Quick Answer

Bison Plumbing provides sump pump repair, replacement, and new installation across Macomb and Oakland County — including battery backup unit installation. Southeast Michigan’s high water table, spring snowmelt, and severe thunderstorm frequency make sump pump reliability critical. Repair: $150–$400. Pump replacement: $400–$900. Battery backup installation: $400–$800. Full new system: $1,500–$3,500. 24/7 emergency response. Part of Bison’s Plumbing Repairs services.

Why Sump Pumps Are Critical in Southeast Michigan

Three Factors That Make Southeast Michigan One of the Highest Basement Flooding Risk Areas in the Midwest

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High Water Table

Much of Macomb and Oakland County sits at low elevation near the Clinton River, Red Run Drain, and Lake St. Clair watershed. The water table is naturally high — in some areas within 4–6 feet of the surface — and rises significantly during spring and after heavy rainfall events. Basement walls and floors experience hydrostatic pressure from this water throughout the year, not just during storms.

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Spring Snowmelt

Southeast Michigan averages 30–40 inches of snowfall annually. When March and April temperatures rise, weeks of accumulated snowpack melts rapidly — often faster than the frozen ground beneath it can absorb the water. This rapid surface saturation drives water toward and into basements at the same time the water table is already elevated from winter moisture accumulation.

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Lake Erie Moisture

Southeast Michigan’s proximity to Lake Erie creates a weather pattern that produces intense convective thunderstorms in spring and early summer — lake-warmed air colliding with cold fronts generates storms that can drop 1–3 inches of rain in 1–2 hours. These high-intensity, short-duration events overwhelm storm drains and saturate soil faster than any pump system can keep pace without adequate capacity.

30–40”Annual snowfall — SE Michigan average, rapid spring melt risk
4–6 ftWater table depth in parts of Macomb County during spring
7–10Year typical sump pump lifespan — replace proactively before failure
24/7Bison emergency sump pump response — (586) 784-4281

Sump Pump Types — Which System Does Your Home Need?

Primary Pump — Most Common

Submersible Sump Pump

Installed inside the sump pit, fully submerged in water. The sealed motor operates underwater, making it quieter and more efficient than pedestal pumps. The standard choice for new installations and replacements in Macomb and Oakland County homes.

InstallationInside the pit — sealed motor submerged in water
Lifespan7–10 years typical
Noise levelQuieter — motor submerged and sealed
Best forHigh-volume, frequent cycling — high water table environments
Cost$400–$900 installed
Primary Pump — Narrow Pit

Pedestal Sump Pump

Motor mounted above the pit on a vertical shaft, with only the pump impeller submerged. Used when the sump pit is too narrow for a submersible pump, or as a budget option. Motor is more accessible for service but louder and shorter-lived than submersible.

InstallationMotor above pit — impeller in water only
Lifespan5–7 years typical
Noise levelLouder — exposed motor above pit
Best forNarrow sump pits; lower-volume applications
Cost$300–$700 installed
⚡ Critical Add-On — Do Not Skip

Battery Backup Sump Pump

A secondary pump in the same pit, powered by a charged battery. Activates automatically when the primary pump fails or when the power goes out. In Southeast Michigan, battery backup is not optional — it is essential protection against the most dangerous failure scenario.

ActivationAutomatic — power outage or primary pump failure
Battery lifeRun time: 5–10 hours continuous; battery replace every 3 years
AlarmAudible alarm when activating — alerts homeowner
Best forAll Macomb & Oakland County homes — storm power outage protection
Cost$400–$800 installed
✅ Recommended Configuration

Primary + Battery Backup System

A submersible primary pump paired with a battery backup unit in the same pit. The standard Bison recommendation for all Macomb and Oakland County homes. The two-pump system provides protection during normal operation, primary pump failure, and power outages.

Primary pumpSubmersible — handles normal water table load
Backup pumpBattery-powered — activates on power loss or primary failure
RedundancyFull protection during storms when both failure modes are most likely
Best forAll homes — non-negotiable for finished basements
Cost$800–$1,700 installed (both units)

Signs Your Sump Pump Is Failing

Southeast Michigan’s sump pumps cycle more frequently than pumps in lower water table regions — accelerating wear. These are the signs that your pump should be evaluated before the next storm season:

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🔴 Act Now

Pump Runs Constantly

A pump that runs continuously — even during dry weather — has either a failed float switch (stuck in the “on” position), a pump that is undersized for the actual water volume, or a check valve failure that is allowing discharged water to flow back into the pit. All three require immediate service before the motor burns out from continuous cycling.

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🔴 Emergency

Pump Doesn’t Run When Water Rises

A pump that fails to activate when water enters the pit has either a dead motor, a tripped GFCI outlet or circuit breaker, a float stuck in the “off” position, or a failed float switch. This is the failure mode that results in basement flooding. If you notice standing water in the pit with no pump activity, call immediately.

