Drain clearance, drain cleaning and practical drainage advice from Chris Peters.
After 35+ years in drainage, I know the difference between a simple blockage and a drain that needs further investigation.
If the drain clears cleanly, I will say so. If the symptoms suggest roots, scale, damage or poor flow, I will explain the sensible options.
Fixed Prices • No VAT • No Call-Out Charge • 35+ Years’ Experience
Common Causes of Drain Blockages
Many blockages are caused by fat, grease, wipes, toilet paper, hair, food waste, scale, silt and leaves. More serious or recurring problems can involve roots, cracked pipes, open joints, poor falls, damaged gullies or collapsed sections of drain.
The cause matters because the correct answer is not always the same. A grease blockage may need a proper clean, a root problem may need cutting back and checking, and a broken section of pipe may need a repair rather than repeated unblocking.
How I Approach a Blocked Drain
The first step is to understand the symptoms and find the best access point. I then clear the blockage using suitable drainage equipment, test the flow and explain what I have found. If the drain needs further investigation, I will tell you why.
The aim is not to make the job sound bigger than it is. Some drains simply need clearing properly. Others give warning signs that something in the pipe is catching waste or slowing the flow, and that is when experience matters.
When a Blocked Drain Should Not Be Ignored
If the same drain keeps blocking, if sewage is backing up, if there are bad smells outside, or if water is sitting in the gully, it is better to deal with it early. Small drainage faults can become more expensive if they are left too long.
If you are unsure, it is usually better to call before repeatedly flushing, adding chemicals or running more water into a drain that is already struggling.
Chris’s Professional Advice
Tree roots usually enter through an existing defect such as an open joint or crack. Cutting roots away may clear the drain, but the entry point may still remain.
From Chris Peters
Not every drain needs a camera survey. Sometimes the right equipment clears the problem cleanly and the drain tests well. If I think CCTV would genuinely help, I explain why before recommending it.
I have seen many drains that looked like a simple blockage at first but turned out to have roots or a displaced joint further along the pipe. That is why I pay attention to how the drain clears and how it runs afterwards.
Drain Cleaning and High Pressure Jetting
Where suitable, high pressure water jetting can remove heavy grease, scale, silt and compacted debris from the drain. The aim is not just to poke a hole through the blockage, but to restore proper flow through the pipe.
Clearing the Problem on the First Visit
My aim is always to clear the blockage properly during the first visit where access and pipe condition allow. That means choosing the right access point, using suitable drainage equipment and testing the flow before leaving.
If I think the drain needs further investigation, I will explain why in plain English rather than turning a simple blockage into unnecessary work.
Blocked Sinks, Baths and Showers
Kitchen sinks usually block with fat, food waste and soap deposits. Bathroom waste pipes often block with hair, soap and scale. I clear the pipework properly rather than relying on temporary chemical fixes.
Water Backing Up Inside the Property
If water is backing up into a toilet, sink, bath, shower or floor-level waste, it usually means the pipe cannot take the flow away properly. I treat this as a priority because using more water can make the mess worse and can sometimes affect more than one outlet.
Once the blockage is cleared, I check how the water runs away so I can tell you whether it looks like a one-off restriction or a sign of something further down the drain.
Recurring Drain Blockages
If the same drain keeps blocking, there is usually an underlying cause. Roots, displaced joints, poor falls, scale, broken pipework or trapped debris can all make a drain block repeatedly even after it has been cleared.
Full Manholes and Backing-Up Drains
If a manhole is full, the blockage is normally downstream from that chamber. I clear the line from the safest practical access point and then check that the chamber drops properly when water is run through the system.
A full manhole should not be left to sit, because wastewater can back up into toilets, sinks, gullies or neighbouring pipework depending on how the drains are connected.
CCTV Drain Surveys in Brighton
CCTV is useful when a drain keeps blocking, smells persist or there may be root ingress, open joints, cracked pipework or a partial collapse. It supports the drain unblocking work by showing what is actually happening inside the pipe.
Drain Repairs
Not every damaged drain needs digging up. Some faults can be repaired using patch lining or drain lining, while others need excavation. I explain the options clearly and only recommend repair work when there is a genuine reason.
Finding the Best Access Point
Good drain clearance starts with choosing the right access point. That may be a manhole, gully, rodding eye, waste pipe or soil pipe depending on where the symptoms are showing.
Working from the right place helps clear the blockage properly and reduces the chance of pushing the problem further along the drain.
Blocked Drains in Brighton
Blocked drains are often caused by fat, grease, wipes, scale, silt, roots or damaged pipework. I use professional drainage equipment to clear the blockage properly and check that the drain is running as it should afterwards.
Why Customers Call Chris Peters
- 35+ years of drainage experience
- Fixed-price wording where possible
- No VAT added to the quoted price
- No separate call-out charge
- Professional advice in plain English
- Checkatrade trust and local reputation
When a CCTV Drain Survey Helps
CCTV is not the main service on every blockage, but it is valuable when a drain in Brighton keeps blocking, smells persist, rats are suspected or there are signs of root ingress, open joints or damaged pipework.
