What Is Trenchless Sewer Repair?
Traditional sewer line repair means excavating a trench — sometimes 50 to 100 feet long — through your yard, garden, driveway, or concrete to reach the damaged pipe below. It's disruptive, slow, and expensive to restore once the repair is done.
Trenchless sewer repair solves the same problem through a completely different approach: instead of digging up the pipe, technicians access it through two small entry points and replace it entirely using pipe bursting. The damaged section is addressed, the pipe is restored to full function, and your yard stays intact.
Stedman's Plumbing uses both trenchless methods depending on the nature of your pipe damage, pipe material, and line depth. The right choice starts with a sewer camera inspection to see exactly what's happening inside your pipes before any work begins.
Two Trenchless Methods — Which One Is Right for You?
Trenchless repair isn't one-size-fits-all. We use two proven methods, each suited to different types and degrees of pipe damage.
Pipe Bursting
A hydraulic bursting head is pulled through the existing pipe, breaking it apart and pushing the fragments outward into the surrounding soil. As the head advances, a new high-density polyethylene (HDPE) pipe is pulled in directly behind it. The old pipe is gone; a brand-new one takes its place — in the same path, through the same two access holes.
- Only two small access holes required
- Installs a full-diameter new pipe
- Handles pipes that have collapsed or fragmented
- Suitable for clay, cast iron, and Orangeburg pipe
- Single access point in many cases
- Original pipe path preserved exactly
- Eliminates root intrusion entry points
- Smooth interior improves flow rate
Is Trenchless Sewer Repair Right for Your Situation?
Most homeowners with sewer line damage are good candidates for trenchless repair — but not every situation qualifies. Here's what we evaluate when determining whether trenchless is the right call:
That's exactly what a camera inspection determines. We look at your pipe, assess the damage, and tell you honestly whether trenchless works — and if so, which method. Call (559) 770-9772 to schedule.
Trenchless vs. Traditional Excavation
Trenchless repair consistently outperforms traditional dig-and-replace across nearly every dimension that matters to homeowners. Here's the direct comparison:
| Factor | Trenchless Repair | Traditional Excavation |
|---|---|---|
| Timeline | 1 day in most cases | 3–5+ days including restoration |
| Yard Disruption | Minimal — 1–2 small access holes | Full trench dug along pipe path |
| Landscaping Impact | Lawn, garden, trees stay intact | Significant — vegetation removed |
| Concrete/Pavement | Preserved in almost all cases | Driveway or walkway often cut |
| Longevity | 50–100 years (new HDPE pipe) | Comparable, but depends on pipe material used |
| Restoration Costs | Low — minimal excavation to fill | High — landscaping, concrete, backfill |
| Property Disruption | Minimal — no heavy equipment in yard | Significant — backhoe access required |
How Long Does Trenchless Repair Last?
One of the most important questions homeowners ask is whether trenchless repair is a permanent fix or a temporary patch. The answer: both trenchless methods are designed for decades of service life.
In both cases, the repaired or replaced pipe will outlast most of the original pipe materials it replaces (clay and cast iron) by decades. Neither method is a temporary fix — they're permanent solutions.
Warning Signs Your Sewer Line Needs Repair
Sewer problems rarely announce themselves clearly. By the time most homeowners call a plumber, the issue has been developing for months. Watch for these warning signs and call for a sewer camera inspection before the damage gets worse.
Fresno Sewer Lateral Responsibility: Who Pays for What?
City of Fresno Policy — Property Owners Are Responsible for the Lateral
The sewer lateral is the pipe that runs from your home's plumbing to the City of Fresno's main sewer line in the street. Under Fresno's municipal code, property owners are responsible for the entire sewer lateral from the house to the connection at the public main — including any section running under the public sidewalk or parkway.
This means that if your sewer lateral fails anywhere along its length (cracks, root intrusion, collapse, or blockage), the repair cost is your responsibility — not the City's. The City is only responsible for the main sewer line running through the street.
Key implications for Fresno homeowners:
- The lateral under your yard and under the sidewalk/parkway is your responsibility to repair
- You may need a permit for lateral repairs — Stedman's handles permit coordination
- The City may require you to repair a deteriorated lateral if it's causing issues with the main
Questions about your specific property's lateral? Call us at (559) 770-9772 — we're familiar with Fresno's lateral requirements and can walk you through the process.
Frequently Asked Questions
Trenchless Sewer Repair Service Area
Stedman's Plumbing provides trenchless sewer repair throughout Fresno and the surrounding Central Valley communities. We serve both residential and small commercial properties.
Cities We Serve
Related Drain & Sewer Services
Trenchless repair is one part of a complete sewer health strategy. Depending on your situation, you may also benefit from:
- Sewer camera inspection — the essential first step before any sewer line repair decision
- Localized sewer spot repair — when the camera reveals isolated damage at a single point
- Hydro-jetting — high-pressure sewer line cleaning before or after trenchless repair
- Professional drain cleaning — for recurring clogs throughout the home







