Older streets in Salt Lake City, UT have a particular pattern of sewer problems that repeats from Sugar House to The Avenues and across Liberty Wells, Yalecrest, and Capitol Hill. Mature trees push through clay laterals. Cast-iron develops tuberculation and scale. Historic homes sit on long runs with shallow slopes and offset joints. Winter frost and spring thaws shift soil along the Wasatch Front. The result is familiar to many: slow drains on a Saturday, gurgling toilets after laundry, and foul sewage odors near a basement floor drain. This article explains why sewer backups occur so often in these neighborhoods, how to read the warning signs, and what technical methods actually fix the root causes rather than repeat the same emergency call every season.
The local plumbing reality under Sugar House Park and Liberty Park
Salt Lake City’s inner-ring neighborhoods were built in phases. The Avenues and Capitol Hill saw early clay sewer laterals. Sugar House, Liberty Wells, and Yalecrest mixed clay with cast-iron. Federal Heights and Rose Park added more cast-iron and, later, PVC segments during repairs. Many blocks in 84105, 84106, 84103, and 84111 have laterals that change material three times between the foundation and the city tap. That mix introduces dozens of potential snag points for wipes, grease, and mineral scale buildup.
Hard, mineral-rich water compounds the issue. Calcium and magnesium in Salt Lake City water create a rough inner pipe surface over time, especially in older cast-iron. Scale grows like coral on the pipe wall, narrowing the bore and catching debris. In a clay joint with root intrusion, scale and roots combine into a dense matrix. Hydro-jetting clears it, but if the joint stays open to soil, roots will be back in a season or two.
The city maintains the main sewer lines in the street. Homeowners are responsible for the private sewer lateral that runs from the home’s foundation to the city connection. That single fact drives many service calls in 84101 and 84102 near Temple Square and Vivint Arena, in 84108 around Hogle Zoo, and in 84109 east toward the foothills. Backups inside the house usually track back to a problem in the lateral, not the city main, unless a whole block is affected at once.
Why sewer backups are common in older Salt Lake neighborhoods
Sewer backups result from flow restriction or flow reversal. Restriction means the line cannot carry normal volume, so wastewater stacks up until it finds the lowest fixture. Reversal means a blockage downstream pushes flow back through the lateral. In older Salt Lake homes, several specific conditions cause that restriction or reversal.
Root intrusion from mature trees
Sugar House, The Avenues, and Yalecrest feature long rows of tall, mature trees. Their roots seek pipe joints for constant moisture. Clay and early concrete pipes have joints every few feet, and many joints have hairline separations. A root tip enters, splits, and thickens. Over a year, that joint becomes a woven mat. Toilet paper and wipes tangle, and a Main Line Blockage forms. Sinks start to drain slowly. Gurgling Toilets show up after showers. Foul Sewage Odors seep from the Floor Drain in the basement because the P-Trap loses seal under negative pressure waves.
Hydro-jetting with a proper Hydro-jetter Nozzle removes the intruding roots and restores the bore, but it does not close the door the roots used. If a Video Camera Pipe Inspection shows a shifted or open joint, trenchless point repair or full Trenchless Sewer Repair with a Perma-Liner system can seal the defect and stop the cycle. In streets near Liberty Park and Sugar House Park, where root density is high and easements are narrow, trenchless methods avoid tearing up mature landscaping and old sandstone walkways.
Mineral scale buildup in cast-iron
Many basements in 84105, 84111, and 84103 still rely on cast-iron stacks and laterals. Over decades, iron oxidizes inward. Combine that with hard water scale, and the oval inside diameter becomes a jagged channel. Toilet paper snags on tubercles. Grease Clogs bond to the roughness. Standing Water remains in the channel after each use. Pipe Descaling with a chain knocker or carbide head, driven by a Spartan Tool or General Wire Spring machine, shaves the deposits back to round and smooth. On heavy buildup, a descaling pass followed by controlled Hydro-jetting clears residual sludge. Scale returns, but the clock resets by several years if the line is kept clean and slopes are true.
Grease-induced blockages and garbage disposals
Salt Lake kitchens see steady use during winter. Liquid grease gets poured into Kitchen Sinks and cools in the lateral, especially near unheated crawlspaces in older Liberty Wells homes. InSinkErator disposals grind fibrous food, which binds with grease. The mix coats the pipe like candle wax. Overflowing Sinks and Slow Drains follow. Hydro-jetting at 3,500 to 4,000 PSI with a rotating nozzle emulsifies and flushes thick grease. A bacteria-based maintenance product like Bio-Clean can reduce future buildup if used monthly, but it cannot clear a blocked line by itself. On Yalecrest lots with long laterals and tight bends, technicians often stage the job: open the Cleanout, run a Drain Auger to establish flow, then jet to finish.
