When one drain clogs, it is usually a localized blockage in that specific fixture line. When multiple drains throughout your house start acting up at the same time — slow kitchen sink, gurgling bathtub, toilet that backs up when you run the washing machine — the problem is almost certainly in the main sewer line.
Your main sewer line is the single pipe that carries all wastewater from your home out to the city sewer main. When it gets clogged, every drain in the house is affected because all of them feed into that one pipe. And in Indianapolis, where clay soil, mature trees, and aging pipe materials are everywhere, main line clogs are more common than many homeowners expect.
Warning Signs of a Main Line Clog
Multiple fixtures drain slowly at the same time. If the kitchen sink, bathtub, and floor drain are all sluggish, the common denominator is the main line — not individual clogs in each fixture.
Water backs up in unexpected places. Flushing a toilet and seeing water rise in the bathtub. Running the washing machine and finding water around the basement floor drain. These cross-fixture backups are a textbook sign that the main line is blocked downstream.
Gurgling sounds from drains you are not using. When the main line is partially blocked, air gets trapped in the pipes and escapes through the nearest opening. That gurgling in the bathroom sink while the dishwasher runs is air being pushed through the system by water that cannot drain fast enough.
Sewage odors from floor drains or cleanouts. If sewer gas is coming up through your basement floor drain, the water trap in the drain has been emptied by back-siphoning from a main line blockage. Persistent odors from your sewer cleanout cap also point to a downstream obstruction.
We have separate guides covering smelly drains inside the house and bathroom sinks that keep clogging for single-fixture issues. But if you are seeing multiple symptoms across the house, the main line is the likely source.
What Causes Main Sewer Line Clogs in Indianapolis
Tree root intrusion. Roots from maples, oaks, willows, and other large trees penetrate sewer lines through joints and small cracks. Over time, they form a dense web inside the pipe that catches debris and creates a full blockage. This is the number one cause of main line clogs in established Indianapolis neighborhoods like Broad Ripple, Meridian-Kessler, Butler-Tarkington, and Irvington.
Bellied or sagging pipe sections. When Indianapolis clay soil shifts — which it does with every wet and dry cycle — it can push pipe sections downward, creating a belly or low spot. Waste settles in these low spots and accumulates until the flow is blocked. A sewer camera inspection is the only way to identify pipe bellies without excavation.
Grease buildup. Kitchen grease that makes it past the P-trap can coat the inside of the main line over years. Combined with other debris, this creates a gradual narrowing that eventually closes the pipe.
Pipe deterioration. Cast iron and clay sewer pipes — standard in Indianapolis homes built before the 1980s — corrode and crack over decades. We detailed the structural warning signs in our guide on signs of a collapsed sewer line in Indianapolis.
What Not to Do
Do not pour chemical drain cleaner down the toilet or floor drain trying to clear a main line clog. Store-bought products are designed for small, localized clogs in fixture drain lines. They will not reach or clear a main line obstruction and can damage older pipe materials.
Do not keep flushing toilets or running water if you suspect a main line backup. Every gallon of water you put into the system with nowhere to go will eventually come back up through the lowest drain in the house — usually the basement floor drain.
What to Do Instead
Locate your sewer cleanout — typically a capped PVC or cast iron pipe sticking up from the ground near your foundation or in the basement. If water is visible inside the cleanout or flowing out of it, the blockage is confirmed.
Call a licensed plumber for professional drain cleaning using a main line snake or hydro jetting. After clearing the blockage, a sewer camera inspection can determine whether the clog was caused by roots, a belly, or pipe damage — and whether the line needs repair or just ongoing maintenance.
The Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission governs municipal sewer connections, but the private sewer lateral from your home to the city main is your responsibility to maintain. Knowing the condition of that line protects you from unexpected repair costs.
Act Before the Backup Reaches Your Living Space
A main line clog does not fix itself. It only gets worse. The earlier you catch it, the simpler and cheaper the fix. Once raw sewage backs up into your home, you are dealing with remediation, sanitation, and potential insurance claims.
DW Plumbing clears main sewer line clogs across Indianapolis and surrounding counties every day. We provide 24/7 emergency service, upfront flat-rate pricing, and a satisfaction guarantee on every job.
Call 317-500-1009 for fast, professional main line clearing. We will get your drains flowing and show you exactly what caused the blockage.