Main Sewer Line vs Lateral: What Is Your Responsibility

Updated June 2026
The main sewer line is the large public pipe running under the street that carries waste from the entire neighborhood to the treatment plant. Your lateral is the smaller private pipe connecting your home to the main. In most jurisdictions, the homeowner is responsible for the entire lateral from the house to the connection at the main, including the portion under the sidewalk and sometimes under the street. The city or sewer authority maintains only the main line itself.

Understanding the Two Pipe Systems

The municipal sewer system consists of two distinct components that serve different functions and have different ownership.

The main sewer line (also called the sewer main or public sewer) is a large-diameter pipe (typically 8 to 36 inches or larger) that runs under the street or easement, collecting waste from dozens or hundreds of properties and carrying it to the municipal treatment plant. The main is owned, maintained, and repaired by the city, county, or sewer authority. If the main fails, it is the municipality's problem to fix.

The sewer lateral (also called the service line, house connection, or private sewer) is a smaller pipe (typically 4 to 6 inches) that runs from your house through your yard to the point where it connects to the main. This pipe is private property, installed at the time your house was built, and maintained at the homeowner's expense.

The connection point where your lateral meets the main is called the tap or saddle connection. This is usually the dividing line between public and private responsibility, though the exact boundary varies by municipality.

Where Your Responsibility Begins and Ends

The specific boundary of homeowner responsibility varies by municipality, and understanding your local rules matters when a problem occurs near the property line.

Most common rule (majority of municipalities): The homeowner is responsible for the entire lateral from the house to the tap connection at the main, including the portion that passes under the public sidewalk and the section between the sidewalk and the street. The homeowner owns and maintains this entire pipe even though part of it runs under public property.

Shared responsibility (some municipalities): A few progressive jurisdictions split responsibility at the property line or at the public right-of-way boundary. The homeowner maintains the lateral from the house to the property line, and the municipality maintains the section from the property line to the main. This arrangement is becoming more common as cities recognize that requiring homeowners to maintain pipe under public streets creates problems.

Full municipal responsibility for the connection (rare): In a small number of jurisdictions, the municipality maintains the tap connection itself and the last few feet of the lateral where it meets the main. The homeowner is still responsible for the rest of the lateral.

What if the problem is at the tap connection where my lateral meets the main?
This is the most common area of dispute. In most jurisdictions, the tap connection is the homeowner's responsibility. However, if the connection failed because of a problem with the main (such as main line repair or replacement that damaged the tap), the municipality may be responsible. Document the situation with a camera inspection and contact your sewer authority to clarify responsibility before paying for repairs.
Can the city make me replace my lateral?
Yes. Many municipalities have ordinances that allow them to require homeowners to repair or replace a defective lateral, especially if the lateral is contributing to inflow and infiltration (I&I) problems in the municipal system. Some cities require lateral replacement at the time of property sale, during major municipal sewer projects, or when a camera inspection reveals defects during a city-wide assessment program.
Who do I call when my sewer backs up?
Call your local sewer authority or public works department first. They can quickly determine whether the problem is in the main line (their responsibility) or in your lateral (your responsibility). If the main is backed up, they will address it at no cost to you. If the main is flowing normally, the problem is in your lateral and you need to call a private plumber.

How to Find Out Your Local Rules

Contact your municipal sewer authority, water department, or public works department to ask specifically where the homeowner responsibility boundary is for sewer laterals. Ask for a written statement or reference to the relevant municipal code section. The information may also be available on your city's website under the public works or sewer services section.

Your property deed or plat may show sewer easements that indicate where the lateral runs and where public property begins. This information is useful when the responsibility boundary is tied to the property line.

Municipal Assistance Programs

Many municipalities have established programs to help homeowners with lateral repairs and replacements. These programs exist because failing laterals contribute to inflow and infiltration in the municipal system, which increases treatment costs for the city. Helping homeowners fix their laterals is often more cost-effective for the municipality than expanding treatment plant capacity.

Common assistance programs include cost-sharing where the city pays 25% to 75% of the replacement cost, low-interest loan programs with terms of 5 to 20 years, rebate programs for using trenchless methods that reduce street disruption, free camera inspections during city-wide assessment programs, and reduced permit fees for lateral replacements.

Check with your local sewer authority to see what programs are available. Many homeowners are unaware these programs exist and pay full price for work that could have been partially subsidized.

Key Takeaway

In most jurisdictions, you are responsible for the entire sewer lateral from your house to the municipal main, including the section under the sidewalk and street. Contact your local sewer authority to confirm your specific boundary and ask about any assistance programs that could reduce your replacement costs.