Sagging laterals and soil movement along the Wasatch Front
Freeze-thaw cycles and periodic subsidence in older fills cause bellies in laterals. A belly forms where soil settles under one section and not the next. Wastewater slows and solids drop out. After a few months, that segment becomes a sediment trap. Video Camera Pipe Inspection shows water standing in the belly after flow stops. If the belly is short and mild, routine Drain Cleaning keeps the line functional. If it spans several feet and holds depth, Sewer Line Repair is the lasting fix. In narrow lots near the University of Utah and Federal Heights, Trenchless Sewer Repair such as pipe bursting or lining is often feasible without conflict with retaining walls and steep drives.
Offset joints and fractured clay or concrete
Shallow trenches and street work create stress on old laterals. An offset joint is where two segments slip out of alignment. Flow hits the lip, slows, and drops paper. Repeated drain cleaning clears the paper but leaves the lip. If a camera shows a 30 percent or greater offset, ongoing backups are likely. Cast-iron transitions to clay at many curb lines in 84102 and 84103. That transition is a frequent failure point and a federal-grade magnet for root intrusion. Precision-located excavation with a Ridgid locator allows a small repair trench instead of a full dig. If the damage extends, lining with Perma-Liner from the Cleanout to the city connection seals multiple joints in one pass.
Venting issues that mimic a blockage
Older homes sometimes have a blocked or undersized Vent Stack. Birds nest at the roof cap, or scale narrows the vent near the attic elbow. Fixtures then siphon their P-Trap water out under negative pressure. The result is Sewage Odors even when the line is not blocked. Gurgling Toilets and slow bathroom group drains on upper floors are common. Clearing the vent with a small jetter or auger restores air balance. In several Avenues homes with copper vents, pinholes also leak sewer gas into attics. A camera on a small line can spot the defect. Repairing the vent and retesting with a smoke method solves the odor without touching the Sewer Pipe in the yard.
Sump pumps, catch basins, and unintended cross-connections
Homes near Millcreek and Rose Park sometimes have older Catch Basins or Sump Pumps that discharge into the sanitary line. During spring runoff or a summer storm, that extra water overwhelms older laterals. Basement Utility Tubs back up. Floor Drains overflow. Local code requires separation. If a Video Camera Pipe Inspection sees side connections or tees, rerouting the discharge to a legal outlet solves repeat backups during weather events. In many cases, correcting a cross-connection costs less than one major cleanup after a Sewage Backup.
Septic tanks on the fringe and annexed properties
Most of Salt Lake City is on municipal sewer, but fringe pockets near Holladay, Murray, and Millcreek have older Septic Tanks that were tied into new sewers during annexation. A forgotten tank or abandoned cesspool can collapse and catch solids. Dye testing and camera work locate the structure. A proper decommission process with fill and compaction removes the future sinkhole risk and restores consistent flow to the Main Sewer Lines.
How the signs line up with the actual fault
Symptoms point to different places in the system if read in order and with context. A single clog at a powder room usually starts at the trap arm or P-Trap. Multiple fixtures on one floor slowing together points to a branch line issue. Whole-house backup where the lowest drain overflows signals a Main Line Blockage. A strong Foul Sewage Odor near a roof or attic suggests a vent problem. Gurgling Toilets after a heavy wash load hints at a partial main restriction downstream of the stack.
In older Salt Lake housing stock, a basement Toilet or Utility Tub acting up first during a shower upstairs indicates the obstruction sits between the basement tie-in and the street. If a house near Utah State Capitol has a wide clay lateral with a ridge felt by a Drain Auger, that is likely an offset or misaligned hub. If a Rose Park homeowner reports backups each spring only, roots near the curb line are the leading suspect, as snowmelt and soil moisture boost growth in that band.
A Video Camera Pipe Inspection is the confirmatory step. Technicians use a Ridgid push camera with a self-leveling head to see joint gaps, fractures, and intrusions. The locator finds depth and position. Footage from 84109 jobs often shows long root curtains where mature maples arch over the curb strip. Footage from 84101 near older warehouse conversions commonly shows grease mats in long flat sections where remodels created low-slope runs under slab.
