plumbing
Connectwithfast,affordableandvettedPlumbersforallyourDrain and sewer camera workneeds



How it works




CoveringallyourSpecialist Plumbingneeds
HowmuchdoesitcosttohireanaPlumberinSouthAfrica?
Drain Camera Inspections in South Africa: Pinpointing Blockages Without Guesswork
Facing a stubborn, recurring drain blockage is a major frustration for any homeowner. Before you resort to guesswork or temporary fixes, consider a drain camera inspection. This crucial service, also known as a CCTV drain survey, uses a high-resolution waterproof camera to provide a clear, real-time view inside your pipes.
A qualified plumber can pinpoint the exact location and cause of a blockage, from invasive tree roots to a collapsed pipe, without disruptive digging. This technology saves you significant time, money, and stress by ensuring the problem is fixed correctly the first time.
What is a Drain Camera Inspection and Why is it Essential in SA?
A drain camera inspection is a non-invasive diagnostic service that takes the mystery out of plumbing problems. Instead of blindly trying to clear a blockage, this method provides undeniable proof of the issue, which is crucial for compliance with South African plumbing standards like SANS 10252-2 (Drainage installations for buildings).
A plumber inserts a small, flexible camera into an access point, like a cleanout, and manoeuvres it through your drain system. The live footage appears on a monitor, allowing both you and the plumber to see exactly what’s happening inside.
“It’s a game-changer because it moves beyond temporary fixes,” explains David, a Kandua-vetted plumber from Johannesburg with over 15 years of experience. “I had a client in a Sandton complex with recurring blockages. Handymen kept snaking the drain with little success. The camera revealed a section of the pipe had ‘bellied’ or sagged underground due to the clay soil, creating a low point where waste was collecting. No amount of snaking would have fixed that structural issue. The camera saved them thousands in future call-outs.”
What Happens During a Drain Camera Inspection?
A professional plumber will follow a specific process to ensure a thorough and accurate inspection:
- Accessing the System: The plumber finds the most suitable access point, which might be a drain cleanout, a roof vent pipe, or by temporarily removing a toilet.
- Inserting the Camera: The high-resolution camera, attached to a flexible rod and fitted with bright LED lights, is carefully fed into the pipe.
- Real-Time Diagnosis: As the camera navigates the pipe, the plumber observes the live video feed, looking for issues like blockages, cracks, tree root intrusion, or sagging pipes.
- Pinpointing the Problem: Most professional cameras are equipped with a "sonde" (a transmitter). This allows the plumber to use a locator on the surface to find the exact location and depth of the problem, which is critical for targeted repairs.
- Reporting: Afterwards, the plumber provides a detailed report, often with a video recording, explaining the findings and outlining the best course of action.
Checklist: Signs You Need a Drain Camera Inspection
Not sure if your issue warrants a camera? Here are some common red flags:
- Recurring Blockages: Your drain keeps clogging up despite being cleared multiple times.
- Slow Drains: Water in multiple sinks, showers, or tubs drains very slowly.
- Foul Odours: You notice persistent sewer smells inside or outside your home.
- Gurgling Noises: Your pipes make strange gurgling sounds after flushing a toilet or draining a sink.
- Lush Patches of Grass: An unusually green and healthy patch of lawn could indicate a leaking sewer line fertilising the soil.
- Buying an Older Home: A pre-purchase inspection can uncover hidden plumbing issues and save you from expensive surprises.
The Risks of Skipping a Professional Inspection
Attempting to solve a recurring drain problem without a proper diagnosis is a risky and often costly affair. Here’s what can go wrong:
- Temporary Fixes: Without knowing the true cause, you are only treating a symptom. Clearing a small hole in a mass of tree roots provides only temporary relief, leading to repeated blockages and more call-out fees.
- Unnecessary Digging: For a major issue like a collapsed pipe, a plumber without a camera would be forced to guess the problem's location. This can lead to extensive and disruptive digging in your garden or driveway. The camera ensures any excavation is precise and minimal.
