Home Cost Report

Sewer line replacement cost

Sewer line replacement costs about $1,300 to $10,000, with a typical price around $3,300, or roughly $50.00 – $250 per linear foot, installed (as of June 2026).

Replacing a home's main sewer line, by length and dig vs. trenchless method.

Replacing a home's main sewer line averages about $3,300, commonly $1,300–$10,000. By length, expect roughly $50–$250 per linear foot depending on the line's depth and whether crews dig or use trenchless methods.

Low
$1,300
Typical
$3,300
High
$10,000

About $50.00 – $250 per linear foot, installed

Estimate your sewer line replacement

Estimate by line length and method. The estimate starts from our published per-foot range.

Adjusts the estimate to local cost levels. Pick a metro or leave on national.

Concrete, driveways, and depth raise the cost the most.

Estimated cost for your options
$2,500$12,500
Typical: $7,500

How we got this

Starts from our published sewer line replacement range (per linear feet × 50), adjusted for:

  • Method: Traditional dig (excavation)×1
  • Access & obstacles: Open yard, straightforward×1

These figures are planning estimates compiled from public cost data on the dates shown — not quotes, bids, or guarantees. Real prices vary widely with your home, location, materials, permits, and contractor. Always get itemized written quotes from licensed local pros before budgeting or hiring.

What changes the price

  • Line lengthRaises cost

    Longer runs cost more — pricing is largely per linear foot.

  • DepthRaises cost

    Deeper lines need more excavation and shoring.

  • Under concrete or drivewayRaises cost

    Breaking and restoring concrete or driveways can hit $300–$350 per foot.

  • Dig vs. trenchlessVaries

    Trenchless avoids tearing up the yard; per-foot price is similar but restoration is cheaper.

  • Permits & inspectionRaises cost

    Sewer work requires permits and inspection, built into a licensed plumber's quote.

Get real quotes for your sewer line replacement

Our ranges are for planning. The only way to know your real price is itemized quotes from licensed local pros — always get at least three before you hire.

Tip: search for licensed, insured sewer line replacement contractors in your area, check reviews and references, and compare written itemized bids — not just bottom-line numbers.

Sewer line replacement cost — FAQ

How much does it cost to replace a sewer line?
Sewer line replacement averages about $3,300 and commonly runs $1,300–$10,000. By length, expect roughly $50–$250 per linear foot installed. Cost climbs with line length, depth, and obstacles like driveways or concrete the crew must dig through.
Is trenchless sewer replacement cheaper than digging?
Trenchless methods (pipe bursting or lining) run about $60–$200 per foot and avoid tearing up your yard or driveway — which can make the total cheaper once you factor in restoration, even when the per-foot price is similar to digging.
Why is my sewer line replacement so expensive?
The pipe itself is cheap; the cost is excavation and restoration. Lines under a driveway, slab, or mature landscaping can reach $300–$350 per foot once concrete breaking and repair are added.
Does homeowners insurance cover sewer line replacement?
Standard policies usually don't cover wear-and-tear or root damage to the sewer line. Some insurers offer a separate service-line endorsement. Check your own policy — this is general information, not insurance advice.

Sewer line replacement cost by city

Costs vary by metro. See sewer line replacement pricing adjusted to local levels:

Cost data compiled June 13, 2026.

Sources (3)

Ranges synthesize several public 2026 cost guides into a low–typical–high band rather than reproducing any single source's table. Metro-level breakdowns are coming as we verify local data.

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