Tooling that works on legacy Salt Lake infrastructure
Mechanical methods still have a place. A Drain Auger with the right head knocks through paper and wipes fast, and Spartan Tool machines are reliable in cast-iron. General Wire Spring sectional machines give good torque in longer runs that cross deep front yards in Yalecrest. But a cable only opens a path. It does not remove the biofilm and grease from the wall.
Hydro-jetting solves that wall problem. A technician selects a Hydro-jetter Nozzle profile for the fault. A warthog-style head with a controlled rear spray angle pulls through heavy grease and blasts all 360 degrees of the pipe. A penetrating nozzle with a forward jet opens a hard blockage or cuts roots ahead of the main body. For clay laterals with root intrusion near Sugar House Park, a two-pass jet is common. First, a penetrator opens flow. Second, a rotation head polishes the bore. Then the camera confirms clean joints.
Pipe Descaling is different from jetting. It uses a high-RPM chain or carbide head to knock down iron tubercles and mineral scale buildup in cast-iron. In tight Federal Heights basements, descaling is often done from a basement Cleanout to avoid moving heavy jet hoses through stairs. After descaling, a low-pressure rinse clears debris. A Viega no-hub coupling may then be installed during a spot repair to stabilize a wobbly hub or misaligned transition before lining.
When the inspection shows cracks, long separations, or multiple failing joints, Trenchless Sewer Repair becomes the durable option. Perma-Liner CIPP liners can bridge across clay, cast-iron, and short PVC segments. In yards with sandstone steps and mature plantings near The Avenues, a single access pit near the foundation or property line is enough. The liner bonds to cleaned pipe and seals joints that roots used to invade. On streets near Vivint Arena, where traffic control complicates dig work, pipe bursting can replace a collapse with a new HDPE lateral in a single day.
The role of proper cleanouts and access in older homes
A missing or buried Cleanout raises both cost and risk. Some Capitol Hill homes never had an exterior Cleanout installed. Others have a rusted cap near grade that sits under landscaping. Without access, technicians must pull a toilet and run from inside, which risks mess and limits nozzle choice. Installing an exterior Cleanout with proper slope and a code-grade wye fitting makes future maintenance safer and faster. On hillsides above the University of Utah, dual-direction Cleanouts allow service both to the street and back toward the house, which is useful if remodels created complex interior runs.
Floor Drains without trap primers present a separate challenge. When P-Trap water evaporates in a dry basement, odors rise even if the main is fine. Adding a trap primer or a small auto-primer device solves that background odor so homeowners can spot a real sewer gas event that signals a leak or vent issue.
Why basement backups can happen without warning
Several scenarios create a sudden backup with little warning:
- A grease plug shifts and wedges at a clay lip near the curb in 84106 after a large dishwashing load, pushing wastewater back into the lowest Toilet or Utility Tub within minutes. A long stringy wipe catches on a root curtain in 84105 Sugar House, and a toddler flush kicks the mat tight. The next shower triggers a full Sewage Backup that was invisible the day before. A spring storm in Rose Park adds runoff into a misconnected Catch Basin that ties into the sanitary lateral. The sudden volume turns a partial blockage into a complete stop.
Short-term behavior changes help a little, but they are not fixes. The real prevention work happens in inspection, cleaning, and structural rehab where needed.
Data patterns technicians see by area and housing type
Technicians who serve 84102, 84103, 84105, 84106, 84108, 84109, and 84111 build a mental map of risk by block:
- The Avenues and Capitol Hill: steep grades with long laterals. Offsets at transitions and brittle clay with root intrusion. Backups often start in basement Bathroom Tubs or Utility Tubs after laundry. Sugar House and Yalecrest: dense canopies, many cast-iron to clay transitions, frequent Main Line Blockage from roots and mineral scale. Homes near Sugar House Park see seasonal root pressure. Liberty Wells: flat lots, long runs, mixed remodels. Grease Clogs common from older Kitchen Sinks and long low-slope sections. Overflowing Sinks precede a full backup by weeks if ignored. Federal Heights: cast-iron with heavy tuberculation. Pipe Descaling smooths walls before lining. Vent Stack issues also appear in older roofs with snow caps. Rose Park: lower elevations with higher water tables. Sump Pumps and Catch Basins show up more often, and misconnected discharges cause backups during storms.
The patterns hold across decades of calls. They guide where to start with the camera and which tools to bring on the first visit.
