Hydrojetting is a powerful drain and sewer cleaning option, but pressure alone is not the full decision. Before using high-pressure water in a sewer line, it often helps to know what the pipe looks like inside.
That is why a sewer camera inspection can be the right first step when symptoms are recurring, the pipe is older, or the blockage may involve roots or damage.
What hydrojetting is good for
Hydrojetting can help clear grease, sludge, scale, soft buildup, and debris from pipe walls. It can be more thorough than basic snaking when buildup is spread through a line instead of sitting as one simple blockage.
That makes hydrojetting useful for recurring slow drains, heavy kitchen line buildup, and some sewer line restrictions. But the pipe should be appropriate for the service.
What camera inspection reveals first
A camera inspection can show whether the problem is buildup, roots, a sagging pipe, a broken section, an offset joint, or another structural concern. Those details matter before choosing the cleaning method.
If the pipe is damaged, hydrojetting may not be the first or only answer. If the camera shows heavy buildup in an otherwise serviceable line, jetting may be a practical next step.
When inspection is especially useful
Camera inspection before hydrojetting is especially helpful when:
- The same drain or sewer line has backed up more than once.
- Multiple fixtures are affected.
- The property has mature trees near the sewer path.
- The home is older and the pipe material is unknown.
- There are sewer odors, gurgling, or wastewater backups.
How this protects the homeowner
Inspection helps match the service to the actual condition. That can prevent a homeowner from paying for cleaning when the real issue is a damaged sewer line. It can also confirm when hydrojetting is a reasonable way to remove buildup before it turns into another backup.
If a sewer line needs repair, the camera can also support the next conversation about sewer line repair or replacement.
Next step
If the line keeps clogging, do not start with assumptions. A camera inspection can help decide whether drain cleaning, hydrojetting, or sewer repair is the most practical path.







