60-ft lateral typical
Trenchless Sewer Repair Cost Guide — Columbus, Ohio (2026)
Trenchless sewer repair in the Columbus, Ohio market runs $150 to $295 per linear foot in 2026, depending on the method, pipe diameter, soil conditions, and municipal permit fees. For a typical 40-to-80-foot residential lateral, total project cost lands between $4,200 and $17,500 — typically 30% to 60% below traditional open-cut excavation.
This guide breaks down every variable that moves the price: method (CIPP vs. pipe bursting vs. traditional), run length, pipe diameter, depth, access, Columbus-area permit fees, and insurance coverage. Wooley Water Sewer Trenchless updates this guide quarterly with current 2026 field pricing across our Carroll, OH service area.
CIPP vs. Pipe Bursting vs. Open-Cut
Three methods repair a failed Columbus-area sewer lateral. Each addresses a different failure mode at a different price point.
60-ft lateral typical
60-ft lateral typical
60-ft lateral typical
60-ft lateral typical
CIPP figures assume a typical 4-inch residential lateral; 6-inch diameter adds roughly 15% and 8-inch commercial laterals add 30–40%. Pipe bursting pricing assumes HDPE replacement pipe rated to NSF-61. Open-cut figures include trench excavation but exclude landscape, driveway, and hardscape restoration.
What to Expect on Columbus Homes Built 1940–2020
Pipe material, joint spacing, and depth all vary by construction decade — and those variables drive cost.
Table · Recommended method and total project cost by home construction decade — Columbus, Ohio 2026
| Home Built | Typical Pipe Material | Most Common Failure | Recommended Method | Typical Total (60 ft) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-1940 | Clay tile (4") | Joint failure + root intrusion | CIPP or bursting | $7,500–$13,000 |
| 1940–1955 | Orangeburg (bitumen) | Deformation + collapse | Pipe bursting | $8,500–$14,500 |
| 1955–1985 | Cast iron (4") | Scale + corrosion + cracking | CIPP lining | $5,500–$10,500 |
| 1985–2005 | PVC SDR 35 | Offset joints + settlement | CIPP or spot repair | $4,800–$8,500 |
| 2005–2020 | PVC SDR 26 or SCH 40 | Root intrusion (cleanout) | Hydro jetting first | $450–$2,500 |
Orangeburg alert for 1945–1972 Columbus-area homes
Pickerington, Reynoldsburg, and Worthington have concentrated stock of Orangeburg laterals from postwar construction. These fail catastrophically — full collapse rather than gradual deterioration. Budget for pipe bursting rather than CIPP; lining a collapsed Orangeburg line is not feasible.
Diagnostic tip: if a sewer camera inspection shows 'deformed oval' or 'egg-shaped' cross-section in a 4-inch line, you are almost certainly looking at Orangeburg.
Five Variables Behind Every Quote
Run length (the biggest driver)
Residential laterals in Columbus, Bexley, Westerville, and Gahanna typically run 40–80 feet from the home to the municipal tap; older Clintonville and Upper Arlington lots can hit 120 feet. Every additional foot adds material plus labor — but per-foot rate often comes down on longer runs because the access-pit and setup cost is fixed.
Pipe diameter
Standard residential is 4-inch. Upgrading to 6-inch during pipe bursting adds roughly 15% to material cost. Commercial laterals at 6-inch or 8-inch price 30–45% above the 4-inch base rate.
Depth
Columbus requires sewer laterals at minimum 36 inches below grade to avoid frost; most run 48–72 inches. Anything deeper than 8 feet adds complexity at the access pits and pushes cost up by 10–20%.
Access (front yard vs. under driveway)
Lines running under a concrete driveway or patio heavily favor trenchless methods — a traditional dig means demolishing and replacing the hardscape. This is the single biggest Wooley-client savings driver: a $9,000 CIPP under a Bexley driveway saves the homeowner $8,000–$12,000 in concrete restoration vs. open-cut.
Columbus-area municipal permits
Permit fees for sewer lateral work vary by authority. The table below captures 2026 rates across Wooley's primary service area.
Table · Sewer lateral permit fees & turnaround — Wooley service-area authorities, 2026
| Authority | Permit Fee (2026) | Inspection | Typical Turnaround |
|---|---|---|---|
| City of Columbus (DPU) | $165–$310 | ✓ Required | 3–5 business days |
| Franklin County Public Health | $140–$250 | ✓ Required | 2–4 business days |
| City of Westerville | $150–$275 | ✓ Required | 2–3 business days |
| City of Bexley | $185–$325 | ✓ Required | 3–5 business days |
| City of Gahanna | $145–$260 | ✓ Required | 2–4 business days |
| Delaware General Health Dist. | $160–$290 | ✓ Required | 3–6 business days |
| Fairfield County | $120–$230 | ✓ Required | 2–4 business days |
| Pickaway County | $100–$210 | ✓ Required | 3–5 business days |
What Actually Pays — Coverage Matrix
Most Columbus-area homeowners discover sewer-line coverage only after a failure. The matrix below shows what each common coverage type actually pays for on a typical trenchless project.
Table · Insurance & warranty coverage matrix — what each policy type actually pays
| Coverage Type | Covers Repair? | Covers Line Replace? | Covers Damage to Home? | Typical Cap |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Standard HO-3 policy | Rarely | No | ✓ (water damage only) | $10K–$25K |
| Service Line endorsement | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | Partial | $10K (typical) |
| Sewer backup rider | Partial | No | ✓ (backup damage) | $5K–$25K |
| Municipal sewer-line insurance | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | No | $8K–$12K |
| Wooley workmanship warranty | N/A | N/A | N/A | 10-year, per job |
Sewer-Line Total Budget by Home Age
Trenchless repair is a capital event, not a recurring expense — but drain cleaning, inspections, and incidental repairs recur. The table below projects average 10-year sewer-line cost for Columbus homes by construction decade.
