Root Intrusion in Drains: High-Risk Species, CCTV Identification, High-Pressure Jetting vs Root Cutting and Relining

Quick Answer: Root intrusion is diagnosed by CCTV survey and classified using MSCC4 codes BRJ (roots at joint) or BRM (root mass). High-risk trees within 10m of a drain include willow, poplar, and oak. High-pressure jetting (3,000–4,000 psi) removes soft root masses temporarily; robotic root cutting removes established root networks; CIPP relining (BS EN 13566-4) is the permanent solution, sealing joints and creating a root-resistant barrier.

Summary

Root intrusion is one of the most common causes of recurring drain blockages in the UK. Roots from trees and shrubs follow moisture and nutrients into drain pipes through the smallest joint gaps or hairline cracks, then grow progressively until they fill the bore and trap solid waste. Unlike simple blockages caused by FOG (fat, oil and grease) or wet wipes, root-blocked drains will re-block within weeks or months of jetting if the root source is not addressed.

The scale of the problem in the UK is significant: clay pipe systems installed before the 1970s have been in the ground for 50–80 years, and joint movement over time — from ground settlement, tree root pressure, and thermal cycling — creates gaps that roots exploit. Properties with mature trees in or adjacent to the garden are at particular risk.

Understanding root intrusion is valuable for drainage contractors in two ways: accurate diagnosis means recommending the right treatment (not just jetting, which is always the cheapest and least effective long-term solution), and the ability to specify relining means access to higher-margin, longer-term work.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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Tree Species Root Aggressiveness Risk to Drains Typical Root Spread
Weeping willow Very high Very high Up to 40m (10× height)
Crack willow Very high Very high Up to 30m
Lombardy poplar High Very high Up to 30m
Hybrid poplar High High Up to 25m
Oak High High Up to 15m
Ash High High Up to 12m
Horse chestnut Moderate Moderate Up to 12m
Sycamore Moderate Moderate Up to 10m
Silver birch Moderate Moderate Up to 7m
Lime Low-moderate Low-moderate Up to 10m
Apple/cherry Low Low Up to 5m
Conifers (most) Low Low Up to 5m

Detailed Guidance

CCTV Identification of Root Intrusion

A properly conducted CCTV survey (see drain cctv survey) will clearly show root intrusion. The surveyor should record:

BRJ — Roots at Joint: Fine hair roots entering at a specific joint, forming a fringe or curtain inside the pipe bore. Typically Grade 2–3. The joint itself may be open (BJO) or cracked (BCC). Roots at joints indicate the entry point — relining will seal the joint and prevent further entry.

BRM — Root Mass: A dense mass of roots that partially or completely blocks the pipe bore. Grade 4–5 depending on extent of blockage. This develops from BRJ over months to years as the initial fringe matures. Root masses trap toilet paper and solids, accelerating to complete blockage.

Distinguishing roots from FOG deposits: Roots are white/cream-coloured on CCTV and appear fibrous; FOG deposits are grey-brown and smooth. Roots do not move under jetting pressure in the same way as FOG. Mixed deposits (roots + FOG + toilet paper) are common and may require both cutting and jetting.

Tree Survey and Risk Assessment

Before specifying treatment, assess the tree situation above ground:

  1. Identify species: leaf shape, bark, seed type, or consult a tree identification app. Willow and poplar are the highest risk.
  2. Measure distance: from trunk to drain centreline. Any willow or poplar within 15m of a drain is at very high risk.
  3. Check for Tree Preservation Orders (TPOs): council online mapping. Cutting roots near a TPO tree without written consent is a criminal offence under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990.
  4. Conservation area check: all trees over 75mm trunk diameter at 1.5m height are protected in conservation areas — give 6 weeks' written notice to the local authority before any root work.

BRE Digest 298 ('Low-rise buildings on shrinkable clay soils') provides safe separation distances but was primarily written for foundations, not drains. For drains, the practical safe distance is approximately 1× mature tree height for high-risk species.

