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Call Us
A real person answers 24/7. Tell us what's wrong — we'll give you a ballpark quote on the phone and schedule a time that works.
Sandy's east bench is alluvial cobble and the water table drops quickly with elevation, so trenching is rocky but usually dry. Older Alta View laterals (clay, some Orangeburg in 60s-era sections) fail at the street connection regularly. Canyon-mouth properties have bedrock closer to surface than the valley average, which changes pipe-bursting feasibility.
Excavation in Sandy
Full service-lateral replacement for leaking, corroded, or undersized water lines from meter to home.
Learn moreTargeted spot repair for a single pinhole, bad fitting, or shutoff valve — when the rest of the line is sound.
Learn moreDig-and-replace sewer service lateral work for collapsed, bellied, or root-choked lines.
Learn moreReplace an entire sewer line through two small access pits — no trench across your yard or driveway.
Learn moreWhat to Expect
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A real person answers 24/7. Tell us what's wrong — we'll give you a ballpark quote on the phone and schedule a time that works.
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Our tech arrives in a Valley Plumbing, Heating, and Cooling van, in uniform, shoe covers on. Diagnoses the issue and quotes flat-rate before any work starts.
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We complete the work, clean up, and walk you through everything we did. Warranty covers our work for the life of the parts.
Valley Plumbing, Heating, and Cooling
Licensed Utah excavators, trenchless-certified, 24/7 emergency response.
Sewer & Excavation in Sandy
Sewer and excavation work is the part of plumbing most Sandy homeowners never think about — until a service lateral collapses, a main water line starts losing pressure, or raw sewage backs up into a basement floor drain at 11pm. Valley Plumbing runs a dedicated excavation division with our own operators, our own equipment, and our own trenchless pipe-bursting rigs. We're not subcontracting your dig to a general grading outfit. Every job in Sandy and across Salt Lake County is planned, permitted, and executed by a crew that has been cutting into Utah soil and replacing failed service laterals for more than two decades. That matters when the pipe in question runs 7 feet under a finished driveway or a 40-year-old maple.
Utah soil isn't friendly to a shovel. Across most of the Wasatch Front — andSandy in particular — you're digging through a mix of expansive clay, silt, and rock cobble left behind by ancient Lake Bonneville. Clay holds water, swells in the wet season, and shrinks in the dry. That movement is hard on rigid pipe joints, especially older clay tile and cast iron sewer laterals. Certain pockets of Salt Lake County — particularly lower-elevation areas near Alta View and East Sandy— also sit over a seasonally high water table, which complicates any excavation past about 5 feet of depth and makes shoring and dewatering a real consideration on longer service-lateral runs.
Sandy's housing stock is predominantly mostly-1960-1990, which is the single biggest factor in what we find underground. Sandy's building boom ran from the 1970s through the 1990s, producing a near-uniform belt of copper-plumbed split-entries and two-stories between 9000 South and the canyons. Hidden Valley, Pepperwood, and the east-bench custom homes are the upscale tier; Alta View and the older west-side sections are the aging workhorses. City sewer mains in established Sandy neighborhoods are often 50 to 80 years old, and the service laterals — the pipe that runs from the house to the city tap in the street — are frequently the original material installed when the home was built. We've pulled clay tile out of yards in Sandy that was stamped with a 1940s foundry mark and was still holding water (barely). We've also replaced 30-year-old PVC that failed from ground movement. Age alone doesn't tell the whole story — material matters, and so does what's been happening at the joints for the last several decades.
The first question on any sewer line call is material. In pre-1950s homes — which we still see throughout the older Sandy neighborhoods — the service lateral is almost always vitrified clay pipe, sometimes called clay tile. Clay holds up structurally for a long time, but its bell-and-spigot joints are a magnet for root intrusion. Homes built in the 1950s and 1960s typically used cast iron for the lateral, which lasts 50 to 75 years but corrodes from the inside out and develops "channeling" along the bottom of the pipe. The 1970s and early 1980s brought Orangeburg — a bitumen-impregnated wood-fiber pipe that was cheap and easy to install and ages terribly. Orangeburg deforms into an oval under soil pressure and eventually collapses; if your Sandy home was built in that window and still has its original lateral, it's not a matter of if. Anything built from the mid-1980s forward is generally PVC or ABS, both of which hold up well unless the bedding was poor or ground movement has caused a bellied section.
