagnostic Inspection $150–$400 Required before any patch quote. Applied toward repair cost if Bison performs the work.
Single-Point Pipe Patch $1,500–$2,500 One confirmed damage location. Camera inspection, cleaning, liner insertion, cure, and post-install camera verification included.
Multi-Point Patching (2–3 locations) $2,500–$4,000 Two or three isolated damage locations addressed in one mobilization. Camera confirms each patch location before installation.
Full CIPP Lateral Lining (comparison) $6,500–$15,000 When camera reveals 4+ damage locations or widespread deterioration. Patching is no longer cost-effective relative to full rehabilitation.
📹 Why Camera Inspection Before Quoting Is Non-Negotiable

A pipe patch quote without camera footage is a guess. The patch length, the number of locations, and the decision between patching and full lining all depend on what the camera shows. Bison’s camera diagnostic inspection runs before any repair is quoted — and the inspection fee is applied toward the repair cost when Bison performs the work. If a contractor quotes pipe patching without first running a camera, ask to see the footage that defines the scope.

💡 Patch Now — Monitor Annually

For older clay pipe laterals where a patch resolves today’s confirmed damage, annual or biennial camera monitoring is the smart follow-up. Clay pipe of 60–80 years age can develop new damage points at joints adjacent to the repaired section as Michigan’s freeze-thaw cycle continues to stress the pipe. Early detection keeps future repairs in the patch cost range rather than the full lining range. Ask Bison about a recurring inspection schedule.