Which Drain Snake Do I Need?

Two questions → the right tool for your clog (and when it’s a pro job). From a licensed plumber.

General guidance from a licensed plumber, not a substitute for an on-site inspection. As an Amazon Associate, Plumbing Picks may earn from qualifying purchases at no cost to you.

Drain snakes — quick answers

What’s the difference between a drum auger and a closet auger?

A drum (hand) auger is a coiled cable in a housing for sinks, tubs, and floor drains. A closet (toilet) auger is shaped specifically for toilets, with a rubber sleeve that protects the porcelain — use it only for toilets, and never run a regular drum auger through a bowl.

Can I put a drain snake through a garbage disposal?

No — don’t snake down through the disposal. Snake the line from the wall stub-out after removing the P-trap, or work from a cleanout. Running a cable through the disposal can wreck it.

How many feet of cable do I need?

Most sink and tub clogs sit within 5–15 feet, so a 25-foot hand auger covers them. Branch and floor-drain clogs can sit deeper — 25–50 feet. A clog in the main line usually needs a power auger or a pro.

Fix the 12 Most Common Plumbing Problems Yourself — Free Plumber’s Handbook

Step-by-step fixes for the 12 most common problems — and exactly when to call a pro. Free and instant, from a licensed plumber. Save hundreds on calls you didn’t need.

No spam — just genuinely useful plumbing help. Unsubscribe anytime.

🔧 Plumbing Picks Assistant
Hi! I am the Plumbing Picks assistant. Ask me about toilets, faucets, drains, leaks, water heaters, hard water, tools — anything plumbing — and I will point you to the fix. What is going on?