A clogged or slow drain is common, and it's usually straightforward to clear. A licensed Avondale plumber gets it flowing again — and can tell you whether it's a simple clog or something bigger.
We're a referral service — the licensed plumber gives you an upfront estimate before anything starts. We don't set the price.
The usual suspects
Grease poured down a kitchen drain cools and congeals inside the pipe, trapping everything else that goes down after it.
Hair combines with soap scum to form the classic bathroom-drain clog, building up gradually until water barely moves.
Even with a disposal, food particles can accumulate in the line over time — especially starchy or fibrous scraps.
Despite the label, most wipes don't break down the way toilet paper does, and they're a leading cause of blockages in toilets and the line beyond them.
Avondale's water is well-documented as very hard, and over time mineral scale builds up inside pipes — the same mechanism our water heater page describes — narrowing them so everyday debris catches more easily.
In older neighborhoods, tree roots seeking water can intrude into aging sewer lines — a real cause of recurring main-line clogs.
Worth knowing
Store-bought chemical drain cleaners work through an intense heat and caustic chemical reaction that attacks the clog — but that same reaction attacks the inside of your pipe, and it keeps working until the product drains out, concentrating damage at joints, bends, and weak spots. Used repeatedly, that corrodes pipes over time — older metal and modern PVC alike, since the heat involved can soften plastic too. They're also largely ineffective on a real main-line clog, since the product dilutes before it ever reaches the blockage.
If a drain is clogging repeatedly, a chemical cleaner treats the symptom without addressing whatever's actually causing it — and it does that while working against the pipe, not for it. A plunger, or an enzyme-based cleaner, is a gentler and safer first step for a simple clog. For anything that keeps coming back, that's worth a call rather than another bottle.
The honest bottom line: chemical drain cleaners can corrode pipes over time and won't fix a recurring clog's real cause. A plunger is a reasonable first try — a professional look is the actual fix.
How it gets cleared
For a localized, simpler clog — hair, soap, a single fixture — a drain snake or auger is usually the right tool: a flexible cable that physically breaks through or pulls out the blockage. It's fast and effective for what it's built for, though it punches a channel through the clog rather than scouring the pipe itself.
For heavier buildup, tree roots, or a clog that keeps coming back, hydro-jetting — water at roughly 1,500 to 8,000 psi — scours the full interior of the pipe rather than just clearing a path through it. It's more thorough, but it's also more than a simple clog usually needs.
Which one makes sense is a scope decision the plumber makes for your specific problem, often after a camera look at the pipe's actual condition — hydro-jetting on a fragile, already-worn line can make things worse, which is exactly why that assessment comes first.
When to worry a little more
Multiple drains slowing down or backing up at the same time, gurgling sounds from other fixtures when one drains, or a clog that keeps returning no matter how many times it's cleared — these usually point to something bigger than a simple fixture clog, most often an issue with the main sewer line. A camera inspection is how a plumber finds the actual cause, whether that's root intrusion, a worn section of pipe, or systemic buildup, rather than guessing.
Built for Avondale
Clogs aren't an Avondale-specific problem — grease, hair, and wipes cause the same blockages in every city. What's true here is mostly true everywhere.
Avondale's water is well-documented as very hard, and the scale it leaves behind narrows pipes gradually over the years — a small but real contributor on top of the universal causes.
In Avondale's older pockets, mature trees near aging sewer lines are a genuine, if occasional, cause of recurring main-line clogs.
Simple from the first call
Tell us what's going on. We'll ask a few quick questions and figure out exactly what you need.
Our licensed plumber assesses the clog and clears it — with an upfront estimate before any work begins.
Your drain runs clear again — and you get back to your day with one less thing to worry about.
Good to know
Sources
There is no single government or standards authority for residential drain-clearing methods, the way the U.S. Department of Energy covers water heaters or the Arizona Geological Survey covers soil hazards. The causes of clogs, the effects of chemical drain cleaners, the snake-versus-hydro-jet distinction, and the signs of a sewer-line issue described on this page reflect standard, widely-converged professional plumbing practice — stated plainly, not attributed to a single cited source. We'd rather say that directly than dress up a trade source as an authority it isn't.
Avondale's water-hardness figure stays qualitative, not yet primary-confirmed.
Call and we'll send our licensed plumber: an honest assessment, the right tool for the job, and an upfront estimate before anything starts.
Call (480) 241-8921