Table · Projected 10-year sewer-line total cost — Columbus, OH homes by construction decade
| Home Built | Expected 10-Year Major Work | Routine Maintenance | Total 10-Year Budget |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pre-1940 | 1 full lateral repair ($10K) | Annual jetting ($550 × 10) | $15,500 |
| 1940–1955 | 1 pipe bursting ($11K) + 2 jettings | Biennial jetting ($450 × 5) | $13,250 |
| 1955–1985 | 1 CIPP lining ($7.5K) + 1 spot repair | Biennial jetting ($450 × 5) | $10,750 |
| 1985–2005 | Nothing major expected (camera × 2) | Camera inspection ($300 × 2) | $1,200–$3,500 |
| 2005–2020 | Nothing major expected | Camera inspection ($300 × 1) | $300–$800 |
Financing & Timing
Deferring a confirmed lateral failure almost always costs more.
Most major financing accepted
A failed Orangeburg line that collapses under a driveway becomes an open-cut emergency at $18K–$25K instead of a planned pipe-bursting job at $11K. Wooley accepts most major homeowner financing products — call (614) 426-0078 for current program details. Need help choosing between CIPP and bursting? See the pipe lining vs pipe bursting decision guide.
Trenchless Sewer Repair Cost — 12-Question FAQ
How much does trenchless sewer repair cost in Columbus, Ohio?+
Trenchless sewer repair in Columbus runs $150 to $295 per linear foot in 2026. For a typical 40-to-80-foot residential lateral, expect a total project cost of $4,200 to $17,500 depending on whether CIPP lining or pipe bursting is the right method, the pipe diameter, depth, and the applicable municipal permit fees.
Is trenchless sewer repair cheaper than traditional open-cut excavation?+
Yes — typically 30% to 60% cheaper once you include landscape, driveway, and hardscape restoration costs. A traditional open-cut repair under a concrete driveway in Bexley or Clintonville can add $8,000–$12,000 in concrete demolition and replacement that trenchless eliminates entirely.
How long does a trenchless sewer repair last?+
CIPP-lined sewer pipe carries a manufacturer-rated lifespan of 50+ years per ASTM F1216, and HDPE replacement pipe installed via pipe bursting is rated to 50–100 years under NSF-61. Wooley's own 10-year workmanship warranty covers installation defects on every job.
What's included in the per-foot price?+
Wooley's per-foot price includes camera inspection, liner or HDPE material, access pit excavation, installation, curing, post-install camera verification, and all required municipal permit filings. It does NOT include landscape restoration beyond access-pit re-grade, additional spot repairs discovered mid-project, or hardscape replacement (which trenchless typically avoids entirely).
Do I need a permit for trenchless sewer repair in Columbus?+
Yes. Every municipality in Wooley's service area requires a sewer lateral permit before any repair work, including trenchless methods. Columbus permits typically cost $165–$310 and take 3–5 business days; Bexley runs $185–$325 over 3–5 days; Westerville $150–$275 over 2–3 days. Wooley files all permits as part of the project.
Can I finance a trenchless sewer repair?+
Yes. Wooley accepts most major financing products for jobs over $2,500. A typical $9,000 CIPP project financed at 7.99% APR over 60 months is approximately $183 per month. Call (614) 426-0078 for current program details.
Will homeowners insurance pay for my sewer line repair?+
A standard HO-3 policy rarely covers lateral replacement itself — it covers water damage to the home from a backup. A service-line endorsement (often $25–$60 per year to add) typically covers both the repair and the line replacement up to a $10,000 cap. Sewer backup riders cover damage from backups but not the line itself.
How much does a sewer camera inspection cost before the repair?+
A full pre-repair camera inspection runs $150–$400 in the Columbus area, depending on line length and whether hydro jetting is required to clear the line first. Wooley includes the inspection cost in any project that proceeds to CIPP, bursting, or hydro jetting.
What's the difference between CIPP lining cost and pipe bursting cost?+
CIPP lining ($150–$295/ft) is cheaper because it reuses the existing pipe as a host. Pipe bursting ($220–$270/ft) costs more because it installs an entirely new HDPE pipe by fracturing the old one. CIPP is the right answer for aged-but-intact pipe; bursting is required for collapsed clay or Orangeburg.
Does the price change for commercial buildings?+
Yes. Commercial laterals are typically 6-inch or 8-inch diameter rather than residential 4-inch, which adds 30–45% to per-foot pricing. Commercial projects also frequently involve longer runs, deeper depth, and more complex access — driving total project costs into the $15K–$50K range.
Will I be without sewer service during the repair?+
Typically for 4–8 hours on a CIPP project and 6–10 hours for pipe bursting. Wooley notifies clients the day before so the household can plan around the service window. On larger commercial projects Wooley can phase the work to maintain partial service during business hours.
How do I get an accurate quote for my home?+
Schedule a Wooley camera inspection first. Pricing is not reliable without knowing the pipe material, exact run length, depth, failure mode, and soil conditions. Call (614) 426-0078 to book; inspections run $150–$400 and are credited toward any work that proceeds.
References & Standards
Pricing and method recommendations in this guide reference the following published standards and authorities.
Stop guessing. Get the real number for your sewer.
Pricing in this guide is based on Wooley's 2026 field data — but the only accurate quote is camera-verified, in your home. Call us. We diagnose first. We quote second. We don't pressure.