We give out more second opinions in Silver Lake than replacements.
That is what happens when you camera an old Silver Lake line before quoting it instead of after. These 1920s-1940s homes sit on original clay, and clay fails in a way that looks total from a snake and is often local on a screen. A lot of Silver Lake lines quoted for full replacement need a section of pipe, not a whole new one.
We run trenchless sewer repair and replacement across Silver Lake and the rest of LA, and every job starts the same way: a camera in the line, footage you watch with us, and an honest call on whether you need a spot repair, a liner, or a full replacement. A lot of Silver Lake lines do not need what the first quote said they did.
The hillside is working against your pipe
A good part of Silver Lake sits on slope, and slope changes how a sewer fails. Hillside soil creeps downhill under its own weight and jumps in a quake, and a rigid clay line in moving ground separates at the joints and offsets sideways on a steep enough lot. That motion is why two identical houses, one flat and one on the hill, do not fail the same way.
It also changes the fix. A pipe that has shifted sideways will not always take a bursting head cleanly, and a collapsed run gives a cable nothing to follow. On Silver Lake lots we read the line on camera before committing to a method, so you are not paying for a no-dig attempt that was never going to pull. Sometimes a targeted dig is the honest answer on a hillside line, and the footage shows you why.
How we work a Silver Lake line
The camera goes first. You watch it. We mark the failure to the foot from the cleanout so there is no guessing about where or how bad. One failed section gets repaired. A pipe leaking at the joints but still round gets lined from the inside. A line that is corroded or collapsed along its length gets replaced, usually by bursting. A full dig is the last option in Silver Lake, not the first. The logic behind that call is in our repair or replace guide.
The lateral is yours, including under the parkway
The pipe from your Silver Lake house to the city main is the lateral, and all of it is your responsibility, even the stretch under the public parkway. There is no city program that covers it. That is the surprise that turns a sewer backup into a stressful week, and it is covered in full in our permits guide.
What this usually looks like
A 1920s home on one of the steeper Silver Lake streets, backing up after years of nothing. The owner had a full replacement quote. On camera the line was mostly sound with one stretch where the hillside had pulled a clay joint apart and offset it. That section needed work, the rest did not. Hillside lots like that fail at the point where the ground moved most, and a replacement quote that treats the whole line as gone is reading the slope wrong.
What it costs in Silver Lake
A section repair is the low end. A trenchless replacement in Silver Lake runs into the five figures depending on length, depth, and access, and lining is often priced by the foot. Hillside access and any work in the public right of way push the number up. Every estimate is itemized, never a single lump sum. The full breakdown is in our cost guide.
Get a straight answer
Already holding a replacement quote for your Silver Lake home? Send it over with any footage and we will give you a free second opinion on whether it is really necessary. Backing up right now? We will get a camera in the line and show you what is actually going on, usually within one business day.
Related reading
- Repair or replace your sewer line: how we decide
- Why LA sewer lines fail
- What sewer line replacement costs in Los Angeles
- Sewer permits and LADBS: what you are responsible for