Logan Plumbing & Drain Services
Roto-Rooter has been a trusted name in plumbing since 1935, building a national reputation on reliable diagnostics, fast dispatch, and consistent workmanship. Homeowners in Logan, UT can count on that same standard - 24/7, 365 days a year - for everything from stubborn drain blockages to leaking pipes and failing water heaters. A slow drain, a drop in water pressure, or a fixture that won't stop running are all signals that something deeper needs attention. Roto-Rooter technicians trace the source, explain the problem, and get to work. Here's a closer look at the plumbing and drain cleaning services available.
- Availability: Roto-Rooter dispatches a technician 24/7, 365 days a year, so plumbing emergencies never have to wait.
Contact Roto-Rooter at 435-752-8367 or schedule service online.
Emergency Plumbing in Logan, UT
A burst pipe, a backed-up sewer line, or a water heater that stops working in the middle of the night cannot wait until morning. Roto-Rooter dispatches technicians around the clock - 24/7, 365 days a year - so a plumbing failure does not have to become a larger, more expensive problem by the time business hours arrive.
The dispatch process is straightforward. Call 435-752-8367 and a representative routes a technician to your address. The technician arrives with diagnostic tools to assess the situation before any work begins. That means you understand what failed, why it failed, and what the fix involves - before anything is opened up or replaced.
Plumbing emergencies tend to escalate quickly. A pinhole leak behind drywall saturates insulation and framing. A main sewer backup pushes wastewater into the lowest fixtures in the home. The faster a technician reaches the source, the less secondary damage accumulates. Roto-Rooter's 24/7 availability exists precisely because plumbing does not follow a schedule.

Most plumbing calls trace back to a short list of recurring problems - slow or blocked drains, water heater failures, hidden leaks, and aging pipe materials that restrict flow or corrode from the inside out. Understanding what each problem looks like helps homeowners in Logan, UT catch issues before they escalate.
Drain Clogs and Backups
Kitchen drains clog from cooking grease that cools and solidifies on pipe walls over time. Bathroom drains - tubs, showers, and sinks - clog when hair binds with soap scum just past the P-trap. The most serious drain failures affect the main sewer line: when toilets back up while another fixture runs, the blockage is almost always in the main line rather than at the individual fixture. A Roto-Rooter technician traces the location and severity of the blockage before choosing a clearing method.
Water Heater Problems
A rumbling or popping noise from a water heater usually means sediment has accumulated on the tank floor. That layer of mineral deposits forces the burner to work harder, raises energy use, and shortens the tank's service life. Other common failures include a corroded anode rod that can no longer protect the tank wall, a thermostat that reads temperature incorrectly, and a pressure relief valve that weeps or drips. Each symptom points to a specific component - not necessarily a full replacement.
Hidden Leaks
Leaks behind walls, under slabs, and at fixture connections often go undetected for weeks. Signs include unexplained increases in water use, soft spots in drywall, discoloration on ceilings, or the faint sound of running water when all fixtures are off. Roto-Rooter technicians use moisture meters and systematic visual inspection to locate the source without unnecessary demolition.
Pipe material plays a large role in how a plumbing system ages. Galvanized steel pipes corrode from the inside, gradually narrowing the interior diameter until flow slows to a trickle and rust-colored water appears at the tap. Copper and PEX lines are more corrosion-resistant but can still develop pinhole leaks at joints and fittings. When a single section fails repeatedly, repiping a branch or the full supply system is often the more reliable long-term fix.
Fixture and Appliance Connections
Faucets, toilets, garbage disposals, and shutoff valves all wear over time. A running toilet typically needs a new flapper or fill valve - components that are inexpensive but waste a significant volume of water if left unaddressed. Appliance connections deserve the same attention: a failed ice maker line can leak slowly behind a refrigerator for weeks before the water reaches a visible surface, and a loose dishwasher supply connection can saturate the cabinet floor without triggering an obvious flood.
Hydro Jetting and Camera Inspection
For drain lines that clog repeatedly, mechanical augering clears the immediate blockage but may not address the underlying buildup. Hydro jetting sends high-pressure water through the pipe to scour calcified grease, mineral scale, and root debris from the pipe wall itself - not just the center of the channel. Before recommending hydro jetting, a Roto-Rooter technician may deploy a sewer camera to confirm the line's condition. That camera footage reveals whether the recurring backup comes from buildup, tree root intrusion at a joint, a belly in the line, or a collapsed section - each of which requires a different response.
Tree roots enter sewer laterals through hairline cracks at pipe joints, then expand as they absorb moisture. The Roto-Rooter Machine cuts through root intrusion that has grown into older clay or cast iron lateral joints, and camera inspection confirms whether the cut is complete or whether a structural repair is also needed. Call 435-752-8367 to schedule a diagnostic visit.
Serving the entire Logan metro area, Including:
Counties in the Logan Metro Area
Frequently Asked Questions in Logan
How can I contact my local Roto-Rooter?
Please visit our locations page to find the nearest Roto-Rooter.
A sewer camera found a 'belly' in my drain line. What does that actually mean?
A belly is a section of pipe that has settled downward, creating a low spot where water and solids pool instead of flowing toward the main. Over time it causes recurring slow drains and backups that augering only temporarily relieves. A Roto-Rooter technician uses the camera footage to mark the belly's location and depth, then outlines the repair options - which may include pipe lining or targeted excavation.
Do you handle plumbing emergencies in the middle of the night?
