
Sewer Line Repair in Pennsylvania
Protect Your Home from a Sewer Line Problem Before It Gets Worse
Haller Enterprises provides professional sewer line repair services throughout Central and Eastern Pennsylvania, with a focus on accurate diagnosis and repairs that address the actual condition of the pipe rather than just the symptom at the drain.
Our licensed plumbers assess the full situation, explain what they find, and complete repairs that protect your home. With decades of experience in this region, we understand what aging sewer infrastructure in Central and Eastern Pennsylvania homes actually looks like.
Call or contact us online to schedule your sewer line repair.
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24/7 Emergency Sewer Line Repairs
You should not have to live with sewage backing up into your home while waiting for a regular appointment. A sewer line failure that is causing backups or releasing sewage beneath your home is an emergency.
Haller offers 24/7 emergency plumbing service throughout Central and Eastern Pennsylvania. When our technicians arrive, they come prepared to assess the situation, stop active backups, and begin repairs. You will know what is wrong and what it costs before any work begins.
Trusted Sewer Line Repair Since 1981
When your sewer line needs repair, you want a licensed plumber who has seen what aging pipe infrastructure in this region actually looks like and knows how to fix it.
Haller has been serving Central and Eastern Pennsylvania since 1981. The older housing stock throughout Bethlehem, Lancaster, York, and Harrisburg means that clay tile and Orangeburg sewer lines are still in the ground under a significant number of regional homes, and these materials are failing now in properties built in the mid-twentieth century.
We handle every repair with care and stand behind our work with a 100% satisfaction guarantee. Contact us online or give us a call to get started.
24/7
Emergency Service
54,133
HVAC Systems Serviced
9,325
Drains Cleared
254
Trucks on the Road
We’re here to help! Call (717) 204-8120.
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Haller’s Proven Sewer Line Repair Process
Scheduling sewer line repair with Haller is straightforward, even when the problem is underground and the cause is not yet clear.
We have made the process simple so you can get the right help without added stress.
Call us or contact us online to describe the symptoms. Slow drains, recurring backups, sewage odors, or wet spots in the yard all help us understand the likely location and nature of the problem before we arrive.
We work around your schedule and offer flexible appointments, including emergency service when the situation cannot wait.
Our plumber runs a camera through the line to see exactly what is happening inside the pipe. Root intrusion, pipe separation, bellying, and collapse all look different on camera and require different repair approaches. We explain what we find and give you upfront pricing before any work begins.
We complete the repair and run the camera again to confirm the line is clear, correctly sloped, and structurally sound before we close up.
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We’re here to help! Call (717) 204-8120.
Questions?
We’re here to help! Call (717) 204-8120.
Questions?
Should You Repair or Replace Your Sewer Line?
Targeted repair of a specific failure point is the right call when the rest of the pipe is in sound condition. A few situations make full line replacement the more practical answer.
Haller gives homeowners an honest assessment based on what the camera actually shows, not on assumptions about pipe age alone.
Orangeburg pipe that has softened and deformed throughout the run, or clay tile that has cracked and shifted at multiple points, is not a candidate for targeted repair. Fixing one section leaves the adjacent sections as imminent failure points. In homes throughout Bethlehem, Lancaster, York, and Harrisburg built between the 1930s and 1970s, full line replacement is often the most practical decision when the camera reveals systemic deterioration.
A single collapsed section is a repair. When camera inspection reveals two or more points of collapse or near-collapse in the same line, the pipe has deteriorated broadly enough that targeted repair will not deliver lasting results. Our plumbers show you the camera footage and explain what each condition means before recommending a scope.
Root intrusion that has entered the pipe at a single joint is a manageable repair. Root intrusion at multiple joints along the run indicates the pipe wall or joint integrity has failed broadly enough that roots will return quickly regardless of how thoroughly the current growth is cleared. Full replacement addresses the pipe condition rather than the symptom.
A sewer line that continues to back up after repairs have been made to specific failure points has a condition that targeted repair is not resolving. That pattern warrants a full camera inspection to understand what is happening in the sections between the repaired areas before committing to further point repairs.
Protect Your Home with Haller’s Home Comfort Club
The Home Comfort Club is a membership plan that keeps your plumbing, HVAC, and electrical systems protected all year.
Membership includes annual inspections, priority scheduling, and exclusive savings on service. Ask about the Home Comfort Club when you schedule your repair.

Home Comfort Club
Maintenance plans starting at
$39 /mo
Schedule Sewer Line Repairs with Haller
Haller has been serving homeowners across Central and Eastern Pennsylvania since 1981, and our licensed plumbers have seen what aging sewer infrastructure in this region actually looks like.
Whether you are dealing with recurring backups, sewage odors, slow drains throughout the house, or a wet spot in the yard that should not be there, we will camera the line, diagnose the condition accurately, and fix it right.
Every repair comes backed by our 100% satisfaction guarantee. Call or contact us online to book your sewer line repair today.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I know if my sewer line is broken?
The most common signs are drains that are slow throughout the house at the same time rather than in a single fixture, recurring backups in the lowest drains in the home such as a basement floor drain, sewage odors inside or outside the home with no obvious source, and wet or unusually green patches in the yard above the sewer line run. Any one of these warrants a camera inspection. By the time multiple signs are present simultaneously, the line has usually been failing for longer than the symptoms suggest.
What causes sewer line backups?
The most common causes we see in Central and Eastern Pennsylvania are root intrusion through joint gaps in clay tile pipe, bellied sections where the pipe has lost slope due to soil settlement, and pipe material failure in Orangeburg lines that have softened and collapsed. In newer homes, grease accumulation and non-flushable materials flushed into the system are more common culprits. Camera inspection tells us which condition we are dealing with and where it is located before we begin any repair.
Can tree roots really damage a sewer line enough to need repair?
Yes, and in the older neighborhoods throughout Bethlehem, Lancaster, York, and Harrisburg, root intrusion is one of the most common sewer repairs we complete. Mature trees send roots long distances in search of moisture, and the joints in clay tile sewer lines are exactly the kind of gap roots exploit. Once roots are inside the pipe, they expand with the pipe’s internal moisture and accelerate the damage at the joint. Regular camera inspection is the best way to catch root intrusion before it reaches the point where pipe wall damage requires excavation.
Will you need to dig up my yard to repair the sewer line?
It depends on the nature and location of the repair. Some repairs, particularly root clearing and joint resealing at accessible locations, can be completed with minimal excavation. Collapsed pipe, separated joints, and bellied sections require opening the ground at the failure point. We will show you the camera footage and explain what access is required before any digging begins. Our plumbers are direct about what the repair involves and why.
My home was built in the 1950s. Should I have my sewer line inspected?
Yes. Homes built in Central and Eastern Pennsylvania between roughly 1930 and 1970 are the most likely to have Orangeburg or clay tile sewer lines. Orangeburg was commonly used during and after World War II as a fiber-based pipe alternative and has a finite service life that many of these installations have already exceeded. A camera inspection gives you an accurate picture of what is actually in the ground under your property rather than requiring you to wait for a backup to find out.







