When your Burlington, IL plumber tells you the sewer line needs to be replaced — not just cleaned, not spot-repaired, but replaced — it’s natural to feel a wave of concern about cost, disruption, and timeline. Sewer line replacement is one of the larger residential plumbing projects a homeowner can face.
But it’s also one of the most straightforward once you understand what’s involved. Here’s a practical walkthrough of the process, what influences cost, how long it takes, and how to make sure the job is done right.
When Replacement Becomes the Right Call
Sewer lines get cleaned. They get spot-repaired. They get camera-inspected and monitored. But at a certain point, the pipe has deteriorated beyond what maintenance and targeted repairs can address. Replacement becomes the right answer when:
The camera inspection shows deterioration along most of the pipe’s length — not just at one joint or section. This is common in Burlington homes with original clay tile laterals that have been in the ground for 50+ years.
Root intrusion is occurring at multiple joints throughout the line. Clearing roots and patching one joint doesn’t solve the problem when roots are entering at five or six points along the pipe. Each cleared section becomes reinfected within months.
The pipe material has reached structural end of life. Orangeburg (bituminous fiber pipe), thin-wall clay, and early-generation PVC with degraded joints all reach a point where the pipe itself can no longer hold its shape or maintain proper grade underground.
Previous spot repairs have accumulated. If your sewer lateral has already been dug up and patched in two or three locations over the years, the remaining original sections are likely in similar condition. Continuing to chase individual failures becomes more expensive than replacing the entire line once.
For a deeper look at warning signs that lead to this point, read our guide to sewer line repair warning signs for Kingston homeowners — the same symptoms apply across Burlington and the surrounding area.
What Drives the Cost of Sewer Line Replacement
Sewer replacement costs vary significantly based on site-specific factors. Understanding what drives pricing helps you evaluate quotes and avoid surprises:
Length of the lateral. Burlington properties range from compact village lots to larger rural parcels. The distance from your home’s foundation to the municipal sewer connection at the street directly affects labor and material costs. A 40-foot lateral is a very different project than an 80-foot run.
Depth of the pipe. Sewer laterals in this part of Illinois are typically buried 4 to 8 feet deep to stay below the frost line. Deeper pipes require more excavation, shoring for trench safety, and backfill material.
Obstacles in the path. Driveways, sidewalks, mature trees, landscaping, fences, and utility crossings all add complexity. If the sewer line runs under a concrete driveway, that concrete needs to be cut and replaced — an added cost that your plumber should identify during the camera inspection and estimate phase.
Pipe material selected. Modern sewer replacement almost always uses Schedule 40 PVC, which provides excellent durability, smooth interior flow characteristics, and root resistance at the joints. The material cost is modest — it’s the labor and excavation that make up the majority of a replacement project.
Permit and inspection requirements. Sewer line replacement in Burlington requires a plumbing permit and municipal inspection. Your plumber should handle the permit process as part of the project. According to the Illinois Plumbing Code (77 Ill. Adm. Code 890), all sewer work must be performed by a licensed plumber and inspected before the trench is backfilled.
The Replacement Process Step by Step
Camera inspection and locate. Before any digging, your plumber runs a camera through the existing sewer line to confirm the extent of damage and mark the pipe’s exact path and depth across the yard. This footage drives the entire project plan.
Permit and utility locate. A plumbing permit is pulled, and JULIE (Joint Utility Locating Information for Excavators) marks all underground utilities in the work area. This is legally required in Illinois before any excavation.
Excavation. The trench is dug along the path of the old sewer line. In most Burlington residential projects, this is done with a compact excavator to minimize yard disturbance. The old pipe is removed in sections.
New pipe installation. The new PVC sewer line is laid at the proper grade — typically 1/4 inch of slope per foot — from the home’s foundation to the municipal connection. Proper grade is critical; without it, waste doesn’t flow correctly and the line will develop problems prematurely.
Connection and testing. The new line is connected at both ends — to the home’s interior drain system at the foundation and to the municipal sewer main at the street. The line is pressure-tested and visually inspected (often by the municipality) before backfill.
Backfill and restoration. The trench is backfilled in layers with appropriate material, compacted to prevent future settlement. Surface restoration — whether that’s grass, gravel, or concrete — is the final step.
How Long Does It Take?
Most residential sewer line replacements in Burlington are completed in 1 to 3 days, depending on length, depth, and site obstacles. The actual pipe installation is typically done in a single day. Excavation preparation, permit inspections, and surface restoration may extend the total project timeline by a day or two.
Choosing the Right Plumber for the Job
Sewer replacement is not a job for the cheapest bid. Here’s what to look for:
Licensed and insured — verify through the Illinois Department of Financial and Professional Regulation. They pull the permit under their own license. They camera-inspect before providing a quote — anyone who quotes replacement without camera footage is guessing. They explain what they found, what they recommend, and why. They provide a written estimate that covers the full scope including excavation, pipe, connections, backfill, and surface restoration.
Productive Plumbing provides sewer line inspection and replacement for Burlington, IL homeowners. We show you the camera footage, explain every finding, and provide a detailed written estimate before any work begins. Call 630-246-4832 to schedule an inspection.