What correct diagnosis looks like from start to finish
A strong diagnostic sequence follows a clear, repeatable path. The technician confirms symptoms and fixture behavior. They locate and test the nearest Cleanout. If there is standing water at the Cleanout, that confirms a downstream blockage. A Drain Auger may be used to relieve pressure quickly and avoid a sewage spill. Then a Video Camera Pipe Inspection with a Ridgid unit documents the interior condition. Distance and depth readings mark each joint and any defect. The locator pings the point in the yard near the sidewalk if an offset or collapse is found.
If roots appear, the next step is Hydro-jetting with an appropriate Hydro-jetter Nozzle to restore full circumference. If heavy iron scale appears, Pipe Descaling occurs first, followed by a rinse or low-PSI flush. If a structural defect exists, measurements are used to design a Trenchless Sewer Repair. A Perma-Liner inversion or pull-in-place is scheduled, with a reinstatement plan for any tie-in. If a short break near the foundation shows, a small excavation with a new PVC section and Viega shielded couplings may suffice.
This sequence minimizes repeat visits. It also produces a recording the homeowner can keep. In many 84108 jobs near Hogle Zoo and Foothill, that recording helps when planning a landscaping project so future roots do not target the same line.
Maintenance that fits the way Salt Lake systems age
Preventive work reduces emergency calls, especially in legacy neighborhoods. The cadence depends on pipe material, tree density, and past problems. As a rule, clay laterals under heavy canopies need a camera check every 12 to 18 months. Cast-iron with known tuberculation benefits from descaling every 5 to 7 years, with a light hydro-jet once in between if grease behavior suggests it.
A bacteria product like Bio-Clean supports a healthy biofilm and reduces grease adhesion, but it should be treated as a maintenance tool, not a fix. Wipe habits matter. Even so-called flushable wipes often snag on minor imperfections. InSinkErator disposals are valuable in kitchens, but fats and fibrous scraps should go to the bin.
For homes near Temple Square or along South Temple that host events, grease loads spike after gatherings. Scheduling Drain Cleaning in late fall and spring prevents holiday backups. In 84101 loft conversions with long horizontal runs, the added volume from modern appliances often exceeds the assumptions made when the lateral was built. A camera check post-remodel helps confirm slopes and venting are still correct.
What happens if a backup is left to repeat
Backups damage more than floors. Repeated overflows saturate drywall and sill plates with contaminated water. Microbial growth develops within 24 to 48 hours. Insurance carriers in Salt Lake City often cover a first event tied to a sudden blockage but may deny repeated claims if no repair was made after a known defect. If a camera shows a fracture or open joint, delaying a fix risks a full collapse. In freeze periods, trapped water in a belly can expand and crack a clay segment that was marginal the prior fall.
Older basements in Liberty Wells and Rose Park still have wood flooring or carpet over concrete. Those materials trap contamination. A single well-managed drain cleaning can protect a basement if done before an event. In that sense, proactive service is cheaper than cleanup. The key is to treat gurgling and slow drains as early warnings and schedule a diagnosis rather than wait.
The value of proper venting and trap protection
It bears repeating. Many sewer odor calls in 84111 and 84106 are vent problems, not line blockages. A blocked Vent Stack creates negative pressure waves. Those waves pull water out of P-Traps on Floor Drains and Bathroom Tubs. The homeowner smells sewer gas inside, but the Sewer Pipe is flowing fine. Clearing the vent returns air to the system, and water seals the traps. If odor persists, a smoke test isolates hidden breaches in walls or attics. Correcting the vent also reduces gurgling and improves fixture performance throughout the house.

Commercial and multifamily nuances across central Salt Lake
Mixed-use buildings near Vivint Arena and Temple Square have shared laterals with heavy grease and wipe loads. Management often handles complaints one unit at a time, but the fix sits in the main. Hydro-jetting with larger hose diameter and higher flow is needed. A camera survey of the whole run documents tie-ins. In older brick buildings in 84101, offsets at each unit’s wye create a ladder of snag points. A full lining with Perma-Liner protects the entire lateral and cuts service calls to zero for years.
Small businesses in Sugar House, including cafes and salons, generate different waste streams. Coffee grounds, hair, and oils act like rebar in a concrete clog. A maintenance plan with quarterly jetting prevents the surprise Saturday morning shutdown. Floor sinks and Catch Basins in back-of-house areas also need regular cleaning. A missed floor sink can be the real reason a grease trap pumps out fast yet backups still occur.
