Protect
Drop cloths under work area. Original 1900s tile, claw-foot tub, pedestal sink — all stay untouched.
Bathroom drain work across the Irvington Historic District is the most predictable thing we do. The fixture types are well-known — tub, shower, lav, toilet — and the 1900s pipe behind them is the same cast iron + occasional galvanized steel pattern that we've worked thousands of times. Hair-and-soap clogs in tubs and showers, slow lav drains from soap-scale buildup, toilet line obstructions, and the occasional foreign object in a kids' bathroom. We diagnose, cable, test, and document. $150-$225 flat-rate per branch. We protect tile, claw-foot tubs, and pedestal sinks during the work — the cable never touches the visible fixture. Same-day across 46219. Browse our full service catalog or our Irvington service area. Flat-rate Bathroom Drain Cleaning Irvington across the metro, 24/7 dispatch.
Tub + shower drains. The most frequent Irvington bathroom call. A century of hair + soap + body oil accumulates in the trap and the branch line behind it. Standard 25-foot hand auger sometimes clears surface clogs, but deeper buildup needs a motorized cable. We pull the strainer or stopper, run cable through the drain to the main stack connection, clear the obstruction, and test with full water flow. The original 1900s tub fittings stay protected — drop cloths under the work area, no contact with the porcelain or claw-foot finish.
Lav (sink) drains. Soap scale + toothpaste residue + the occasional dropped jewelry. The original 1900s pedestal sink or built-in vanity has a tighter trap geometry than modern fixtures, which means buildup happens faster. We cable through the lav drain, often pulling the P-trap to clear the immediate obstruction, then snake further to make sure the branch line is clear back to the stack.
Toilet line work. Slow-flushing toilet or full backup. Standard plunger work clears most of these — but if the obstruction is in the line beyond the trap (down in the branch where it meets the stack), we need motorized cable. Sometimes the toilet itself needs to be pulled for cable access. $150 for trap-only clears; $200-$225 if the toilet needs to be pulled and reset.
When the bathroom call signals something bigger. If multiple bathroom fixtures back up simultaneously (toilet + tub + lav all slow), the issue is downstream of where they all join — the main stack or main lateral. We route to main sewer line cleaning ($300-$550) instead of charging branch-line rates per fixture. If a single fixture clogs three or more times in a year despite cabling, camera scope ($250, credited toward follow-up) tells us whether the issue is the branch material, a partial blockage further down, or something structural.
Drop cloths under work area. Original 1900s tile, claw-foot tub, pedestal sink — all stay untouched.
Locate obstruction — trap, branch, stack, or main. Flat-rate quote in writing.
Right-sized cable through the drain. Clears immediate obstruction.
Full water flow test. Drop cloths removed. 30-day clog-back guarantee.
Same flat-rate everywhere — crews staged across the metro. Each area page covers the local pricing detail + access notes.
Tub, shower, lav, toilet branch line work in 1900s original plumbing. Flat-rate $150-$225 per branch. Same-day across 46219.
Call (463) 331-0700$150-$225 flat-rate for tub, shower, lav, or toilet branch line clogs. Standard hair + soap + scale at the lower end; toilet line work requiring pulling the toilet runs the upper end. Same flat-rate as central Indianapolis.
Most Irvington Historic District homes still run original 1900s bathroom plumbing — cast iron branch lines from each fixture, sometimes with galvanized steel additions during early 20th century renovations. Pipe material is older + fittings are smaller diameter than modern PVC, which means hair-and-soap clogs build up faster. We use cable + cutting head sized to the 1900s spec.
No. The cable enters through the drain opening — it never touches the bathroom fixtures or tile. We protect the bathtub surround with drop cloths and run the cable directly into the drain. Wall + floor tile, claw-foot finish, original pedestal sink — all untouched.
That's a main stack or main lateral issue, not individual branch clogs. We route to main sewer line cleaning ($300-$550) instead of charging branch-line rates per fixture. Camera scope confirms which case applies.
Surface clogs in tubs, showers, and lavs respond to a 25-foot hand auger from the hardware store about 50% of the time. Deeper buildup needs a motorized cable. Toilet clogs that don't respond to a plunger usually need motorized cable. If the home is 1900s Historic District, we recommend professional work — the older pipe material is more forgiving of properly-sized cabling than of hardware-store augers handled aggressively.
Yes. Toilet pulling adds $50-$75 to the standard $150 branch rate. We re-seat the toilet with a new wax ring and verify the seal before leaving. Same-day work — pull, cable, reset.
Some Irvington homes have galvanized steel branch lines installed during early 20th century renovations. The galvanized often shows interior corrosion + diameter narrowing similar to cast iron grease coating. Cabling clears immediate clogs; if the recurrence pattern points to material deterioration, we discuss repipe options with a plumbing contractor (we don't do that work, but we'll honestly point you that direction when it makes sense).
Yes. Bathroom backup before guests arrive qualifies as an emergency. Same flat-rate at 3 AM Sunday as 10 AM Tuesday. See our Irvington emergency service page for full emergency-dispatch detail.
Standard bathroom branch line work — tub, shower, lav, toilet. We protect the 1900s tile, claw-foot tub, pedestal sink. The cable never touches what's visible. $150-$225 flat-rate.