Business Name: Mid-State Sewer Service
Address: 8754 Cottonwood Dr, Freeland, MI 48623
Phone: (989) 482-7976
Mid-State Sewer Service
We at Mid-State Sewer Service offer a range of cleaning services including video camera inspection, main line sewer cleaning, kitchen and bathroom sink cleaning, shower and bathtub drain cleaning, toilet backups, floor drain cleaning, crawl space clean out entry, roof vent cleaning, drain tile cleaning, storm drain cleaning, hydro jetting, and sewer/ septic backups. We also provide portable toilet rental services.
8754 Cottonwood Dr, Freeland, MI 48623
Business Hours
Monday through Sunday: Open 24 hours
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MidStateSewer
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@Midstatesewerservice
A property owner generally meets excavation the same way a chauffeur meets a hole in the evening, too late to swerve and with a sickening thump. One day the lawn is fine, the next there is effluent appearing by the maple tree and your plumbing technician is stating words like collapse, replacement, and permitting. Excavation has its place. A crushed structure sewer will not repair itself, and a leach field that has actually reached the end of its life needs proper septic installation. However in many homes and small companies, the roadway to the backhoe is paved with small, preventable misses, specifically around overlooked drain cleaning and extended septic pumping intervals.
I have viewed modest options conserve customers 5 figures and whole summers of lawn. I have actually likewise seen well-meaning individuals pour hundreds into miracle ingredients while neglecting the greasy spoon of a kitchen area line that was the genuine problem all along. Excellent outcomes seldom hinge on a single item. They come from a calm, repeatable structure: check out the symptoms, collect the ideal information, act in the least expensive lane first, then intensify just as the facts demand.
How home plumbing and onsite systems actually fail
From sink to soil, your wastewater passes through short stretches where specific issues prevail. Understanding those choke points is half the battle.
Inside your house, the kitchen area branch is the troublemaker. Fats, oils, and grease bond to pipe walls and capture lint, coffee grounds, and those errant noodles that slip past the strainer. Bathrooms develop their own concerns with wipes that declare to be flushable however behave like small tarpaulins. Hair and soap scum help them weave mats in the lines. Basements frequently have long, shallow runs where any small belly collects whatever heavier than water. The building sewer that leaves the foundation is where you meet roots, particularly in older clay or Orangeburg lines, and seasonal ground motion can pull joints apart. One droop of 3 to six feet can create an irreversible sluggish spot.
At the sewage-disposal tank, two mistakes do most of the damage. Initially, extending the time in between septic pumping allows the scum and sludge layers to increase, pressing solids to the outlet. When the filter obstructions or, even worse, solids reach the distribution box, you begin to nasty the leach field. Second, letting a high inflow event, such as a leaking toilet or an all-day watering accident that disposes into a sump line, overwhelm the tank turns a settlement device into a conveyer. Solids do not have time to settle.
In the field, failure shows up as either hydraulics or biology. Hydraulics is uncomplicated. If your soil has a perched water level for months, the trenches never rest. A remodel that doubled components without upsizing the system can produce the exact same overload. Biological failure comes from a thick biomat that no longer passes effluent at a normal rate. A healthy biomat is anticipated, it polishes wastewater. A starved field, coated with years of grease and detergent providers, can choke and send out water to daylight. Frost depth, traffic load, and landscaping can all worsen the mix.
The early indications whisper. Drains gurgle only on laundry day. A faint sewage smell shows up after a big holiday. The spot of yard above your line greens up before the remainder of the yard in spring. Individuals tend to describe these away. You must not. Those are the moments when a little, scheduled service call prevents the excavation later.
Preventative drain cleaning is your very first line of defense
Drain cleaning used to indicate a cable television device and a hope that the blockage was soft. We still cable particular lines, but the series of tools has grown and the thinking has actually matured. The goal is not just to restore circulation today. The objective is to keep the interior of the pipeline as close to self-cleaning velocity as you can, with the least abrasive approach that does the job.
