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A backed-up sewer line isn’t a problem you can wait on. Whether you’re seeing slow drains across multiple fixtures, smelling sewage in the yard, or dealing with a full backup inside the house — MQ Plumbing gets to the root of it fast. We run a camera inspection to find the exact problem, then repair or replace what needs to go. We serve homeowners and businesses across Mint Hill, Charlotte, and the surrounding metro. Written price before any work begins. No surprises.

Sewer Line Services We Provide

Not every sewer problem is the same. Some need a targeted repair. Others need a full line replacement. Some are new construction connections that have to be done right the first time. Here’s what we handle:

Sewer Camera Inspection

Before any work begins, we run a high-definition camera through the line. You see exactly what's in there: blockage, root intrusion, cracked or collapsed pipe, offset joints. No guesswork, no digging blind.

Sewer Line Repair

When the damage is localized, we excavate the affected section, remove what's failed, and replace it with new pipe. Clean, permitted, and built to last.

Sewer Line Replacement

When the line is too far gone for a targeted fix — extensive root damage, collapsed sections, decades-old clay or orangeburg pipe — we replace the full run from the house to the city connection. Done once, done right.

City Tap Connection

New construction, an addition, or reconnecting after a major repair. We handle the full connection from your home to the municipal sewer main, including coordination with Mecklenburg County and surrounding jurisdictions.

Cleanout Installation

If your home doesn't have a sewer cleanout, or the existing one is buried or inaccessible, we install one. It makes every future inspection and service call faster and cheaper.

Signs Your Sewer Line Needs Attention

Sewer line problems rarely appear out of nowhere. There are almost always warning signs in the weeks or months before a full failure. The earlier you catch them, the smaller the repair.

  • Multiple drains running slow at the same time — one slow drain is usually a local clog. When the kitchen sink, the bathroom, and the tub are all sluggish together, the problem is in the main line.
  • Gurgling sounds from toilets or drains — air being pushed back through the system. It means something downstream is obstructed.
  • Sewage odor in the yard or coming up through floor drains — a cracked or broken pipe is venting into the soil or back into the house.
  • Sewage backup in the lowest fixtures — toilets, basement floor drains, and ground-floor tubs are the first to show it when the main line is blocked or collapsed.
  • Soft, wet patches in the yard that don’t dry out — an underground sewer leak saturating the soil. Over time this causes soil erosion and can undermine your foundation or driveway.
  • Unusually green or fast-growing grass in a line across the yard — leaking sewage acts as fertilizer. A perfectly green strip running toward the street is a classic sign.

If you’re seeing any of these — or a combination — a camera inspection will tell you exactly what you’re dealing with in under an hour.

Not sure which fits your situation?

Call us and we'll walk through it — no obligation, no sales pitch.

Who's Responsible for What — and Why It Matters

This is one of the most common points of confusion for homeowners, and it directly affects what you’ll pay and who you call.

The city or county maintains the main sewer line that runs under the street. That’s their pipe, their problem. Everything on your side of the connection point — the lateral line running from your house to the street — is your responsibility as the property owner.

That means: if your lateral line cracks, gets infiltrated by tree roots, or collapses, you’re the one who pays to fix it. The city won’t come out for that call.

In Mecklenburg County and most surrounding jurisdictions in the Charlotte metro, the property owner is responsible for the full lateral — from the foundation of the house all the way to where it connects to the public main at the street or easement. In some cases that run is 50 feet. In older neighborhoods, it can be 100 feet or more.

This is also why permits matter. Sewer line work in North Carolina requires a permit in most jurisdictions. We pull it, we schedule the inspection, and your repair is on record — which protects you when you sell the home and keeps your homeowner’s insurance intact.

Permits Pulled on Every Install

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Serving Charlotte Metro Since 2021

Licensed, Bonded & Insured

Upfront Written Pricing

Same-Day Service Available

Repair or Replace? Here's How We Think Through It

Not every problem needs a full replacement. Not every repair will hold. We run a camera inspection first precisely so we’re not guessing — and so you’re not paying for more than you need.

Here’s the logic we use:

  1. Localized damage, pipe otherwise in good shape — If the camera shows a single offset joint, a specific crack, or one section of root intrusion on a line that’s otherwise clean and intact, a targeted repair makes sense. We excavate the affected section, replace it, and you’re done.
  2. Repeated problems in the same line — If you’ve had this call before, or the camera shows multiple problem areas spread across the run, a repair buys you time but not a solution. We’ll tell you that directly.
  3. Pipe material and age — Clay pipe (common in Charlotte-area homes built before 1980) and orangeburg pipe (a compressed fiber material used through the 1960s) don’t get better with age. They deteriorate, collapse, and cannot be reliably patched. When we see these materials in poor condition, replacement is the honest recommendation — not because it’s a bigger job, but because another repair on the same failing material is money wasted.
  4. Collapse or major root intrusion — A line that’s partially or fully collapsed, or that’s been taken over by root systems throughout its length, cannot be repaired in sections. It needs to come out.

We’ll show you the camera footage, walk you through what we found, and tell you exactly what we’d do if it were our own house. Then you decide.

What's Likely in Your Line — and Why It Matters

The type of pipe running from your house to the street determines how it fails, how urgent the repair is, and what replacement involves. In the Charlotte area and Mint Hill specifically, we see a lot of variation — because the area has homes spanning seven decades of different building standards.