Root intrusion is the runaway leading cause of sewer failures we see in established Sandy neighborhoods. Mature trees — poplars, maples, willows, and ash — send fine feeder roots toward any joint with even a small leak, and once they're inside the pipe they grow into a full mat that catches paper and grease. Common signs of a failing sewer lateral: recurring backups that jetting only fixes temporarily, multiple fixtures draining slowly at the same time (toilet gurgles when the washing machine drains, tub backs up when the toilet flushes), sewage odor in the yard along the line run, and patches of unusually green grass in a strip across the lawn. Sandy's east bench is alluvial cobble and the water table drops quickly with elevation, so trenching is rocky but usually dry. Older Alta View laterals (clay, some Orangeburg in 60s-era sections) fail at the street connection regularly. Canyon-mouth properties have bedrock closer to surface than the valley average, which changes pipe-bursting feasibility. South Valley Water Reclamation Facility via local collection; newer subdivisions are all PVC, older Alta View / 9000 South still has clay and some cast iron Every sewer call gets a camera inspection before we quote anything — we're not guessing what's down there, and neither should you.
Trenchless is the reason Sandy homeowners no longer have to tear up a driveway, a mature landscape, or a stamped concrete patio to replace a failed sewer line. There are two trenchless methods we run. Pipe bursting pulls a new HDPE pipe through the path of the old line while a bursting head fractures the old pipe outward into the surrounding soil — you end up with a brand-new, fused, jointless pipe in the exact same trench line. CIPP (cured-in-place pipe) lining is the other option: we pull a resin-saturated felt liner through the existing pipe and cure it in place, essentially creating a new pipe inside the old one. Both methods need only two small access pits — one at the house cleanout and one at the city tap — instead of a 60- to 100-foot open trench.
Trenchless isn't the right answer every time. If the line has fully collapsed, there's no path for the bursting head or liner to follow, and you're back to a traditional dig. Same with severely bellied sections where the pipe has sagged below grade — a liner just reproduces the belly, and pipe bursting won't correct grade either. But for most root-intrusion failures, off-spec materials like Orangeburg, or aged clay and cast iron that are still continuous, trenchless is the clear win. A full traditional dig on a typical Sandy service lateral runs 3 to 5 days of crew time plus landscape and hardscape restoration. Trenchless is usually 1 to 2 days with two small patches to restore. On a home with a mature lawn, a long driveway, or any kind of hardscape between the house and the street, the math on trenchless is hard to argue with.
The water service line — the pressurized pipe from the city meter at the curb into your home — is the other major excavation job we handle in Sandy. Homes built before 1986 can still have lead solder or, in some older Sandy sections, lead service lines; any Sandy homeowner in a pre-1986 house should know what their service line material is. Galvanized steel service lines, common in mid-century construction, corrode from the inside and slowly choke off flow — you'll see it as low pressure throughout the house, rusty water on the first draw in the morning, and eventually a sudden jump in your water bill from a pinhole leak you can't find.
Copper service lines from the 1960s–1980s are getting close to the end of their usable life in Utah's hard-water conditions, and modern replacements use either PEX-A or type K copper depending on the application and the local code. Sandy City Building permits and inspections handle everything inside city limits; Sandy operates its own water utility separate from JVWCD direct service, so meter/tap coordination goes through Sandy City Public Utilities. In Sandy, any water service line replacement requires a permit from the local building department, a pressure test, and an inspection before backfill. We pull every permit, coordinate with the water department for the meter side of the connection, and handle the inspection scheduling — you don't have to chase anyone down.
Beyond sewer and water service, our excavation crew takes on yard and foundation drainage projects in Sandy year-round. That includes French drains for chronically wet yards, swales and surface grading to move water away from the foundation, perimeter footing drains for basements that seep in the spring melt, storm drain tie-ins, dry wells, and sump pit excavation. In Sandy's lower-elevation areas and anywhere with a seasonally high water table, foundation drainage isn't optional — it's the single best thing you can do to keep a basement dry long-term. We locate utilities, cut to depth, bed in perforated pipe with drain rock and filter fabric, and tie the discharge into a daylight or a storm connection that makes sense for the property.
