Short answer from a licensed Georgia plumber: a typical professional drain cleaning in Atlanta runs $150 to $300 for a standard fixture clog — sink, tub, or toilet line. A main sewer line is a different job: $300 to $500 to cable it, more if it needs a camera or the problem is roots. Those $49–$99 specials you see advertised everywhere? Real, but read on before you book one.
Atlanta Drain Cleaning Prices at a Glance
| Job | Typical Atlanta Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Sink / tub / shower clog | $100 – $200 | Cable through the fixture or trap |
| Toilet clog (auger-resistant) | $100 – $270 | When your plunger and a closet auger have lost |
| Laundry / standpipe | $150 – $215 | Often grease + lint mats |
| Main sewer line (cable) | $300 – $500 | Cleanout access makes it cheaper |
| Camera inspection | $150 – $350 | Worth it for repeat main-line clogs |
| “$49–$99 special” | What it says — read below | One drain, with conditions |
The Truth About the $49–$99 Specials
Those offers are real and sometimes a fine deal — but know what they are. They typically cover one accessible drain through an existing cleanout, with easy access, and they’re priced as a door-opener: the company expects a percentage of those visits to turn into bigger tickets (root cutting, camera work, repairs). Common ways the $99 becomes $400: no accessible cleanout (pulling a toilet to reach the line is extra), roots or a belly in the line (“we can cable it, but…”), or the upsell pitch once they’re in your crawlspace.
None of that is necessarily a scam — main-line problems are real and roots don’t cable themselves away. But go in knowing: the special is a diagnostic visit with a teaser price. Ask on the phone: “Is that price through my existing cleanout? What’s the price if you have to pull a toilet? Does it include the camera?” A straight answer tells you who you’re dealing with.
Before You Call Anyone: the 10-Minute Checks
A good share of “drain cleaning” calls I’ve run could have been a homeowner with a $30 tool and ten minutes:
- One slow fixture (sink, tub): it’s local — hair or grease at the trap. A hand snake or a drain snake that matches the job usually clears it. Full steps: how to unclog any drain.
- Toilet only: plunger with a proper flange, then a closet auger. Toilet keeps doing it? — that’s a different problem than one clog.
- Multiple fixtures backing up at once, gurgling, sewage at a floor drain: stop — that’s your main line, and it’s exactly when paying a pro makes sense. Don’t pour anything down it; cable work and a camera are the right call.
- Skip the liquid drain cleaner. The lye/acid products damage pipes and rarely fix the actual blockage — what we recommend instead is enzyme maintenance after the clog is cleared mechanically.
What Makes Main-Line Work Cost More
Access (an outside cleanout saves real money vs pulling a toilet), what’s in the line (grease and wipes cable easily; roots need a cutting head and will return without follow-up), and how far the blockage sits. If you’ve had the same main-line clog twice in a year, pay for the camera — repeat cabling without knowing why is renting a solution. In older intown neighborhoods — Decatur, East Atlanta, Grant Park — clay sewer laterals with root intrusion are practically a local tradition; that’s a camera-then-decide situation, not a $99-special situation.
FAQ
Why do Atlanta companies advertise $49–$99 drain cleaning?
It’s a customer-acquisition price for one accessible drain. It’s honest at face value — just know the conditions, and that the visit is designed to find bigger work. Ask what’s included before booking.
How do I know if it’s one clogged drain or my main line?
One fixture acting up = local clog. Multiple fixtures, the lowest drain in the house backing up, or gurgling toilets when the washer drains = main line. Local you can often DIY; main line, call a pro.
Is hydro jetting worth it over cabling?
For grease-heavy lines and root-prone laterals, jetting cleans the pipe wall instead of punching a hole through the clog — it lasts longer but costs more ($350–800+). For a first-time, garden-variety clog, cable it first.
How often should drains be professionally cleaned?
With decent habits (hair catchers, no grease down the kitchen sink, no “flushable” wipes — ever), most homes never need routine professional cleaning. Monthly enzyme maintenance keeps slow drains from becoming clogs.
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