You moved into a Roy home three months ago and the basement drain just backed up for the first time. Is it your problem, the previous owner's problem, or something that has been building in the line for years? That is the question behind most first-time drain calls in a high-turnover residential city — the new homeowner or renter inherits a line they know nothing about, and the first backup is the first clue. Roy is a large southwest Weber residential city with construction spanning from the 1950s through last year, which means the pipe in the ground could be clay, cast iron, PVC, or a combination of patches from prior repairs. Drain cleaning, hydro jetting, sewer camera inspection, and sewer line repair and replacement all start from the same place: the symptom, the home age, and whether the line has been serviced before.
Tell us what you are seeing: one slow drain, multiple fixtures backing up, sewage smell, or a backup that happened once and you want to make sure it does not happen again. Then share the property address, approximate home age, and whether you are the homeowner or a renter coordinating with a landlord. If you have had the drain cleaned before and the clog returned, mention how many times and how long between events — that pattern determines whether the next visit should be a standard cleaning or whether the camera needs to run to find the underlying cause. Nearby areas like Farr West, Harrisville, Hooper, Huntsville, Marriott-Slaterville, and North Ogden share the Weber County corridor, but Roy has the residential volume and the construction-era spread that make honest triage more important than a fast quote.