A cam inspection addresses 2 questions you can not guess precisely: what is the pipeline made from and what is the condition inside. PVC reacts differently than cast iron or clay. With cast iron, we frequently see scale that turns a four inch line into a 2 inch choke. With clay, we see roots at every joint. Understanding this lets us select the right method. A straight cable can punch a hole through a blockage, but it rarely scrubs the walls. A chain flail can descale cast iron efficiently when paired with a cam so we do not thin the pipeline to failure. Hydro jetting, which utilizes pressurized water at controlled gallons per minute, is gentle on plastic, searches grease in kitchen branches, and can cut roots when paired with a rotating nozzle. It also flushes debris downstream, which is why you open and utilize cleanouts instead of pressing junk toward the tank.

People ask about enzymes and bacteria. The best septic bacteria inside the tank can assist absorb residue, however they do not replace mechanical cleaning in a grease-choked cooking area line. The drain line is not a comfortable fermenter. Temperature levels swing and detergents break cell walls. I have measured lines after heavy enzyme use and enjoyed nothing budge. Use biology where biology lives, inside the tank and field. Leave grease to physics.
Frequency depends on usage. A family that cooks daily and runs a garbage disposal will develop grease faster than a couple who consumes light and garden composts. Beauty parlor, daycare centers, and short-term leasings press lines hard in bursts, which welcome slugs of particles. For lots of homes, inspecting and jetting the cooking area branch every one to three years keeps surprise blockages at bay. The main to the tank often goes five to 7 years between proactive cleanings, unless you have known roots.
Here is a simple property owner routine list that spends for itself sometimes over:
- Strain every sink and empty the strainer into the garbage, not the disposal. Keep trees with aggressive roots at least ten feet from the building sewer, and water them away from the line so they do not chase after moisture. Fix any running toilet within 48 hours, and test flappers yearly with a couple of drops of food coloring. Install a cleanout on the main if you do not have one, so future drain cleaning is precise, fast, and cheaper. Schedule a video camera inspection if you have two or more downturns in a year, even if they clear with plunging.
Those five practices have avoided more emergency situation calls than any bottled item on a shelf.

The peaceful math of prompt septic pumping
A sewage-disposal tank separates and digests. That only works if you provide it time and room. The schedule for septic pumping is not a superstitious notion. It is a function of tank size, genuine water usage, and solids loading.
Here is what I use as a beginning point. For a 1,000 gallon tank serving a typical family of four, plan on pumping every 2.5 to 3.5 years. If you run a garbage disposal typically, shift that earlier by 6 to twelve months. A 1,500 gallon tank with the same family can stretch to four or five years. If it is a villa with seasonal usage, five to seven years might be fine. Those are guidelines. The better method is to measure.
Any proficient pumper can take a core in the tank that reveals scum density and sludge depth. When the combined residue and sludge layers near 30 to 35 percent of tank volume, you are due. If the outlet filter is caked or the effluent looks turbid, you have actually already waited too long. Ask your pumper to tape-record those measurements on the Drain Cleaning billing. Keep them with your home papers. You will see your own pattern and change your schedule.
People often stress over overpumping. You can not injure a tank by pumping it once a year, aside from spending more than needed. In some jurisdictions with inspection programs, annual checks are required and pumping can fold into that see. In cold climates, pick shoulder seasons so access lids are not frozen and the ground is firm. If your tank lids are buried, have risers installed to bring them to grade. A riser set expenses cash once and repays you in time, security, and avoidance of yard damage throughout every future service.
Septic pumping expenses differ by region. In my area a basic pump out for a 1,000 to 1,250 gallon tank runs 300 to 700 dollars, depending upon lid depth, filter cleaning, and distance from the truck. Add a little charge for an effluent filter if you do not have one currently. That filter is one of the least expensive forms of insurance in this entire conversation. It keeps solids that slip past the baffle from heading to the field. Clean the filter when you pump, and between pumps if you ever see sluggish drains after a surge of visitors.
A useful framework to choose what to do next
When something goes wrong, feelings spike. Raw sewage in the tub panics even stoic folks. A framework keeps rash relocations in check and guides you from easy to complex.
