Step-by-step fix
Step 1: Make sure snaking is the right fix
- Check what the drain is doing. A slow or stopped single drain is often a good candidate for hand snaking.
- Run a little water and watch nearby fixtures. If water backs up in multiple drains or rises in a tub when a toilet or sink is used, the clog may be farther down the system.
- If this is a sink, tub, or shower, remove any visible hair or debris at the stopper or strainer first. A shallow clog may come out without a snake.
- Lay down towels and put a bucket nearby before opening anything.
If it works: You have a single problem drain, the work area is protected, and a hand snake is a reasonable next step.
If it doesn’t: If more than one fixture is backing up, use a larger cleanout-based approach or call a plumber because this may be a branch or main line clog.
Stop if:- Sewage is coming up into tubs, showers, or floor drains.
- The drain line or trap is cracked, leaking badly, or too corroded to handle safely.
- You suspect the clog is in the main sewer line rather than one fixture drain.
Step 2: Open the best access point
- Remove the stopper, strainer, or drain cover if that gives you direct access to the drain opening.
- For many bathroom sinks, it is often easier to place the bucket under the trap and remove the trap to reach the wall drain directly.
- If you are using a cleanout, loosen the cap slowly in case water is standing in the line.
- Wipe away sludge at the opening so the cable can feed in cleanly.
If it works: You have a clear access point where the snake can enter the drain without fighting through a stopper or heavy buildup.
If it doesn’t: If you cannot get useful access through the drain opening, try the trap or an accessible cleanout instead.
Stop if:- Water pours out uncontrollably when you open the trap or cleanout.
- The trap, cleanout, or drain parts are seized and feel likely to break if forced.
Step 3: Feed the cable in by hand
- Pull out a short length of cable and guide the tip into the drain opening or wall drain.
- Feed the cable forward a little at a time while turning the handle as needed to help it follow bends.
- Keep one hand controlling the cable near the opening so it does not whip or kink.
- When you feel resistance, stop pushing hard. Tighten the cable if your tool uses a lock, then rotate the handle steadily to work into the clog.
If it works: The cable moves into the line and you have either reached the clog or worked through the first bend without kinking the snake.
If it doesn’t: If the cable keeps hanging up right away, pull back a little, rotate, and try a slightly different angle instead of forcing it.
Stop if:- The cable kinks, frays, or starts twisting back on itself.
- You have to use excessive force to make the cable move.
Step 4: Break up or grab the clog
- At the clog, rotate the snake while applying light forward pressure. Let the cable do the work instead of jamming it ahead.
- Move the cable in and out a few inches while turning to break up grease, soap buildup, or hair.
- If the cable suddenly moves forward, feed a little farther and keep rotating to clear beyond the first blockage.
- Pull the cable back slowly once or twice to bring debris out, then wipe the cable clean before feeding it back in if needed.
If it works: You feel the clog loosen, the cable advances farther, or debris comes back out on the cable.
If it doesn’t: If you keep hitting the same hard stop and nothing changes, the clog may be too dense, too far away, or not reachable with a small hand snake.
Stop if:- You pull back roots, heavy scale, or material that suggests a damaged drain line.
- The cable becomes stuck and will not move in either direction with gentle control.
Step 5: Remove the snake and reassemble the drain
- Withdraw the cable slowly while continuing to control it near the opening.
- Wipe the cable as it comes out so you do not spread dirty residue around the room.
- Reinstall the trap, stopper, strainer, or cleanout cap securely.
- Clean the area and rinse the snake before storing it.
If it works: The cable is out, the drain parts are back in place, and the area is cleaned up enough for testing.
If it doesn’t: If a trap or cleanout still leaks after reassembly, loosen it and reseat it before testing again.
Stop if:- A trap nut, cleanout cap, or drain fitting will not reseal because threads are damaged or parts are cracked.
Step 6: Test the drain in real use
- Run warm water slowly at first, then increase the flow for a minute or two.
- Watch the drain speed and listen for gurgling that suggests the line is still partly blocked.
- Check all reassembled joints for leaks while the water is running.
- Use the fixture normally once more after a short pause to make sure the drain still clears without backing up.
If it works: Water drains at a normal rate, no joints leak, and the clog does not return during a normal-use test.
If it doesn’t: If the drain is still slow, repeat the snaking once more or move to a better access point. If it still backs up, the clog is likely deeper or larger than a hand snake can clear.
Stop if:- Water backs up into another fixture during the test.
- The drain leaks inside the cabinet, wall, or floor area.
- The clog returns immediately after repeated snaking.
FAQ
Can I snake a drain through the stopper opening?
Sometimes, yes. If the opening gives the cable a straight enough path, it can work. If the cable keeps catching, remove the stopper or go through the trap or cleanout for better access.
Should I use a hand snake or a chemical drain cleaner first?
A hand snake is usually the better first move for a solid clog because it physically removes or breaks up the blockage. Chemical cleaners can sit in the line, splash back during disassembly, and may not solve the root clog.
How far should I feed the snake?
Feed until you reach the clog and then a little beyond it once it loosens. For a simple fixture clog, the blockage is often within the first several feet, but some are farther down the branch line.
What if the snake keeps coming back clean?
The clog may be farther away, the cable may be slipping past it, or the problem may not be a simple fixture clog. Try a better access point like the trap or cleanout. If multiple fixtures are affected, think bigger than a single drain clog.
Can a hand snake damage pipes?
It can if you force it, especially in older or fragile drain lines. Use light pressure, steady rotation, and stop if the cable binds hard or the piping seems weak.