◧ Nevada · repair cost + coverage
Sewer line replacement cost in Nevada
A typical 50–100 ft lateral in Nevada runs about $3200–$18900 — near the national average. Here's what drives it locally and whether your insurance will pay.
What drives failures in Nevada
High water table and subsidence stress older laterals. Either way, the buried lateral from your house to the city main is yours to fix — including the excavation. Estimate your specific job (trenchless vs open-cut, by length and access) with the repair cost calculator.
Will insurance pay in Nevada?
The coverage rule is the same nationwide: a standard homeowners policy pays only when a sudden covered peril breaks the line, and excludes the everyday causes — roots, wear, corrosion. The fix everywhere is a service-line endorsement ($20–100/yr) that covers the buried pipe and the dig. What varies by state is your policy's exact language and your consumer protections — your Nevada Department of Insurance is the authority. Run your cause through the coverage verdict tool to see where you land.
This Nevada figure is a coarse cost-index estimate, not a quote — get a camera inspection and a local bid, and confirm coverage with your insurer and the state DOI.
Common questions
How much does sewer line replacement cost in Nevada?
A typical 50–100 ft lateral in Nevada runs about $3200–$18900 installed — near the national average, reflecting local labor and permit rates. Trenchless (lining or bursting) costs more per foot but avoids surface restoration; open-cut is cheaper per foot but adds it back. Depth, access, and digging under hardscape swing the figure.
Does homeowners insurance cover sewer line replacement in Nevada?
As everywhere in the US, a standard policy pays only for a sudden covered peril — not the common causes (roots, age, corrosion), which are excluded. A service-line endorsement is what covers the buried pipe. Nevada's Department of Insurance is the authority on what your specific policy must cover.
What causes sewer line failure in Nevada?
High water table and subsidence stress older laterals. Whatever the cause, the buried lateral from your home to the city main is the homeowner's responsibility to repair.
Sources & standards
- Sewer line & camera inspection cost data — HomeGuide
- Trenchless vs traditional sewer replacement cost — Angi
- US EPA — pipe bursting / trenchless rehabilitation cost case studies
- A licensed plumber / trenchless contractor in your area — the authority on a camera-verified diagnosis and quote
General information, not insurance/legal advice. Coverage varies by carrier and state — confirm against your own policy.