High-Pressure Jetting

High-pressure jetting (HPJ) is the first-line response to a root-blocked drain. A jetting nozzle is inserted into the pipe and pulls backward toward the camera, cutting through and flushing out root material.

Limitations of jetting alone:

When jetting is appropriate:

Jetting technique for roots: Use a rotating root-cutting nozzle or chain flail nozzle at 3,500–4,500 psi. Multiple passes are typically required — first pass to break up the mass, subsequent passes to flush debris downstream. Post-jetting CCTV to confirm clearance and identify the full extent of the problem.

Robotic Root Cutting

Where roots are established (BRM Grade 4–5) — particularly fibrous root masses that resist jetting — a robotic milling cutter or chain flail provides mechanical cutting. The cutter is guided by CCTV and can cut roots flush with the pipe wall, opening up severely blocked sections.

Robotic cutters are also used to:

Root cutting is a preparatory step, not a cure. Post-cutting CCTV will typically show the full joint damage that enabled root entry. This is the specification stage for permanent repair.

CIPP Relining as Permanent Solution

CIPP (Cured-In-Place Pipe) relining (see no dig drain repair) is the definitive solution for root intrusion in domestic and small commercial drains. The liner:

For BRJ Grade 2–3 (roots at joints only, pipe otherwise intact), full relining over the affected section is the recommended treatment.

For BRM Grade 4–5 (root mass filling the bore), the sequence is:

  1. High-pressure jetting to partially clear
  2. Robotic cutting if jetting insufficient
  3. Post-cutting CCTV to assess pipe condition
  4. CIPP relining if pipe is lineable
  5. Excavation if pipe is collapsed or displaced beyond lining capability

Herbicidal Root Treatment

Copper sulphate (500mg/l solution) or proprietary root foam products (e.g., Dichlobenil in foam carrier) can be applied to cut root stubs to inhibit regrowth. In private drains, this is legal and effective as a short-term measure between cutting and lining. In public sewers, herbicidal treatment requires water company consent — most will not permit copper sulphate in live sewers due to environmental concerns.

Herbicidal treatment is NOT a substitute for relining. It slows regrowth by 12–24 months but roots will return through unsealed joints.

Frequently Asked Questions

My drain keeps blocking every few months — is it always roots?

Not always. Recurring blockages within 6 weeks suggest roots. Blockages at intervals of 3–6 months are more often caused by partial pipe deformation, a low point in the pipe (ponding), or a protruding lateral connection. FOG buildup from a kitchen drain can also cause seasonal re-blockage (summer is worse — grease is less mobile in cold weather). CCTV is the only reliable diagnostic — rodding and jetting alone tell you there's a problem but not why.

My tree has a TPO — can I still have the drain relined?

Yes. Relining does not involve any excavation or root cutting above ground. It is entirely internal to the pipe and does not affect the tree. You may want to cut root stubs inside the pipe first using a robotic cutter — this also does not affect the tree and does not require TPO consent. Only work that affects the roots in the soil (root barrier installation, excavation near the tree) requires consideration of the TPO.

Should I ask the tree's owner to remove the tree?

This is a civil matter. If your neighbour's tree is damaging your drain, you may have a claim under the law of nuisance, but legal action is rarely proportionate. In practice, relining your drain is faster, cheaper, and more certain than legal proceedings. Document the CCTV evidence (MSCC4 report, video) if you do intend to pursue a civil claim or an insurance claim for root damage.

How often should a root-affected drain be re-surveyed after relining?

After CIPP relining, a 5-year re-survey interval is typically recommended for drains near high-risk trees. A well-installed liner has no joints for roots to penetrate, so root re-entry is very unlikely — but other defects (liner wrinkles, post-installation joint issues) should be checked. Annual CCTV is excessive for a relined drain in good condition.

Regulations & Standards