In this guide, I’ll walk you through how each option works, where each one shines (and struggles), what the timeline and price range typically look like, and the questions you should ask before you sign anything. Whether you’re a homeowner trying to protect your property and budget or a plumber considering adding new services, you’ll leave with a clear, practical framework to choose the right fix.
What “Pipe Liner” Really Means
When people say “pipe lining,” they’re usually talking about CIPP—cured‑in‑place pipe. Think of it as building a new pipe inside the old pipe. A flexible, resin‑saturated liner is inserted into the damaged line, then expanded and cured until it hardens into a seamless, structural tube. Done correctly, it creates a smooth, durable “pipe within a pipe” without tearing up your entire yard.
How a Professional Liner Installation Unfolds
- Inspection and mapping. A small, high‑definition camera is run through the line to locate cracks, joints, root intrusions, and any “bellies” (sags that hold water). The tech marks exact distances so the repair lands in the right spot.
- Mechanical cleaning. Rotary chain tools or grinding heads descale cast iron, cut out roots, and remove heavy buildup. You want the host pipe clean and round.
- Hydro‑jetting. A high‑pressure jet rinses residual debris so the liner can bond properly.
- Liner insertion. There are two common approaches:
- Pull‑in‑place (PIP): A short patch or longer liner is pulled to a precise location (fantastic for spot repairs).
- Inversion: The liner is turned inside out and pushed through the line with air or water pressure from a drum (great for long runs).
- Curing. The liner is hardened using UV light or epoxy resins that cure with time, heat, steam, or hot water. UV cure is fast; epoxy systems are proven and widely used.
- Reinstating branch lines. If a full‑length liner was installed, a robotic cutter is used to re‑open the connections from your home’s branch lines (sinks, tubs, toilets) into the main.
- Final camera verification. You get before‑and‑after footage and a written summary so you know exactly what was fixed.
Where Lining Shines
- Minimal digging. Often only small access pits or an existing cleanout are used.
- One‑day turnaround. Many residential jobs are completed the same day.
- Structural reinforcement. Lining seals joints, bridges small cracks, and blocks root intrusion.
- Smoother interior. The new inner surface is much smoother than old clay or scaled cast iron, which reduces friction and helps flow.
Limitations You Must Respect
- Bellies don’t go away. Lining doesn’t correct bad grades or sags; it follows the shape it’s installed in.
- Major collapses need excavation. If the pipe is crushed or missing, you can’t support a liner.
- Diameter shrinks slightly. The liner adds thickness. In most homes that’s not a problem because the surface is smoother, but it’s worth noting.
- Lateral access matters. You need a way to get the liner into position and the curing train through the line.
What “Pipe Replacement” Really Involves
Replacement means the damaged pipe is removed and a brand-new line—often PVC or HDPE—is installed to code. This can be done by open‑cut excavation or via trenchless replacement like pipe bursting.
How Replacement Is Typically Done
- Open trench: Digging exposes the old line, which is cut out and replaced. This gives you full visual control, makes grade adjustments easy, and allows upsizing if needed. The trade‑off is disruption: landscaping, driveways, and patios may be cut.
- Pipe bursting (trenchless replacement): A bursting head pulls a new pipe through the path of the old one, fracturing the old material outward. You still need access pits at the ends, but the yard impact is far less than open‑cut. Bursting is great when you want a full‑length new pipe and possibly a larger diameter without opening the whole yard.
Where Replacement Wins
- Correcting grade. If the line sags or was installed with improper slope, replacement is the way to fix it.
- Severe structural failure. Major collapses, long missing sections, or crushed Orangeburg and brittle clay often require replacement.
- Upgrading diameter. If you need to upsize for additional fixtures or long runs, replacement (or pipe bursting) is the path.
- Code and long‑term strategy. When you want everything new, with new cleanouts and future‑friendly routing, replacement gives you a blank slate.
Cost Comparison: What to Expect
Every yard, soil, and house layout is different, but typical residential ranges look like this:
- Pipe lining (CIPP): About $75–$300 per foot, depending on access, length, curing method, and difficulty.