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⚠ Investigate

Grinding, Rattling, or Loud Humming

Unusual sounds from the pit indicate either motor bearing failure (grinding), debris lodged in the impeller (rattling), or a motor that is running but not pumping (humming without discharge flow). These sounds typically precede complete motor failure within days to weeks. Service before the motor fails entirely.

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⚠ Investigate

Pump Runs But No Water Discharges

When the pump activates normally but water isn’t being expelled, the check valve has failed and is allowing backflow into the pit, the discharge line is clogged with debris, or the discharge line has frozen at the exterior exit point during winter. The pump is working but not protecting — service required.

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⚠ Schedule Service

Visible Rust or Corrosion

Surface rust on a submersible pump body or discharge fittings indicates moisture intrusion to the motor housing — a precursor to motor failure in a pump that is constantly submerged. A pump showing significant corrosion on a unit over 7 years old should be replaced proactively rather than reactively.

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🟥 Proactive

Pump Is Over 7–10 Years Old

In Southeast Michigan’s high-cycling environment, submersible pumps rarely survive beyond 10 years. A pump approaching or past this threshold should be replaced before failure — not after. A $600 proactive replacement is a fraction of the cost of the basement flooding and mold remediation that follows an undetected pump failure during a storm.

Why Battery Backup Is Non-Negotiable in Southeast Michigan

⚡ The Storm Power Outage Problem

The fundamental problem with relying solely on a primary electric sump pump in Southeast Michigan is the timing correlation: the moments your pump needs to work hardest are exactly the moments you are most likely to lose power.

Macomb and Oakland County experience 15–25 significant power outages per year, the majority of which occur during severe thunderstorms — the same storms that drop 1–3 inches of rain in an hour and drive the water table up fastest. Without battery backup, a power outage during a major storm leaves your basement completely unprotected precisely when water is rising most aggressively.

Power outages occur most frequently during severe storms — the same events that produce the most water table pressure
Battery backup activates automatically — no manual intervention required during an outage
Audible alarm alerts homeowner when backup pump activates — signals primary pump failure or power loss
Battery provides 5–10 hours of continuous run time — covering most storm-related outage durations
For finished basements: replacement cost for flooded finishes typically runs $10,000–$30,000+
Battery replacement every 3 years — lower ongoing cost than one flooding event

Annual Sump Pump Maintenance Checklist

Perform this check in late winter or early spring — before snowmelt season and the first heavy rain events of the year:

1

Test the Float Switch — Pour Water into the Pit

Slowly pour a bucket of water into the sump pit and observe whether the float rises and activates the pump. The pump should activate when the water level reaches the float trigger point and shut off after the pit drains. If the pump doesn’t activate, check the GFCI outlet and circuit breaker first, then call Bison.

2

Inspect the Discharge Line — Clear Blockages

Trace the discharge line from the pump to its exterior exit point. Check for debris blockages, kinked sections, or ice dams at the exit pipe. Confirm the exit point terminates at least 10 feet from the foundation — shorter discharge distances allow water to recirculate back toward the foundation.

3

Test the Check Valve

After the pump runs and the pit drains, confirm water is not flowing back into the pit from the discharge line. A check valve that fails to seat properly will allow backflow — causing the pump to cycle continuously or run inefficiently as it re-pumps the same water.

4

Clean Debris from Pit and Pump Screen

Remove sediment, gravel, and debris from the pit floor and pump intake screen. Debris in the impeller is one of the most common causes of pump failure and unusual noise. A clean pit allows the float to move freely and prevents premature pump wear.

5

Test Battery Backup Unit — Replace Battery if Over 3 Years Old

Most battery backup units have a test button that simulates power loss — confirming the backup pump activates and the battery holds sufficient charge. Batteries in backup units should be replaced every 3 years regardless of apparent condition — battery capacity degrades gradually and may appear adequate until it fails under load during an actual outage.

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Check Pump Age — Plan Proactive Replacement

Note the installation date of your primary pump. If it is 7 years old or older, begin planning a proactive replacement before the next spring storm season. A pump at the end of its design life in Southeast Michigan’s high-cycling environment is a flooding risk, not a functioning safeguard.

⚠ Basement Flooding After Pump Failure

If your basement has already flooded due to sump pump failure, call Bison Plumbing at (586) 784-4281 for 24/7 emergency response. Do not re-enter a flooded basement until the power to that area has been confirmed off — standing water and live electrical outlets are a life safety hazard. Once the immediate flooding is addressed, Bison can assess whether the existing pit, discharge line, and backup system are adequately sized for your home’s water table load. Also see: sewer backup response if sewage is present in the floodwater.

💡 Spring Service Timing

Schedule your annual sump pump test and service in February or early March — before the first significant snowmelt event. Bison Plumbing’s schedule fills quickly in late March and April as homeowners react to the first flooding events of the season. Early scheduling ensures your pump is tested, serviced, and confirmed operational before the period of highest risk. Contact Bison to schedule spring sump pump service.