- Identify the scope of the symptom. If only the kitchen area sink is slow while a bathroom on the exact same level drains well, the issue is local to that branch. If toilets on the lowest flooring are bubbling while upstairs runs fine, presume the primary to the tank. If fixtures throughout the whole home slow throughout heavy usage, think tank or field. Stabilize and collect information. Stop heavy water use for 12 to 24 hours. Lift the septic tank lid if you can do so safely. A tank that is to the leading with the outlet submerged indicate a field or outlet clog. A tank at regular operating level, with water vacating, suggests the limitation is upstream. Choose the least intrusive fix that your data supports. Local branch concern, schedule targeted drain cleaning, preferably with a video camera. Mainline problems, clean from the cleanout towards the tank with a jetter or cable television, then electronic camera to verify condition. Tank overfull, call for septic pumping and inspect the outlet filter and distribution box. Verify the outcome. After any cleaning or pumping, run regulated water at recognized volumes and watch bottom lines. If you pumped a tank that was complemented and the field still contradicts regular circulations within a day or 2, intensify. That escalation may be a distributor or lateral line jet, a soil examination, or a repair at the circulation box. Decide between maintenance and repair. If a camera shows offset joints, root intrusions every couple of feet, or a collapsed section, prepare a sectional septic repair or complete line replacement. If the field reveals persistent breakout in numerous zones with a mature system, bring a licensed designer to examine life left and options for brand-new septic installation.
Most calls follow that path. A family I dealt with last summertime had two backups in 3 months. They had actually never cleaned up the kitchen area line. We jetted 80 feet of inch-thick grease, then descaled a crusty cast iron primary. The tank, a 1,000 gallon unit for a household of 5 with a heavy cooking schedule, had actually not been pumped in six years. We pumped, set up a riser and an effluent filter, and set a two year pointer. That whole service ran about 1,600 dollars. The excavation they were being pitched by a less patient specialist would have begun at 9,000 simply to replace the building sewer, and it would not have actually resolved the grease that was ensured to reform.
Edge cases that alter the plan
No 2 properties are identical, and there are use patterns that require customized rules.
Short term leasings pack occupancy into weekends. I have clients who see eight showers an hour from afternoon to night. That pushes design flows. For them, I promote bigger tanks, alarms on pump chambers, and quarterly checks of filters. We likewise map and identify cleanouts so a local handyman can direct a service tech without the owner flying in.
Home companies like hair salons or little business kitchens on residential septic systems need grease and hair management at the source. A passive grease interceptor before the kitchen area branch can avoid unlimited sewer cleaning calls. An easy hair trap system under hair shampoo sinks expenses less than a single emergency check out and keeps the main clear.
Cold regions bring frost and access issues. Set up proactive work before the deep freeze. Set up risers to grade, not five inches below it, so covers do not ice under sod. If your gain access to is across soft yard in spring, plan pumping for late summer season when the ground can support the truck. A 100 foot hose pipe pull is typical. A 200 foot pull includes labor and in some cases a helper.
Additions and remodels change whatever. More bedrooms without a system assessment can overload a field in two years. If you are adding fixtures, require a design review before framing. A modest septic repair or a new distribution box upgrade throughout construction is far less expensive than rework later. I have actually rerouted lines around planned patios simply by being at the table a few weeks earlier.
Water treatment devices matter. Do not send backwash from iron filters or conditioners to the septic. Send it to a dry well or approved dispersal different from the tank. Sump pumps, roof drains, and yard drains need to never link to the structure sewer. I still find them. When we eliminate them, many persistent slowdowns vanish.
When excavation is the right decision
You can do whatever right and still fulfill the shovel. Some failures are structural and some systems are simply at the end of their style life.
A collapsed clay lateral that has ovaled and pinched shut will not hold a jetter open for long. I have actually enjoyed such sections look restored for a week then close like a squeezed straw. Video camera video footage that reveals missing out on pipeline or spaces suggests it is time to dig or trenchless line where codes allow. In those cases, a thoughtful septic repair plan looks at depth, neighboring energies, surface area restoration, and future access. It also includes proper cleanouts so the new run is maintainable.
