Hydro Jetting vs. Snaking: Which Drain Cleaning Method Do You Need?
Has your drain clogged again, even after a plumber snaked it last month? You are not alone. Many Southlake homeowners face the same backup over and over. The real question is not whether to call a plumber. It is which drain cleaning method you actually need.
Two main methods clear a clogged line: snaking and hydro jetting. Each one works, but they fit very different problems. Pick the wrong one, and you may pay to clear the same clog twice. Understanding hydro jetting vs. snaking helps you choose the method that solves the problem for good.
Below, we explain how each method works and compare them side by side. Then we help you match the right method to your situation. We also answer the question most people ask us: will this damage my pipes? Our Southlake technicians inspect your line first, then match the method to the pipe.
Should I Snake or Hydro Jet My Drain?
Snake your drain for a single, simple clog. Choose hydro jetting for clogs that keep coming back. The right method depends on what is happening inside your pipe.
Snaking works best for a one-time blockage near a fixture. Think hair, soap, or a small object. It clears a path fast and is gentle on older pipes.
Hydro jetting works best for recurring clogs, grease buildup, or tree roots. High-pressure water scrubs the whole pipe wall, not just the blockage. This is why the results last longer.
Still not sure? A camera inspection confirms the right call. Our team checks your line before we pick a method. See our drain and sewer services in Southlake to schedule a professional inspection.
How Drain Snaking Works
Drain snaking is the method most homeowners already know. We feed a long, flexible metal cable into your drain. The end has a cutting head that spins as it moves.
When the cable reaches the clog, the head breaks through it. Some debris pulls back out with the cable. The rest gets pushed down the line.
Snaking is fast and reliable. It works well for a single clog near one fixture. Think hair in a bathroom drain or soap buildup in a sink. For these everyday clogs, a standard drain cleaning visit often does the job.
The cable can bend around pipe turns and reach clogs deep in the line. This makes it a strong first choice for everyday blockages.
One thing to know: snaking clears a path through the clog. It does not scrub the pipe walls. If grease coats your pipe, the cable goes through the middle and the grease stays. For many clogs, that path is all you need.
Snaking is also gentle on older or fragile pipes. High pressure can stress aging lines, so a snake is often the safer pick.
How Hydro Jetting Works
Hydro jetting takes a more powerful approach to drain cleaning. We send a high-pressure stream of water through your pipe. A special nozzle sprays water in more than one direction.
The forward jets cut through the clog. The rear jets pull the hose deeper into the line. Together they clean as they move.
Here is what makes hydro jetting different:
- It scrubs the full inside of the pipe.
- It removes grease, scale, sediment, and roots.
- It uses only water, with no chemicals.
Because it uses no chemicals, hydro jetting is safer for your family and your septic system. The water does the work on its own.
Hydro jetting needs a proper cleanout to reach your line safely. Many fixtures cannot handle high-pressure nozzles on their own.
Hydro Jetting vs. Snaking: A Side-by-Side Look
Both methods clear clogs, but they work in very different ways. This quick comparison shows how drain snaking and hydro jetting stack up.
| Drain Snaking | Hydro Jetting | |
|---|---|---|
| How it works | Cable breaks through the clog | Water scours the whole pipe |
| Best for | Single, simple clogs | Recurring clogs, grease, roots |
| Cleans pipe walls? | No, clears a path only | Yes, full pipe interior |
| How long it lasts | Shorter-term fix | Longer-lasting results |
| Older or fragile pipes | Gentle, often safer | Needs a camera check first |
Snaking is a targeted fix. It opens a path so water can flow again. Hydro jetting is a full clean. It removes the buildup coating your pipe walls.
This is why the results differ. Snaking can leave grease or roots behind, so clogs may return. Hydro jetting clears that buildup, so your line stays clear longer.
The simple way to think about it: snaking clears a path, jetting cleans the pipe.
We're There When You Need Us!
877-746-6855 
Which Drain Cleaning Method Do You Need?
The right method comes down to your clog and your pipes. Here is how to tell which one fits your situation.
Choose snaking when:
- You have one slow drain, not several.
- The clog is hair, soap, or a small object.
- It is a one-time problem, not a repeat.
- Your pipes are older or more fragile.
Choose hydro jetting when:
- Several drains are slow at the same time.
- The same drain backs up again and again.
- Grease or tree roots are the cause.
- You want the line cleaned before a video drain inspection.
Watch for signs of deeper buildup. Gurgling sounds, slow drains, and repeat backups all point to material on your pipe walls. These are not single clogs.
Here is a clear signal. If a drain keeps clogging after it was snaked, snaking is not solving the real problem. That is the time to step up to hydro jetting. Tree roots are a common cause, and our root removal service can clear them at the source.
Will These Methods Damage My Pipes?
This is the question we hear most, and it is a fair one. The short answer: both methods are safe in trained hands.
Hydro jetting is safe for modern pipes when the pressure matches the pipe. PVC and copper lines handle strong water pressure well. Older, corroded, or clay pipes need a lower setting.
This is why we run a camera inspection first. We check for cracks, weak spots, and pipe age before we begin. The camera tells us the safe pressure for your line.
Snaking has its own risks when done wrong. Bad technique can scratch pipes, compact debris, or stress pipe joints. A pushed clog can also end up harder to reach.
Rental snakes may seem easy, but they take real skill to use safely. The wrong move can turn a small clog into a bigger repair.
Both methods belong with a licensed professional. Our Southlake technicians are state-licensed and inspect every line first.
Trusted Drain Cleaning in Southlake
Berkeys Plumbing, A/C & Electrical has served Southlake since 1975. That is 50 years of clearing drains across North Texas. We know the pipes and the problems homes here face.
Our team handles both snaking and hydro jetting. We do not guess which one you need. We scope your line with a camera, then match the method to your pipe. For bigger blockages deep in the line, our sewer drain cleaning service clears the whole run.
Older neighborhoods often have aging lines that need a careful touch. Newer homes face their own clogs from grease and daily use. We adjust our approach to fit your line and your home.
Tree roots are a leading cause of sewer line clogs in older yards. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency notes that roots can grow into pipe joints and block flow. You can read more in the EPA's guidance on caring for your home's sewer line.
Our customer service is available 24/7. A clogged drain rarely waits for a good time, so neither do we.
Ready to clear your drain the right way? Call (817) 481-5869 to schedule drain and sewer service in Southlake.
Frequently Asked Questions
Hydro jetting is better for recurring clogs, grease, and tree roots, while snaking is better for a single, simple clog. The right choice depends on what is inside your pipe. We inspect your line first, then recommend the method that fits.
Hydro jetting results often last months or even years, much longer than snaking. It removes buildup from the whole pipe, not just the clog. How long it lasts depends on your usage and what goes down your drains.
Hydro jetting does not damage pipes when the pressure matches your pipe and a pro runs it. PVC and copper handle high pressure well. Older or fragile lines need a camera check and a lower setting first.
Most homes benefit from hydro jetting every few years, though heavy-use lines may need it sooner. Frequent cooking grease or tree roots can speed up buildup. We can suggest a schedule after we scope your line.
Your drain keeps clogging after snaking because the snake clears a path but leaves buildup on the pipe walls. Grease and roots stay behind and rebuild the clog. This pattern usually means your line needs hydro jetting.
We're There When You Need Us!
877-746-6855 
Berkeys Plumbing, A/C & Electrical in Southlake • 1070 S Kimball Ave Suite 131, Southlake, TX 76092 • 817-481-5869