Weather, altitude, and how flow behaves here
Salt Lake City sits at high elevation. Boiling points change, and evaporation occurs faster in dry months. That affects P-Trap seals. In summer, infrequently used Floor Drains lose water faster, and odors follow. In winter, cold soil condenses grease fast in near-surface laterals, which is why backups spike after holiday cooking. During deep cold snaps, basement cleanout caps contract and may weep a little. A fresh gasket or cap prevents a surprise drip that smells like a vent leak.
Snowmelt and rain events also matter. Even with separated storm and sanitary systems, illegal ties or broken joints can let groundwater enter. A camera run after a storm that shows clear water entering at one point marks an infiltration path. That same path is the one roots will find in spring.
Practical homeowner habits that reduce risk
Homeowner habits cannot fix a broken clay joint, but they can lower the frequency of nuisance clogs:
- Do not pour fats or cooking oil into Kitchen Sinks. Let them cool, then bin them. Even hot water and soap will not keep oil liquid all the way to the street in winter. Keep wipes, floss, and hygiene products out of toilets. The label may say flushable, but older clay and cast-iron do not forgive. Run Garage or basement fixtures weekly to keep P-Traps wet. A minute of flow keeps odors from creeping up through dry traps. Mark and preserve the Cleanout location during landscaping. A buried Cleanout costs time in an emergency. If Gurgling Toilets start after showers or laundry, schedule a camera inspection before the next weekend. That sound is the first warning sign of a forming Main Line Blockage.
Edge cases and judgment calls
Not every symptom leads to the same decision. Here are examples from recent service patterns across 84105, 84106, 84103, and 84111:
A Yalecrest home with a tall maple had a clean pipe except for one 3-foot root curtain at 68 feet near the curb. The technician cleared it with Hydro-jetting and recommended a root control follow-up. The homeowner planned a sidewalk replacement within a year, so holding off on lining made sense. Risk was managed by scheduling a camera check in six months.
A Capitol Hill duplex had heavy cast-iron scale from the basement to the street. Descaling restored the bore. A small belly remained under the front garden. Since access was good and roots were absent, the owner chose annual jetting rather than an excavation that would damage historic masonry. That choice was logical with eyes open to a possible future repair.
A cafe in Sugar House saw backups every quarter. The camera found a long low-slope segment under the dining room. Re-pitching the slab was not feasible. The team set a monthly grease management protocol, installed a larger interceptor, and scheduled quarterly jetting. Backups stopped. Not every fix is structural if operational controls work.
A Rose Park bungalow had Sump Pumps discharging into the sewer. During storms, the basement flooded. Rerouting the discharge to a proper outlet and adding a check valve reduced load on the lateral and eliminated the storm backups. The work paid back the same season.
How “clogged drain service Salt Lake City” differs in historic blocks
Service in older neighborhoods is not a generic clogged drain job. A Sugar House lateral is a living system shaped by trees, soil, and time. A standard Drain Cleaning may restore flow today but leave a fractured joint that roots will reclaim fast. The correct service level depends on inspection, pipe material, and neighborhood patterns.
- Rooter Service is the fast opener for a sudden blockage. It cuts a channel and relieves pressure. Hydro-jetting is the wall cleaner. It removes grease, sludge, and root fuzz that cable heads miss. Pipe Descaling is for cast-iron with mineral scale buildup. It makes future cleanings less frequent. Video Camera Pipe Inspection guides all decisions. It turns guesswork into measured repair. Trenchless Sewer Repair with Perma-Liner solves recurring joint defects without heavy excavation. Sewer Line Repair by spot excavation remains right for short, localized breaks near foundations.
A technician who works 84102 through 84111 daily understands these trade-offs and brings the right Ridgid cameras, Spartan machines, or General Wire Spring tools for the job. That local repetition creates speed and accuracy in both diagnosis and repair.
What to expect on a professional visit in 84101 through 84111
A well-run service call in Salt Lake Learn more here City follows a clear arc. Arrival includes a walk-through to locate fixtures, note symptoms, and find the Cleanout. Protection goes down for floors and steps. If there is active backup risk, the technician opens the line with a Drain Auger. Then the camera goes in. The homeowner or property manager sees the live feed. Measurements are logged. If jetting is indicated, the Hydro-jetter hose is staged from the truck, and a proper Hydro-jetter Nozzle is selected for roots or grease. Flow is restored, and the camera confirms results. If a repair is needed, options are presented with footage, distances, and surfaces affected. That transparency is standard across reputable providers in 84105, 84106, and neighboring Millcreek, Murray, and Holladay.