- Wasted Money: Paying for multiple call-outs that don’t solve the core issue is far more expensive than a single diagnostic inspection that identifies the problem for good.
- Severe Damage: An unaddressed issue, like a small crack, can escalate into a major pipe collapse. This can lead to much more expensive emergency repairs and potential property damage from sewage backup.
Real Customer Stories
Ben from Constantia was dealing with a perpetually backed-up toilet. “We were at our wits’ end,” he says. “A Kandua pro performed a camera inspection and showed us on the screen exactly where the drain line had dipped under our driveway. Wastewater was just pooling there.” Knowing the precise location allowed for a targeted excavation and pipe levelling. “This targeted repair saved us what would have been a massive bill for a ‘trench-and-guess’ approach.”
The van der Merwes from Durban North were constantly battling a slow-draining kitchen sink. After trying countless chemical drain cleaners, they called a Kandua pro. Within 30 minutes, the camera discovered a large "fatberg" (a solidified mass of grease and soap) that had built up over years. The footage showed the plumber exactly where to aim a high-pressure hydro-jet, clearing the blockage permanently and saving the family from future frustration.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
How much does a drain camera inspection cost in South Africa?
Typically between R1,500 and R4,500. The cost varies by region and the complexity of the job, but it is a fraction of the cost of unnecessary excavation. For a more detailed breakdown, check out our plumbing cost guide.
Can a drain camera clear a blockage?
No, it is a diagnostic tool. The camera finds the problem, and then your plumber uses specialised equipment like a hydro-jetter or drain snake to clear it.
How long does an inspection take?
Between 30 minutes to a few hours. A straightforward inspection of a single line is quick, while a full survey of a property’s main sewer lines will take longer.
What kind of problems can a drain camera find?
It can uncover a wide range of issues, including grease and debris buildup, tree root intrusion, cracked or collapsed pipes, misaligned pipe sections, corrosion, and foreign objects lodged in the drain.
Is a drain camera inspection messy?
No, the process is generally very clean. The camera is inserted through existing access points, and professional plumbers take precautions to keep the work area tidy.
Will I get a copy of the video footage?
Most professionals will provide a digital copy. It is best to confirm this with your plumber beforehand, as it is crucial for insurance claims or future reference.
Can a drain camera be used on any pipe?
It works on most residential pipes, typically from 50mm to 225mm in diameter. It may not be suitable for very small pipes, like those connected to a basin trap.
Can the plumber find the exact location of the blockage from the surface?
Yes, if their camera is equipped with a sonde and locator. This technology allows them to mark the exact spot and depth on the ground above the pipe. Always confirm your plumber has this equipment if excavation might be needed. For more complex jobs, you may also need a qualified electrician to ensure any wiring is handled safely.
Why is this service so popular when buying a new home?
It can reveal hidden, costly pipe issues in older properties. A clean report provides peace of mind, while discovering a major problem gives you powerful leverage for negotiation. The City of Cape Town’s stringent Water By-law, for instance, makes new homeowners responsible for fixing leaks, so a pre-purchase inspection is a smart investment.
Why You Can Trust Kandua to Get It Right
At Kandua, getting your home projects done is simple, safe, and stress-free.
- Tell us what you need – Or let our smart AI Home Companion help diagnose your problem if you’re not sure where to start.
- Get answers as you go – While posting your job, you can ask our smart AI home companion anything from understanding typical costs, to how the process works, to how long it might take. Ask questions whenever they pop up, and get clear, helpful answers instantly.
- We match you with the best – All our pros are 100% vetted: ID-verified, background checked, and maintaining at least a 4.5-star rating. We make sure the pro we send has the right skills and certification to get your job done right.
With Kandua, you can rest easy knowing you’re in safe hands from the first click to the final handshake.
A plumbing problem is never just “a small thing”. A dripping tap can turn into damp walls. A slow drain can become a full-on overflow. And when a geyser acts up, it’s suddenly everyone’s problem.
