LOCAL DRAIN SPECIALIST • DRAIN CLEANING EXPERTS
Hydro Jetting vs. Snaking: Which Drain Cleaning Method Do You Actually Need?
A snake can open a clogged drain. Hydro jetting can restore it. Learn the difference, when each method makes sense, and how to avoid wasting money on “temporary fixes.”
Here’s the simplest way to understand it: snaking removes the blockage, while hydro jetting cleans the pipe. The right choice depends on what’s causing your problem — and whether it keeps coming back.
What Is Snaking vs. Hydro Jetting?
A drain snake (auger) is a flexible cable that breaks through or grabs an obstruction. It’s often the fastest solution for a single localized clog.
- Good for: hair clogs, small obstructions
- Limit: may leave buildup on pipe walls
- Result: flow returns, but clogs can repeat
Hydro jetting uses high-pressure water to scrub pipe walls and flush out grease, sludge, and debris. It can restore the pipe’s full diameter for better long-term performance.
- Good for: grease, sludge, scaling, recurring clogs
- Limit: not ideal for severely damaged pipes
- Result: cleaner line, fewer repeat blockages
When Snaking Is the Right Call
Snaking is a smart choice when the clog is isolated and you’re not dealing with heavy buildup. If your drain problem is new, snaking may be all you need.
When Hydro Jetting Is the Better Fix
If your drains are slow often, smell bad, or clog repeatedly, that usually points to buildup on the pipe walls. Jetting removes that buildup so the drain can flow like it should.
Cost & Value: What You’re Paying For
Hydro jetting often costs more than snaking because it’s a more thorough cleaning method, uses specialized equipment, and can take longer to do properly. But if your issue keeps returning, jetting can be the better value long-term.
Rule of thumb: If you’ve paid to clear the same drain more than once, it’s time to consider jetting and/or a camera inspection.
Is Hydro Jetting Safe for My Pipes?
In most cases, yes — when performed correctly and when the pipe is in suitable condition. If a line is severely cracked, collapsed, or failing, the better first move is to inspect and determine the safest approach.
Why Camera Inspections Matter (Especially for Recurring Clogs)
A camera inspection shows the true cause — roots, grease, offset joints, bellies, cracks, or heavy scaling — so you can choose the right fix instead of guessing.