Roto-Rooter dispatches technicians 24/7, 365 days a year - including nights, weekends, and holidays. A burst pipe or a main line backup that's flooding a basement can't wait until morning. Call 435-752-8367 any time to reach Roto-Rooter dispatch and get a technician headed to your home in Logan, UT.
My refrigerator's ice maker line is leaking behind the fridge. Is that a plumbing job?
Yes. Ice maker supply lines are small-diameter water lines, and a slow leak behind the refrigerator can go unnoticed long enough to damage the subfloor. A Roto-Rooter technician inspects the line, the shutoff valve, and the connection at the back of the appliance, then replaces the failed section. Catching it early limits the damage significantly.
Multiple drains in my house are backing up at the same time. What does that mean?
When a toilet backs up while the shower runs, or two fixtures slow down simultaneously, the blockage is almost certainly in the main sewer line rather than any individual fixture drain. A Roto-Rooter technician confirms this with a camera inspection, then clears the main line with an auger or hydro jetting depending on what the camera reveals - roots, grease accumulation, or a structural problem.
How do tree roots get into drain pipes, and can you actually get them out?
Roots enter through hairline cracks at pipe joints, drawn by the moisture and nutrients inside the line. Once inside, they expand and catch debris until flow stops completely. The Roto-Rooter Machine is specifically designed to cut through root masses in sewer laterals. After mechanical clearing, a camera inspection shows whether the joint damage is severe enough to require a pipe repair or lining.
What's the difference between snaking a drain and hydro jetting?
A cable auger - or snake - punches through the blockage and clears a path, but it doesn't clean the pipe wall. Grease, mineral scale, and soap scum that coat the interior can rebuild a clog within weeks. Hydro jetting sends high-pressure water through the line, scouring the wall surface clean. Roto-Rooter technicians recommend jetting when the same drain clogs repeatedly or when a camera inspection reveals heavy buildup.
Can you replace old galvanized pipes without tearing out all my walls?
Galvanized steel corrodes from the inside over time, narrowing the pipe bore and discoloring water. Full replacement - repiping to copper or PEX - is sometimes needed, but the scope of wall access depends on your home's layout and the extent of corrosion. A Roto-Rooter technician assesses the pipe condition first so you understand exactly what the job involves before any work begins.
My toilet keeps running after it flushes. What's causing that?
A running toilet almost always comes down to a worn flapper that isn't sealing the flush valve, or a fill valve that won't shut off at the correct water level. Both are mechanical parts that degrade with normal use. A Roto-Rooter technician identifies which component is failing, replaces it, and checks the float adjustment so the tank fills to the right level and stops.
Why does my whole house have low water pressure all of a sudden?
A sudden drop across every fixture usually points to a problem at the supply side - a failing pressure reducing valve, a partially closed shutoff, or a leak pulling pressure out of the line before it reaches your fixtures. Roto-Rooter technicians test pressure at multiple points to isolate the cause, then repair or replace the component responsible rather than treating each fixture separately.
How do I know if I have a hidden leak inside my walls?
Hidden leaks often show up as soft drywall, peeling paint, a musty smell, or an unexplained spike in your water bill before you ever see standing water. A Roto-Rooter technician uses moisture meters and visual inspection to trace the source - behind walls, under slabs, and at fixture connections - so the repair targets the actual leak point rather than guesswork.
My water heater is making a rumbling noise. Is it about to fail?
Rumbling usually means sediment has settled on the tank floor. As the burner heats water trapped beneath that layer, it pops and rolls - that's the sound you're hearing. Left alone, sediment accelerates corrosion and reduces efficiency. A Roto-Rooter technician flushes the tank, inspects the anode rod, and tests the pressure relief valve to determine whether a flush resolves the issue or a replacement is needed.
Roto-Rooter has operated as a national plumbing brand since 1935. That longevity reflects something specific: a diagnostic process and service standard that holds consistent regardless of which market a technician is working in. The same methodology used to locate a slab leak or clear a main line blockage in one city applies in every city the brand serves - including Logan, UT.
Uniformed technicians arrive in marked vehicles with the tools needed to diagnose before they repair. That sequence matters. A technician who inspects first - checking pipe condition, running water through fixtures, using a camera on a sewer line when the situation warrants - arrives at a more accurate diagnosis than one who guesses from symptoms alone. Roto-Rooter's national training standards are built around that inspect-first model.
24/7 Dispatch, Every Day of the Year
Plumbing failures do not align with business hours. A sewer backup on a Sunday evening or a water heater failure on a holiday carries the same urgency as a weekday call. Roto-Rooter's dispatch network operates 24/7, 365 days a year, connecting callers with a technician rather than a voicemail. That availability is not a promotional claim - it is a structural feature of how the brand routes service requests.
Consistent Standards Across Every Service Call
The brand's scale means that the processes used to diagnose a hidden leak, clear a grease-blocked kitchen drain, or assess a failing water heater are not improvised on-site. They follow a documented approach refined across decades of service calls. Homeowners benefit from that consistency: the technician who arrives has been trained on the same diagnostic sequence and service methods as every other Roto-Rooter technician in the network.
Choosing a plumbing service comes down to reliability - knowing that the technician who arrives will diagnose accurately, explain clearly, and complete the work correctly. Roto-Rooter's national infrastructure supports that outcome: consistent training, marked vehicles, uniformed technicians, and a dispatch system that answers around the clock.
For drain cleaning, plumbing repair, water heater service, or leak detection, reach Roto-Rooter at 435-752-8367. Technicians serve Logan, UT 24/7, 365 days a year - ready to diagnose and resolve the problem the same day you call.