Kandua helps you get it sorted quickly by matching you with a vetted plumber for your job — whether it’s a repair, installation, inspection, or an urgent call-out.
A few quick answers (so you don’t have to scroll)
How do I choose a good plumber?
Pick someone who communicates clearly, explains the cause (not just the symptom), prices transparently, and can provide the right compliance paperwork where it’s required.
Do I need a plumbing certificate (COC) in South Africa?
Sometimes, yes — especially for bigger plumbing work and specific installations. If a job needs a Plumbing CoC, it must be issued by the right person (more on that below).
What should plumbing cost?
Most plumbers charge a call-out fee + hourly labour + materials. After-hours and specialist work (leak detection equipment, camera inspections, gas, hot water systems) usually costs more.
What should I do first in a plumbing emergency?
Turn off your main water supply, keep water away from electrics (switch off power if needed), and call a plumber.
Common plumbing problems (and what they usually mean)
You don’t need to diagnose like a plumber — but it helps to know what the signs typically point to.
“My water bill jumped”
Often linked to a hidden leak (toilet running silently, underground line leak, cracked pipe behind a wall). If you’ve ruled out obvious dripping taps, it’s worth booking leak detection early — it can save you from expensive “guess and break” repairs.
“My drain keeps blocking”
One blockage can be a once-off. Recurring blockages usually mean a deeper issue: build-up in the line, an incorrect slope, roots, or damage. This is where a camera inspection is a game-changer because it stops the cycle of temporary fixes.
“My geyser is leaking / overflowing / tripping power”
Geysers are high-pressure systems and often linked to electrical components too. If the geyser is leaking, the overflow is running constantly, or the power is tripping, don’t gamble — get a plumber involved quickly.
“Low water pressure everywhere”
Could be municipal supply — or it could be your pressure control valve, a partially closed stopcock, a clogged filter, pipe restrictions, or a leak. A good plumber will help you narrow this down fast.
When it’s a DIY job — and when it isn’t
DIY can work for simple, low-risk things (like replacing a shower head, cleaning an aerator, tightening a visible fitting).
Call a plumber when:
- the leak is hidden (walls/ceilings/floors)
- there’s sewage, a strong drain smell, or repeated backups
- you’re dealing with geysers, hot water systems, or pressure issues
- the job involves gas
- you may need a certificate for compliance, insurance, or future sale of the property
- you want the job done properly the first time (instead of paying twice)
Certifications, registrations & compliance in South Africa (what matters and when)
This is the part most people only learn after they’ve paid. Here’s the simple version.
1) Plumbing CoC (Certificate of Compliance)
A Plumbing Certificate of Compliance is a document confirming that plumbing work meets required standards and rules. You typically want a CoC when:
- major plumbing work is done (especially on water supply systems)
- hot water systems are installed or materially altered
- compliance is needed for insurance, sale of a property, or peace of mind
- the job is significant enough that you’d want proof it was done correctly
Important: not every small repair results in a CoC, but when a CoC is required, it must be issued by the appropriately authorised plumber (see PIRB below).
2) PIRB (Plumbing Industry Registration Board)
In South Africa, you’ll often hear plumbers mention PIRB. In practical terms:
- PIRB is linked to professional plumbing registration/designations.
- A PIRB-licensed plumber is typically the person who can issue a PIRB Plumbing CoC where applicable.
When you should ask about PIRB licensing:
If your job involves compliance paperwork, geysers/hot water systems, major installations, or work you’ll want certified for insurance or property transfer, ask upfront:
“Will I receive a Plumbing CoC, and are you licensed to issue it?”
3) Gas plumbing compliance (LPG / Natural Gas)
Gas work is a separate category because it carries higher risk. For gas installations and repairs, you should expect:
- the right gas-related registration/authorisation from the installer, and
- a Gas Certificate (often called a certificate of conformity/compliance) for the installation or modification.
