A backed-up mainline is messy, but you can often clear it before it becomes an emergency. Here’s the safe way to try — and when to stop and call.
Step 1 — Find your cleanout
Look for a capped white or black pipe near the foundation or in the yard. That’s your access point — not the toilet.
Step 2 — Relieve the pressure
Open the cleanout slowly with a wrench, standing clear. If water gushes out, that’s your backup draining — better here than in the house.
Step 3 — Run a hand auger
Feed a cable in toward the main until you hit the blockage, crank through it, then flush with a hose. Soft clogs (grease, paper) often clear; roots usually don’t.
When to call a pro
If it clogs again within days, the auger won’t pass, or you smell sewage in the yard, stop. That’s a camera-and-equipment job — and on a sewer line, guessing gets expensive fast.
Often Missed
Open the outdoor cleanout slowly — if it gushes, that is your backup draining safely outside instead of up through the house.