Clay pipe

Common in homes built before 1980. Clay itself is durable, but the joints between sections are sealed with a material that breaks down over time. Tree roots find those joints and work their way in. Once root intrusion starts in clay, it keeps coming back until the line is replaced.

Orangeburg pipe

Used from the 1940s through the late 1960s as a cheaper alternative to cast iron. Made from compressed wood pulp and pitch. It absorbs moisture, softens, and eventually collapses from its own weight. If your home is from this era and the sewer line has never been replaced, a camera inspection is worth doing before you have a backup — not after.

Cast iron

Durable, but corrodes from the inside over decades. In older homes you'll sometimes see cast iron for the section inside the house transitioning to clay outside. Interior cast iron that's corroded can restrict flow and eventually fail.

PVC

Standard in homes built from the late 1970s onward. The right material, installed correctly, with proper grade toward the street. Most problems in PVC lines come from installation issues, not the pipe itself.

If you don’t know what’s in your line, a camera inspection will show us exactly what we’re working with.

Ready to Get It Diagnosed?

Licensed plumbers. Written pricing. Same-day service available across Charlotte, Mint Hill, Marvin, Weddington, Pineville, Fort Mill, and Concord.

How a Sewer Line Call Works With MQ Plumbing

You Call, We Listen

Tell us what you're experiencing. We'll ask a few questions about what you're seeing: which fixtures are affected, how long it's been happening, whether there's been any odor or wet spots in the yard. We get you on the schedule — same-day for urgent situations.

We Diagnose and Quote On-Site

A licensed plumber runs the camera through the line and walks you through the footage. You see exactly what's there. Based on what the camera shows, we give you a written quote for the repair or replacement. That number is fixed before any work begins.

Work Done, Hot Water Back

We excavate, remove the failed pipe, and install new. We pull permits where required, schedule the inspection, and haul away everything we remove. When we leave, the repair is done and the job is on record.

They talk about us

What Our Clients in Charlotte Are Saying

What Sewer Line Work Costs in Charlotte, NC

Sewer line jobs vary more than almost any other plumbing service — because the price depends on how deep the pipe is buried, how long the run is, what it’s made of, what’s in the way (tree roots, a driveway, a concrete patio), and what exactly failed.

That said, here are realistic ranges based on what we see in the Charlotte metro:

  • Camera inspection — $150 to $300. This is always the starting point. It tells us what we’re actually dealing with so the repair quote is accurate.
  • Targeted sewer line repair (single section) — $1,500 to $3,500. Depends on depth, access, and how much pipe needs to come out.
  • Full sewer line replacement — $4,000 to $12,000+. The range is wide because a 40-foot run in soft soil at 4 feet deep is a very different job from a 100-foot run at 8 feet under a landscaped yard with mature trees.
  • City tap connection — $2,500 to $6,000+. Includes permit, excavation, connection to the municipal main, and inspection.

We give you an exact written quote after the camera inspection. If the scope changes once we’re in the ground — which occasionally happens — we talk to you before any additional work proceeds. That’s how it should work.

If you don’t know what’s in your line, a camera inspection will show us exactly what we’re working with.

Ask plumber

Frequently Asked Questions

Who is responsible for the sewer line from my house to the street?
You are. In Mecklenburg County and surrounding jurisdictions in the Charlotte metro, the property owner is responsible for the lateral sewer line — the pipe that runs from your foundation to the connection point at the city main. The city maintains the main line under the street, but everything on your side of that connection is yours to maintain and repair.
Do I need a permit for sewer line repair or replacement in North Carolina?
In most cases, yes. Sewer line repairs and full replacements require a permit in Mecklenburg County and most surrounding areas. We handle the permit process entirely — you don't need to do anything. The permit also protects you: unpermitted sewer work can create complications with your homeowner's insurance and real estate disclosure when you sell.
How do you know if I need a repair or a full replacement?
We don't know until we run the camera. That footage shows us the exact condition of the pipe — where the damage is, how extensive it is, and what the pipe is made of. Based on that, we explain what we found, what the options are, and what we'd recommend. You make the decision with full information.
How long does sewer line work take?
A targeted repair on a single section typically takes one day. A full replacement — depending on the length of the run, depth, and site conditions — usually takes one to three days. We'll give you a realistic timeline when we quote the job.
My toilet keeps backing up but the drain clears after a while. Is that a sewer line problem?
It might be, or it might be a blockage in the line that hasn't fully closed off yet. Intermittent backups that clear on their own often mean partial blockage — root intrusion, grease and debris buildup, or a partial collapse that's restricting flow. It will get worse, not better. A camera inspection will tell you exactly what's in the line.
Can tree roots really get into sewer pipes?
Yes — and it's one of the most common causes of sewer line problems in the Charlotte area. Tree roots seek out moisture, and the joints in older clay pipe are a reliable source. Roots enter through hairline cracks in the joint sealant, then grow inside the pipe, eventually restricting or completely blocking flow. Maples, oaks, and sweetgums — all common in Mint Hill and Charlotte neighborhoods — are frequent offenders. Once roots are established in the line, clearing them is a temporary fix. The only permanent solution is replacing the affected section with new pipe and sealed joints.