In commercial or multifamily spaces near Vivint Arena, timing and access affect the plan. Night or early morning jetting can avoid tenant disruption. Cleanouts inside retail tenant spaces may need coordination. A precise plan prevents callbacks and business interruption.
Why proactive replacement makes sense on some blocks
Some laterals in The Avenues and Sugar House are past their practical life. If a camera shows multiple fractures, sags, and open joints across 50 or more feet, repeated cleanings are a bandage. A full lateral rehabilitation with Perma-Liner or pipe bursting sets decades of trouble-free service. The infill development around 84105 and 84106 adds living units to old lots, raising waste volume. An upgraded lateral future-proofs the property. In older brick homes near Utah State Capitol with historic landscapes, trenchless options preserve stone and mature trees.
The math often favors repair. Two or three emergency cleanups can equal a significant share of a permanent fix. Owners who plan to sell also value a clean camera report. Buyers in Salt Lake City ask for it, especially in 84103 and 84105.
Scheduling, documentation, and code realities
Salt Lake City inspectors recognize trenchless methods when installed to standard. Proper permits and post-liner testing protect property value. Documentation matters. Save the before-and-after videos. Note distances and depths. If a cleanout was added, mark its GPS location. These records prevent future confusion during landscaping or utility work.
If a Catch Basin or Sump Pump discharge is corrected, keep the compliance note. Insurance carriers appreciate documented risk reduction after a prior Sewage Backup. In multifamily buildings, a building-wide camera survey creates a shared understanding that stops unit-to-unit blame games.
Final checks homeowners can do before calling for help
Homeowners can do quick checks that inform the technician:
- Look for a Cleanout cap in the front yard or near the foundation. Knowing its location saves time. Run water at a Kitchen Sink and watch a basement Floor Drain. If the drain bubbles or overflows, it is a main restriction, not a single-fixture clog. Listen for Gurgling Toilets after ending a shower. That sound points to a partial main blockage or a vent issue. Smell near sink bases and Floor Drains. If odor is strong only near unused drains, add water to P-Traps and see if odor fades. If it does, the issue may be venting or trap evaporation. Note whether backups happen after heavy rain or only during normal use. Weather-tied backups can indicate illegal ties or infiltration.
These observations help the technician target the right solution faster.
Service and response for Salt Lake City homes and businesses
For homeowners and property managers facing repeated slow drains, sewage odors, or a surprise backup in 84101, 84102, 84103, 84105, 84106, 84108, 84109, or 84111, local expertise is the difference between another temporary clear and a durable fix. A team that works Sugar House, The Avenues, Capitol Hill, Liberty Wells, Yalecrest, Federal Heights, and Rose Park every day reads the signs quickly and brings the right mix of Drain Cleaning, Rooter Service, Hydro-jetting, Pipe Descaling, Video Camera Pipe Inspection, Sewer Line Repair, and Trenchless Sewer Repair to solve the real cause.
Just Right Plumbing serves Salt Lake City, UT and neighboring areas including West Valley City, Murray, Holladay, Sandy, Draper, Bountiful, South Jordan, and Millcreek. NATE-Certified Technicians handle both HVAC and plumbing needs with Licensed, Bonded, and Insured status. Jobs use trusted brands and methods, including Ridgid diagnostics, Spartan Tool and General Wire Spring machines, Bio-Clean for maintenance guidance, InSinkErator familiarity for kitchen issues, Perma-Liner trenchless solutions, and Viega couplings for code-grade spot repairs. The company offers 24/7 Emergency Response, Upfront Flat-Rate Pricing, a 100% Satisfaction Guarantee, Google Guaranteed standing, and BBB Accredited service. For clogged drain service Salt Lake City clients can count on, request a Video Camera Pipe Inspection and flat-rate Hydro-jetting quote today, or schedule a same-day visit for Sewage Backup, clogged drain service Salt Lake City Main Line Blockage, Gurgling Toilets, Foul Sewage Odors, or Overflowing Sinks.
Just Right Plumbing, Heating & Cooling
Website: https://justrightair.com
Phone: +1 801-302-1154
Our Locations
Main Office:2990 S 460 W,
Salt Lake City, UT 84115 Downtown SLC Satellite:
231 E 400 S, Unit 104B, Salt Lake City, UT 84111 Layton Branch:
3146 N Fairfield Rd, Layton, UT 84041
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