- Replacement: About $400–$800 per foot, influenced by depth, soil type, concrete/asphalt, trees and roots, utilities to work around, and whether you need tunneling or additional access points.
Why the spread? Depth and access drive cost. A shallow, straight run with easy access is cheaper. A deep line under a slab, a driveway, or a big oak with invasive roots is more expensive—no matter which method you choose. Always get multiple written proposals that specify scope, materials, warranties, and what’s included in restoration.
Liner Technologies: A Quick Primer
UV‑Cured Liners
- Pros: Rapid cure (minutes), consistent quality, minimal downtime.
- Cons: Requires specialized equipment and access to pull a light train through; not every location is ideal.
Epoxy/Resin‑Cured Liners
- Pros: Proven, flexible in terms of length and access; can cure with ambient time, hot water, or steam.
- Cons: Cure time can be longer; odor management and ventilation are important during cure.
Spot Patches vs. Full‑Length Liners
- Spot repair (3–5 ft): Ideal for a single cracked hub or root intrusion at a joint. Quick, precise, and cost‑effective.
- Full‑length lining: Best when the whole pipe run is riddled with joint leaks or widespread cracking but still structurally present.
Replacement Methods: Choosing Your Path
- Open‑cut PVC replacement: Maximum control and inspection visibility; easiest way to fix slope and add cleanouts. Most disruptive to landscape and hardscape.
- Pipe bursting with HDPE or PVC: Far less surface disruption; can upsize; great for long runs. Requires adequate host path and space for launch/receive pits.
Which One Lasts Longer?
Done right, both options are long‑term solutions.
- CIPP liners are commonly rated and tested to last decades; many manufacturers target 50+ years. They’re structural and resist roots by eliminating joints.
- PVC/HDPE replacement is also a decades‑long solution—PVC laterals regularly hit 50–100 years depending on soil conditions and installation quality.
Warranties vary: some lining systems carry 10–50‑year product warranties with a shorter labor warranty; replacement often carries a contractor warranty on workmanship plus a manufacturer warranty on pipe. The bigger factor is the quality of the installation and correct diagnosis.
Liner vs. Replacement: A Simple Decision Framework
Use this checklist to start steering toward the best option:
Lean Toward Lining If…
- The pipe is structurally present (no long collapses or missing segments).
- Problems are cracks, leaking joints, or roots—not slope issues.
- You need to protect landscaping, trees, or hardscape with minimal disruption.
- You want a faster, one‑day project and less mess.
Lean Toward Replacement If…
- The line has severe bellies, improper slope, or consistent standing water.
- There are major collapses or long sections that are ovalized/crushed.
- You plan to upsize for capacity or future fixtures.
- You’re already remodeling and don’t mind a bigger excavation scope.
What Can Go Wrong (and How to Avoid It)
- Misdiagnosed bellies. Lining over a belly traps the problem in place. Insist on documented, measured camera footage and clear notes on slope.
- Poor surface prep. Skipping thorough mechanical cleaning and jetting jeopardizes adhesion. Ask how the pipe will be prepped.
- Missed laterals. Every branch line must be reinstated cleanly after lining. Confirm the contractor uses a robotic cutter and rescopes the line after reinstatement.
- Access oversights. If there’s no cleanout, you may need a small access pit. That’s normal; just get it in writing and plan restoration.
- Odor during cure. Resin systems can produce noticeable odors. Professionals handle ventilation and trapping; ask how they manage it.
Timeline and Disruption: What Your Week Looks Like
- Pipe lining: Often one day on site. You’ll likely have brief water/sewer downtime during curing. Yard impact is minimal. Indoors, you can expect some noise from jetting and cutting tools.
- Replacement: Typically several days depending on length and depth. Excavation spoils must be staged; concrete/asphalt may be cut and later patched. Inspections can add a day or two.
If your line runs under a slab and tunneling is required, expect more time, coordination, and cost no matter which route you take.
How to Compare Bids the Right Way
Ask each contractor to provide:
- Scope drawing and footage count. Start and end points, lengths, and depths.
- Diagnosis notes. Clear description of issues: breaks, offsets, bellies, root entry points.
- Method and materials. Liner type and cure method, or pipe material and size for replacement.