A leach field that has actually ponded for months, with numerous zones showing breakout and no resting capability, is not a candidate for rejuvenation by magic aeration gizmos. Some jurisdictions permit pressurized lateral jetting or soil fracturing with air to bring back permeability in specific soils. I have seen modest improvements from those methods when the field was young and treated early. On older fields with a thick, fully grown biomat and fines plugging the soil user interface, those procedures are brief lived. A licensed designer can take percolation tests, map problems, and propose a new field or an alternative treatment system. Expect authorizations and inspections. Expect staging to secure the rest of your yard.
Choosing a contractor for excavation matters. Try to find ones who do both sewer cleaning and installation. They see the full lifecycle and tend to position cleanouts and risers where future you will thank them. Request electronic camera video before and after. Ask how they will secure irrigation, how they will backfill, and what settlement service warranty they use. I have clients who conserved a thousand dollars selecting the most affordable quote and lost twice that in sod replacement the next spring.
Small upgrades that develop long term resilience
Three little changes make life much easier for everybody who will ever touch your system.
Install risers on your sewage-disposal tank covers and an effluent filter at the outlet if you lack one. Bring lids to grade, set them a little happy if your lawn tends to build up mulch. Label them on a simple sketch with distances from repaired points like a corner of the house.

Add full size cleanouts, two method where practical, on the main line just outside the foundation. If the run to the tank is long, include an intermediate cleanout every 75 to 100 feet. Cleanouts reduce the need to pull toilets or run equipment on roofs. They also enable sectional sewer cleaning without flooding the tank with debris.
Manage roots thoughtfully. Copper sulfate crystals have short range and blended results. Mechanical root cutting during hydro jetting or with a bladed cable works, but it is an upkeep task, not a remedy. In backyards with chronic root invasion, we have installed root barriers at specific trenches and guided tree plantings far from the sewer corridor. A little landscape preparation beats yearly root battles.
On the behavioral side, audit water use. Swap old flappers. Replace a 1990s top loader that utilizes 30 to 40 gallons a load with a modern unit that utilizes 12 to 18. Stagger showers when visitors visit. All of that keeps the tank in its sweet area where germs digest and solids stay put.
Two short stories that show the framework in action
A retired couple called after their hall bath gurgled two times in a month. They had been pitched a complete line replacement by a professional who scoped a couple of feet of orange, scaly cast iron from the closet flange and declared doom. We began with the framework. Scope of symptom, simply the lowest bathroom and the kitchen area after big meal nights. We jetted the kitchen area branch to a glossy interior and descaled the cast iron primary while enjoying by video camera, then checked the go to the septic system. It was PVC beyond the very first twenty feet, in great shape. The tank was overdue, scum thick and the filter choked. We pumped and set a 3 year period. Total invested, 1,280 dollars. That was 3 years back. They have actually had no repeats, and the line replacement quote they prevented was 12,400 dollars plus a brand-new driveway patch.
A little breakfast coffee shop on a rural home called two times in 6 weeks for emergency situation sewer cleaning. Their sewer line went to a grease trap, then to a septic system and field. We found the trap was undersized and never ever pumped on schedule. The outlet tee was missing. Kitchen area staff discarded fryer oil into the preparation sink during modification outs. We laid out an easy plan. Quarterly trap service, personnel training, a lid riser for quick gain access to, and monthly hot water flushes with a jetter port set up at the trap outlet so we might search the short run downstream. They also changed their septic pumping to annual for the first 2 years while the system shed its backlog of grease. The coffee shop went from 4 backups a year to none in eighteen months. They avoided a field replacement that the proprietor had begun to cost at 28,000 dollars.
Where sewer cleaning and septic repair fit together
Sewer cleaning, drain cleaning, septic pumping, septic repair, and septic installation are not separate worlds. They are chapters in the exact same story. A wise owner mixes them, utilizing cleaning and pumping to collect real details, then making repairs where a camera and measurements state they will pay off. You only dig when the pipe is broken, the field is invested, or the style never fit the usage. Everything else is maintenance, and maintenance beats excavation every time.
