What Sewer Camera Inspection Costs in LA
A sewer camera inspection in Los Angeles is one of the most undervalued tools in homeownership, especially before buying an older LA property. John’s Plumbing & Drain Services uses HD waterproof cameras with locating transmitters to inspect sewer laterals across LA, identifying root intrusion, pipe collapse, scale buildup, and offset joints before they become $10,000 problems.
For homes in older neighborhoods like Echo Park and Koreatown where most sewer laterals are 80 to 120 years old, a camera inspection is a $250 investment that prevents tens of thousands in surprise costs.
How Sewer Camera Inspection Works
A modern sewer camera is a waterproof color HD camera mounted on the end of a flexible push rod (typically 200 feet long). The plumber feeds the camera into the sewer lateral through an accessible cleanout, then pushes it through the line while watching the video feed on a monitor.
The camera head includes a locating transmitter (called a sonde) that emits a signal traceable from above ground. This means when the plumber sees a problem at, for example, 47 feet of camera travel, the location can be pinpointed within a foot above ground using a locator wand. That precision is what makes repair planning possible without exploratory excavation.
Five Situations When You Need a Sewer Camera Inspection
1. Before Buying an Older LA Home
The single most cost-effective use of a sewer camera inspection in Los Angeles is during the inspection period before closing on an older home. A standard home inspection does not include the sewer lateral. A failed sewer lateral can cost $4,000 to $30,000 to repair depending on length, depth, and method.
If a $250 sewer camera inspection finds significant issues, the buyer has three options: walk away, negotiate a price reduction, or negotiate seller-paid repair. All three are better than discovering the problem six months after closing.
This is especially important for homes built before 1970 in neighborhoods like Echo Park, Silver Lake, Koreatown, Boyle Heights, and Highland Park, where original clay or Orangeburg sewer laterals are common.
2. Recurring Sewer Backups
If a sewer line in a Los Angeles home has backed up more than once in the past two years, snaking the line again is treating the symptom rather than the cause. A sewer camera inspection identifies whether the backups are caused by root intrusion (requires hydro jetting plus root barrier or pipe lining), pipe collapse (requires sewer repair), grease buildup (requires hydro jetting on a maintenance schedule), or offset joints (requires pipe replacement).
3. Before Major Landscaping or Hardscape
If you are planning to install a new lawn, hardscape, pool, or retaining wall over your sewer lateral, run a camera inspection first. Replacing a sewer lateral under finished hardscape costs significantly more than under bare dirt. If the existing lateral is showing signs of failure, repairing or replacing it before the landscaping work saves the cost of redoing it later.
4. Before a Major Home Renovation
A renovation that adds bathrooms, expands the kitchen, or builds an ADU increases the load on the sewer lateral. If the existing lateral is at the end of its service life, the additional load can push it over the edge within the first year after renovation. Camera inspection before the renovation lets you know whether to upgrade the lateral as part of the project, which is cheaper than doing it as a separate emergency repair later.
5. After Visible Root Intrusion at a Fixture
If you have ever pulled the cap off a sewer cleanout and seen tree roots, or roots have appeared in a toilet, that confirms roots are in the lateral. Camera inspection identifies which joints they are entering and how much damage exists. The fix is usually hydro jetting followed by pipe lining or pipe bursting at the affected joints.
What the Camera Reveals
A clear, well-executed sewer camera inspection in an older LA home commonly identifies:
- Root intrusion through joints, typically in clay sewer laterals where the mortar joints have failed
- Offset joints where the pipe has shifted due to soil movement
- Cracks and pipe collapse, especially in Orangeburg pipe from the 1940s-50s and old cast iron
- Belly or sag, a low spot where waste collects rather than flowing through
- Scale buildup in older cast iron drain stacks
- Grease buildup, especially in kitchen and restaurant lines
- Foreign objects, commonly toys, wipes, or construction debris that has worked its way down the line
- Improper connections, typically from past DIY repairs or unpermitted additions
Why Pre-Purchase Sewer Inspection Pays for Itself
The American Society of Home Inspectors notes that standard home inspections do not include the sewer lateral, which leaves buyers exposed to one of the largest possible post-closing repair surprises. The ASHI consumer guide recommends sewer camera inspection as a separate add-on inspection for older properties.
The math is straightforward. A pre-purchase sewer camera inspection costs $150 to $350. A surprise sewer lateral replacement after closing costs $5,000 to $25,000. Catching the issue during the inspection period means the seller pays, the price is renegotiated, or you walk away. Discovering it after closing means you pay.
LA Neighborhoods Where This Matters Most
Sewer camera inspection is most valuable in neighborhoods with the oldest sewer infrastructure:
- Echo Park, Silver Lake, Atwater Village (1900s-1930s clay laterals, heavy tree cover)
- Koreatown, Pico-Union, Westlake (1910s-1940s multi-family with original cast iron and clay)
- Highland Park, Eagle Rock, Mount Washington (1900s-1920s hillside laterals)
- Boyle Heights, Lincoln Heights (1900s-1930s clay laterals)
- West Adams, Jefferson Park, Leimert Park (1910s-1940s clay laterals)
- San Pedro, Wilmington (1900s-1920s original infrastructure)
Homes in these neighborhoods built before 1960 almost always have an aging clay or cast iron sewer lateral worth inspecting before purchase.
Frequently Asked Questions About Sewer Camera Inspection in Los Angeles
How much does a sewer camera inspection cost in LA?
A sewer camera inspection in Los Angeles cost depends on the length of the lateral, the property type, and whether locating services are included. John’s Plumbing & Drain Services provides camera inspection across LA, Glendale, Burbank, and Pasadena, with the full HD video recording available to the homeowner after the inspection.
Do I need a camera inspection before buying a house in LA?
A sewer camera inspection before buying a Los Angeles home is strongly recommended for any property built before 1970, especially in older neighborhoods like Echo Park, Silver Lake, Koreatown, Boyle Heights, and Highland Park. The cost of inspection is a small fraction of the cost of a surprise sewer lateral replacement ($5,000 to $25,000) after closing.
What does a sewer camera show?
A modern HD sewer camera in Los Angeles reveals root intrusion through pipe joints, offset joints from soil movement, cracks and pipe collapse, low spots where waste collects, scale and grease buildup, foreign objects, and improper past repairs. The camera includes a locating transmitter that pinpoints the exact above-ground location of any problem identified.
Can a sewer camera find a leak in my LA home?
A sewer camera identifies issues inside the sewer lateral (drain side), but does not detect supply line leaks, slab leaks, or pressurized water leaks. For pressurized leaks, John’s Plumbing & Drain Services uses electronic leak detection equipment instead, which works on a different principle.
How long does a sewer inspection take?
A typical sewer camera inspection in a Los Angeles single-family home takes 45 to 90 minutes from arrival to completion. This includes locating an accessible cleanout, running the camera the full length of the lateral, identifying any issues with their above-ground location, and reviewing findings with the homeowner. A written report with video footage is typically delivered within 24 hours.

