When it’s needed:
New gas installations, changes to gas lines or appliances, or work that materially affects the gas system.
If a plumber is doing gas work, don’t be shy about asking:
“Will I receive the gas compliance certificate for this work?”
4) Solar geysers & heat pumps (hot water specialists)
Solar geysers and heat pumps sit in that “specialist” zone: plumbing, pressure, safety components, sometimes electrical integration too.
When you should care about specialist competency:
Installations, system changes, recurring failures, or when you want the job signed off properly. Ask whether the plumber is experienced specifically with solar hot water or heat pump systems — they’re not the same as a standard geyser swap.
5) Electrical CoC (sometimes relevant)
This is not a plumbing certificate — but it becomes relevant when hot water work involves electrical changes. If electrical components are installed/altered, the right electrician should handle that portion and issue the correct electrical compliance documentation.
Simple rule: plumbing paperwork for plumbing work, gas paperwork for gas work, electrical paperwork for electrical work.
Pricing: what to budget for plumbing in South Africa
Plumbing pricing varies a lot depending on where you live and what the job involves. Hiring a plumber in South Africa can cost anywhere from about R450 to R900+ per hour, with the overall price influenced by the job’s complexity, urgency, travel distance, and the plumber’s experience.
As a realistic rule of thumb :
- Standard labour often lands around R450–R850 per hour (excluding any call-out fee), with many homeowners commonly seeing ~R600–R900 depending on area and job type.
- Specialist work (complex diagnostics, difficult access, multiple points of failure) can push higher.
- Many plumbers quote ex VAT, so if you’re comparing quotes, always confirm whether VAT is included.
Typical cost structure
- Call-out fee (covers travel + initial assessment)
- Labour (hourly)
- Materials/parts
- After-hours premium (nights, weekends, public holidays)
- Specialist equipment (camera inspections, leak detection gear)
Typical hourly ranges you’ll see (guideline)
- Basic plumbing: ± R350 – R600/hour
- Average general plumbing: ± R500 – R850/hour
- Specialist / urgent work: ± R900 – R1,400/hour (sometimes more after-hours)
A realistic “small job” expectation
Even for something that sounds simple, budget for a call-out + 1–2 hours labour plus small parts. That’s why bundling a few small fixes in one visit often saves money.
10 genuinely helpful plumbing FAQ's
1) When should I get a drain & sewer camera inspection instead of just unblocking?
If the blockage keeps coming back, multiple fixtures are affected (e.g., toilet + shower), you’re getting gurgling sounds or sewer smells, or the plumber suspects roots/pipe damage. A camera inspection helps confirm why it’s blocking (build-up vs roots vs collapse) so you don’t keep paying for temporary fixes.
2) Is it safe to use drain cleaner chemicals for blocked drains?
Occasionally for minor, slow drains — but be cautious. Chemical cleaners can damage older pipes, create heat reactions, and are hazardous for you and the plumber. If you’ve used chemicals, tell the plumber before they work on the drain. For recurring blockages, mechanical clearing + camera inspection is usually safer and more effective.
3) How does professional leak detection work, and will it require breaking tiles or walls?
Leak detection typically uses non-destructive tools (depending on the leak type), like acoustic listening, pressure testing, and moisture mapping to narrow down the source. It usually reduces “guess-and-break”, but a small access point is sometimes still needed to confirm and repair the leak once the location is identified.
4) My geyser overflow pipe is dripping — is that normal?
A brief drip during heating can be normal because pressure rises as water heats. But constant dripping, heavy flow, or water running when no hot water was used can signal a pressure/valve issue or a failing component. If the overflow suddenly changes behaviour, get it checked—especially if you also notice low hot water, temperature fluctuations, or tripping power.
5) What’s the difference between a standard electric geyser, a heat pump, and a solar geyser — and what breaks most often?
- Electric geyser: simplest; common failures are element, thermostat, valves, and leaks from corrosion.