Utah requires a state-licensed plumbing contractor for any sewer or water service work, and the excavation itself falls under additional licensing through DOPL. Valley Plumbing, Heating, and Cooling carries both, plus the general liability and workers' comp coverage any Sandy homeowner should be asking about before a crew shows up. Every dig starts with a Blue Stakes of Utah locate — call 811 or submit online at least two working days before excavation — to mark public utilities. Private utilities (landscape wiring, secondary water, gas lines past the meter, low-voltage) aren't covered by 811, and we run our own private locate before breaking ground. Sandy City Building permits and inspections handle everything inside city limits; Sandy operates its own water utility separate from JVWCD direct service, so meter/tap coordination goes through Sandy City Public Utilities. City or county permits are pulled for every sewer lateral and water service replacement in Sandy, and inspections happen before backfill so the work is visible and verified. We handle the full permit package, schedule the inspections, and give you the closed-out documentation for your records and any future home sale.
A sewer backup isn't a next-week problem — it's a right-now problem, and bypassing it costs more with every hour of sewage sitting in a basement or seeping into a crawlspace. Our emergency line is live around the clock, answered by a real dispatcher, and our typical response time for urgent sewer calls inSandy is under two hours. We show up with a jetter, a camera, and a vac truck in the same run, so we can clear the line, inspect the failure, and have a repair plan in front of you before we leave — not three days later. If you're dealing with an active sewage backup or a broken water service line right now, stop reading and call (801) 341-4222.
Same-day service · Flat-rate pricing · Family-owned since 2011.
By the Numbers
15+
Years Serving Utah
70,000+
Jobs Completed
4.8★
Google Rating
24/7
Emergency Response
“Called Valley Plumbing, Heating, and Cooling on a Saturday when our water heater died. They had a new unit installed by 4pm that same day — honest pricing, no pressure, clean work. The tech even explained everything he was doing. Easily the best plumbing experience we've had in Sandy.”
David H.
Alta View · Trenchless Sewer Line Replacement
Valley Plumbing, Heating, and Cooling
Flat-rate pricing, free camera inspection with most jobs.
FAQs
Yes — we cover all of Sandy from 9000 South to the mouth of the canyons, including Alta View, Hidden Valley, and Pepperwood. Same-day appointments are available most days.
Sandy's water tests between 350 and 400 ppm — very hard by any standard. A water softener dramatically extends the life of your water heater, fixtures, and appliances. We install and service multiple softener brands and can recommend the right size for your home.
Type M copper installed in the 1970s is now 50+ years old and prone to pinhole leaks, especially in hard-water areas like Sandy. If you're seeing brown stains in your sinks, low water pressure, or unexplained wet spots in walls, it's time for an evaluation. We offer full repipes in PEX-A with minimal drywall disruption.
Yes. We're licensed in Sandy and handle all permitting through Sandy City's building department, including coordination with city inspectors. Every major plumbing project gets properly permitted and documented.
More Valley Services in Sandy
Valley Plumbing, Heating, and Cooling runs plumbing, HVAC, and excavation crews out of the same dispatch. One call, one trusted team, flat-rate pricing across every service we offer.
Why Valley Plumbing, Heating, and Cooling
Utah homeowners have leaned on Valley for over two decades. Here's why.
Every tech is state-licensed, background-checked, and continuously trained.
Real humans on the phone, techs dispatched fast, any hour, any day.
We quote before we start. No hidden fees. No bait-and-switch.
Shoe covers on, drop cloths down. We leave your home cleaner than we found it.

4.8
3,132+ Google Reviews
Excavation service near Sandy
Available Around the Clock
Burst pipe, no heat, AC down? Real plumbers pick up — no answering machines. Valley Plumbing serves Salt Lake City and surrounding areas any time, day or night.
Licensed & Insured — Utah Plumbing Contractor