Start easy, remain curious, and build the small habits that keep waste moving quietly along. If you have actually not mapped your system, do it this month. If you can not remember your last septic pumping, call and arrange one, then compose the date where you will see it. If your kitchen sink has been clearing slower each season, set a time to jet and scope that branch. Give yourself options before the yard turns into a job site.
The backhoe is a fine tool on the ideal day. Make certain that day only comes when the truths are on its side.
Mid-State Sewer Service is a sewer and septic company
Mid-State Sewer Service is located in Freeland Michigan
Mid-State Sewer Service provides sewer services
Mid-State Sewer Service provides septic services
Mid-State Sewer Service offers drain cleaning
Mid-State Sewer Service offers hydro jetting
Mid-State Sewer Service offers sewer camera inspections
Mid-State Sewer Service offers septic tank cleaning
Mid-State Sewer Service offers septic system installation
Mid-State Sewer Service offers portable toilet rentals
Mid-State Sewer Service serves residential customers
Mid-State Sewer Service serves commercial customers
Mid-State Sewer Service operates twenty four seven
Mid-State Sewer Service is family owned
Mid-State Sewer Service is licensed and insured
Mid-State Sewer Service serves Mid Michigan
Mid-State Sewer Service serves Saginaw Midland and Bay City
Mid-State Sewer Service was established in twenty nineteen
Mid-State Sewer Service uses modern equipment
Mid-State Sewer Service provides emergency sewer services
Mid-State Sewer Service has a phone number of (989) 482-7976
Mid-State Sewer Service has an address of 8754 Cottonwood Dr, Freeland, MI 48623
Mid-State Sewer Service has a website https://midstatesewer.com/
Mid-State Sewer Service has Google Maps listing https://maps.app.goo.gl/urdD9gsPrLA1zzyy9
Mid-State Sewer Service has Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/MidStateSewer
Mid-State Sewer Service has an YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/@Midstatesewerservice
Mid-State Sewer Service won Top Septic Pumping 2025
Mid-State Sewer Service earned Best Septic Tank Cleaning Award 2024
Mid-State Sewer Service was awarded Best Portable Toilet Rental 2026
People Also Ask about Mid-State Sewer Service
What services does Mid-State Sewer Service provide?
Mid-State Sewer Service provides sewer cleaning septic services drain cleaning hydro jetting and camera inspections for residential and commercial customers.
Where is Mid-State Sewer Service located?
Mid-State Sewer Service is located in Freeland Michigan and serves surrounding Mid Michigan communities.
Does Mid-State Sewer Service offer emergency services?
Yes Mid-State Sewer Service offers emergency sewer and septic services to handle urgent issues at any time.
Is Mid-State Sewer Service available twenty four seven?
Mid-State Sewer Service operates twenty four seven to provide reliable service whenever customers need help.
What areas does Mid-State Sewer Service serve?
Mid-State Sewer Service serves Mid Michigan including Saginaw Midland and Bay City and nearby areas.
Does Mid-State Sewer Service offer septic tank cleaning?
Yes Mid-State Sewer Service offers septic tank cleaning and maintenance to keep systems running properly.
Can Mid-State Sewer Service perform sewer camera inspections?
Mid-State Sewer Service provides sewer camera inspections to diagnose problems inside pipes accurately.
Does Mid-State Sewer Service provide hydro jetting?
Yes Mid-State Sewer Service uses hydro jetting to clear tough clogs and buildup in sewer lines.
Is Mid-State Sewer Service licensed and insured?
Mid-State Sewer Service is licensed and insured giving customers confidence in their services.
Does Mid-State Sewer Service work with both residential and commercial clients?
Mid-State Sewer Service works with both residential and commercial clients for a wide range of sewer and septic needs.
Where is Mid-State Sewer Service located?
The Mid-State Sewer Service is conveniently located at 8754 Cottonwood Dr, Freeland, MI 48623. You can easily find directions on Google Maps or call at (989) 482-7976 Monday thru Sunday 24-hours a day
How can I contact Mid-State Sewer Service?
You can contact Mid-State Sewer Service by phone at: (989) 482-7976, visit their website at https://midstatesewer.com/ or connect on social media via Facebook or YouTube
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