- Heat pump: heats water efficiently using a compressor; common issues include refrigerant leaks, compressor/fan faults, and control problems.
- Solar geyser: uses solar collectors; common issues include circulation problems, leaks, valve failures, and controller/sensor faults (depending on system type).
A plumber can advise which system suits your area, water hardness, usage, and roof layout.
6) Do I need special plumbing for installing a water filtration system?
Often, yes—especially for whole-house or under-sink systems. The plumber needs to confirm pipe sizes, water pressure, placement (so it’s serviceable), and whether a pressure-reducing valve or bypass loop is needed. Filter choice also depends on your water source (municipal vs borehole vs tank) and what you’re trying to remove (sediment, taste/odour, chlorine, bacteria).
7) Can a plumber install a washing machine or fridge water line, and what usually goes wrong?
Yes. Common problems are incorrect connectors, leaking valves, poor hose quality, and water hammer/pressure issues. A plumber will usually check that the shut-off valve works properly, connections are correct, and that the appliance has the right pressure and drainage setup.
8) What’s involved in installing a water tank backup system for a home?
Typically: tank placement, inlet/outlet plumbing, a pump (if needed), a non-return valve, and a safe changeover arrangement so tank water can’t feed back into the municipal supply. The right setup depends on whether you want the tank for garden use only, toilet flushing, partial household backup, or full backup.
9) When do I need septic system maintenance, and what are warning signs?
Warning signs include slow drains throughout the house, sewage smells outside, soggy ground near the tank/soakaway, gurgling pipes, and sewage backing up. Septic systems usually need periodic pumping/servicing depending on household size and tank capacity. Avoid flushing wipes/grease/chemicals—those are common causes of failures.
10) For gas plumbing (LPG or natural gas), what checks should I expect after installation or repair?
You should expect leak testing, safe routing of gas lines, correct fittings, and verification that appliances are correctly connected and ventilated where required. For installations or modifications, you should also expect the correct gas compliance certificate for the work performed. If a plumber is doing gas work, ask upfront what documentation you’ll receive and who is issuing it.
.avif)



Here's what other clients are saying:






WhyuseKanduawhenyoubookaanPlumber
When you book through Kandua, you’re not just finding a pro – you’re getting a safer, simpler and more reliable way to sort out jobs around your home
.avif)
Your safety comes first
AI that understands your home problems
Only top rated, vetted Pros
Less admin, more peace of mind
SuggestedreadsaboutDrain and sewer camera work
.webp)
Beyond the Surface: Why a Drain Camera Inspection is Your Smartest Move for Stubborn Blockages in SA
Recurring drain blockages in South Africa? Discover why drain camera inspections reveal hidden pipe problems, eliminate guesswork, and deliver permanent solutions instead of temporary fixes.
-Inside-Your-Pipes-(1).webp)
Drain Camera Inspection: What We Can See (and Find) Inside Your Pipes
Recurring drain blockages? Discover how professional drain camera inspections pinpoint hidden problems, eliminate guesswork, and save South African homeowners time, money, and unnecessary pipe damage.

Beyond the Plunger: When to Use a Drain Camera for Stubborn Blockages
Stubborn drain blockage? Discover when plungers fail and why a professional drain camera inspection reveals hidden problems—saving time, money, and repeat blockages before they get worse.
%2520(1).webp)
How Much Does A Plumber Cost per hour in South Africa
Hiring a plumber in South Africa can cost anywhere from R450 to R900+ per hour, with the overall price influenced by the job's complexity, urgency, and the plumber's experience. Expect to pay a call-out fee of roughly R450–R750 (usually deducted if the work is completed), standard labour of about R450–R850 per hour, and higher after-hours/emergency pricing of about 1.5–2× the normal labour rate (plus an emergency call-out), plus materials and any access/repair or compliance-related costs. This guide will help you understand the various factors that contribute to plumbing costs and provide transparent pricing estimates.
.webp)