
Drain Line Jetting
- Camera inspection to locate the blockage where access allows
- High-pressure jetting of downspout and underground drain lines
- Root cut-out and sediment removal from buried pipe
- Flow test after the clear to confirm full drainage
- Debris flushed, then hauled off or binned
Gutter cleaning handles what you can see. Jetting handles what you can't — the underground drain lines that carry water from your downspouts away from the house. Those pipes fill with sediment, decomposed leaf debris, and roots that find the joints. A snake just bores a hole through the blockage; within weeks it closes back up. A jetter is different: high-pressure water scours the entire inside wall of the pipe, flushing the clog out and leaving the line running at full capacity.
In King County, this matters more than most places. The rain doesn't quit, and a blocked drain line means water pooling against your foundation, eroding flower beds, or surfacing in the yard. Most homeowners don't know the line is failing until water starts coming back up at the downspout or the catch basin overflows.
“Gutter cleaning handles what you can see.”
We start by locating the blockage — camera inspection where access allows — then jet the line from the downspout connection through to the discharge point. Roots get cut out, sediment gets flushed, and we run a flow test afterward so you can see the water moving the way it should. Debris is hauled off or binned, your call.
If your lines haven't been jetted in years, expect the first service to take longer — we're cutting out a decade of buildup, not last season's leaves. We're licensed, insured, and carry proof of insurance for property managers who require it before we start.