I do not automatically recommend a camera survey for every drain. If the blockage clears cleanly and the pipe runs well afterwards, that may be enough. If the symptoms suggest a hidden fault, a CCTV survey can stop you paying for repeated clearance without understanding the cause.
What I Check After Clearing the Drain
Once the drain is flowing again, I do not just pack up and leave. I check that water is running away properly, look for signs of a repeat problem and explain whether the blockage looks like a one-off issue or something that may need further investigation.
This is important because a drain can appear clear but still run poorly if there is scale, a rough joint, roots or debris further along the pipe. A proper check gives you a better idea of whether the problem has genuinely been solved.
What Happens When You Call
When you call about a blocked drain in Brighton, I will normally ask what is backing up, whether the problem is inside or outside, and whether it has happened before. That helps me understand whether it sounds like a straightforward blockage, a blocked toilet or sink, or a drain that may need further investigation.
I will also try to be clear about access, likely equipment and price before work starts. If the job sounds like it may need more than a simple clearance, I will explain that rather than surprising you afterwards.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if the blockage is inside or outside?
If several outlets are slow or backing up, the problem is often further along the drain. If only one sink or basin is affected, it may be a local waste pipe blockage. I will always explain what I find in plain English so you know whether it looks like a one-off blockage or something that may return.
Do chemicals clear blocked drains?
Chemicals may move a small blockage, but they rarely solve a serious or recurring drainage problem. Where possible, I keep the explanation simple: what was blocked, how it was cleared and whether anything else is worth checking.
Can drain scale cause blockages?
Yes. Scale can narrow the pipe and catch paper, wipes and debris, making blockages more likely. Where possible, I keep the explanation simple: what was blocked, how it was cleared and whether anything else is worth checking.
Can you help if another company has already tried?
Yes. If a blockage has already been tried with rods, plungers or chemicals, it may need different equipment or a better look at where the restriction is. The important thing is to clear the blockage properly first, then check whether the drain is running normally afterwards.
What should I do before you arrive?
Avoid using water where possible if the drain is backing up, and keep access clear to toilets, sinks, gullies or manholes. If the drain tests well after clearing, I will say so; if there are warning signs, I will point them out clearly.
Can you clear commercial drains?
Yes, depending on the site and access. I can help with many small business and commercial drainage problems. Many drainage problems are straightforward once the right access and equipment are used, but repeated symptoms should not be ignored.
Can you help with bad drain smells?
Yes. Bad smells can be linked to partial blockages, dry traps, faulty connections, damaged pipework or poor ventilation. Many drainage problems are straightforward once the right access and equipment are used, but repeated symptoms should not be ignored.
What happens if the drain blocks again?
If the same drain blocks again, I would look for signs of an underlying fault such as roots, scale, poor fall, cracked pipework or a displaced joint. I will always explain what I find in plain English so you know whether it looks like a one-off blockage or something that may return.
Do you repair damaged drains?
Yes. Where damage is found, I can explain repair options such as patch lining, drain lining or excavation where needed. The important thing is to clear the blockage properly first, then check whether the drain is running normally afterwards.
What causes blocked drains?
Common causes include fat, grease, wipes, scale, toilet paper, roots, silt, broken pipework and displaced joints. Where possible, I keep the explanation simple: what was blocked, how it was cleared and whether anything else is worth checking.
Do I need to know where the manhole is?
It helps, but if you are not sure, I can usually advise based on the property layout and symptoms. A good visit should leave you with both a working drain and a clearer understanding of why the blockage happened.
Is a recurring blockage normal?
No. A recurring blockage usually means there is an underlying cause that should be checked. A good visit should leave you with both a working drain and a clearer understanding of why the blockage happened.
Why is my outside drain overflowing?
It may be blocked with silt, leaves, fat, wipes or debris, or the connecting drain may be restricted further along the line. If the drain tests well after clearing, I will say so; if there are warning signs, I will point them out clearly.
More Drainage Services
Blocked Drains Blocked Toilets Blocked Sinks Outside Drains Drain Cleaning CCTV Drain Surveys Drain Repairs
Nearby East Sussex Areas
I also cover nearby towns and villages close to Brighton.
Blocked Drains Hove Blocked Drains Portslade Blocked Drains Southwick Blocked Drains Shoreham-by-Sea Blocked Drains Patcham Blocked Drains Woodingdean Blocked Drains Ovingdean Blocked Drains Rottingdean
Need Drainage Help in Brighton?
If you are not sure whether the problem is a straightforward blockage, a recurring drain fault or something that may need CCTV, give me a call first. I will explain the likely options clearly and I will not recommend extra work unless there is a good reason.
When you phone, you speak directly to Chris. I will listen to what has happened, explain the likely options and keep the advice practical before any work starts.
For blocked drains in Brighton, call Chris Peters Plumbing & Drainage and speak directly to the person doing the work.