- Access plan. Where pits or cleanouts will be; how equipment gets in and out.
- Reinstatement and verification. How laterals will be reopened and how success will be documented (final camera inspection with recording).
- Permits and inspections. Who pulls them; what’s required in your jurisdiction.
- Warranties. Product and workmanship, in writing.
- Restoration. Backfill, compaction, concrete/asphalt, landscaping, and cleanup responsibilities.
- Timeline and disruptions. Honest start/finish windows and downtime expectations.
- References and training. Certifications or factory training on the specific system; recent jobs you can talk to.
For Plumbers: Should You Add Lining to Your Services?
If you run a plumbing company, lining can be a powerful way to solve customer problems while boosting your bottom line. Here’s the straight talk:
- Training is non‑negotiable. Your team must understand inspection, cleaning, resin handling or UV operation, liner selection, curing cycles, and reinstatement. Partner closely with your system manufacturer and invest in hands-on courses.
- Equipment isn’t cheap. A proper investment includes cameras, jetters, mechanical cleaning tools, inversion drums or pull‑in gear, curing equipment, and robotic cutters.
- Process discipline wins. From site protection to resin mixing to QC on cure times, success is repetition and documentation.
- Start with point repairs. Build confidence with short patches. Then scale to longer runs and more complex reinstatements.
- Sell outcomes, not gadgets. Homeowners want a safe yard, a reliable pipe, and clear proof of success. That’s your pitch, not the brand of curing light.
Maintenance After the Fix
No matter which path you choose, a few habits keep your new or newly‑lined pipe in top shape:
- Be kind to your drains. No wipes, no paper towels, no grease.
- Mind the trees. Aggressive roots near the line may warrant root barriers or periodic inspection.
- Schedule a checkup. A camera inspection every few years (or after major landscaping projects) is cheap insurance.
- Know your cleanout. Make sure a code‑compliant cleanout exists and that you know where it is. Label it on a property diagram.
Real‑World Scenarios
- The Root Farm: A 60‑year‑old clay lateral under a prizewinning lawn has roots at every joint but no major sags. Lining is a great fit—minimal digging, one‑day job, and you preserve the yard.
- The Sunken Middle: A cast‑iron line with a 12‑foot belly under the slab causes recurring clogs and sewage smells. Replacement wins because slope must be corrected. A mix of tunneling and open‑cut may be required.
- The Broken Hub by the Cleanout: Just one cracked hub two feet from access? A spot patch liner is fast and cost‑effective.
- Adding a Bathroom: You’re upsizing to handle an extra bath and laundry. Pipe bursting or open‑cut replacement allows larger diameter and new routing as needed.
Quick FAQ
Will lining reduce my pipe’s flow?
The diameter reduction is usually minor. Because the liner’s interior is smoother than old clay or scaled cast iron, friction drops and flow often improves in real‑world use.
Can I line Orangeburg?
It’s rarely recommended because the host pipe can be too weak to support a liner. Replacement is typically the safer call.
How long will I be without service?
Lining projects often require several hours of limited or no use during cleaning and curing. Replacement projects may involve longer disruptions, especially if inspections are staged.
Is there a best season for this work?
Professionals can do both methods year‑round. Extreme cold may extend cure times for some resin systems; extreme heat demands careful resin management.
The Bottom Line
If your sewer is structurally present and your main issues are cracks, leaking joints, or root intrusion, pipe lining is a fast, clean, long‑lasting solution that can save you serious disruption. If you’re battling bellies, collapses, or bad slope, or you want to upsize or completely re‑route, replacement—open‑cut or pipe bursting—is the right play. The smartest move is to demand a professional diagnosis with clear footage and a proposal that spells out scope, access, materials, warranties, and restoration. When you compare apples to apples, the right choice usually becomes obvious.
Whether you’re protecting a beautiful yard or rebuilding a problem line once and for all, you deserve a repair that’s structurally sound, code‑compliant, and well‑documented. Make the contractor show you the plan, make them prove the outcome, and don’t be afraid to ask hard questions. That’s how you win the “Pipe Liner vs Pipe Replacement” decision—and keep everything flowing the way it should for decades to come.