Half the homes selling in the Indianapolis metro right now were built before 1980. That puts them squarely in the Orangeburg pipe and cast iron windows. A $200 scope versus a a wide range that varies by plumber Marion County replacement is the cleanest math in the buyer packet. We schedule inside your option period and deliver the report in 24 hours.
The Indianapolis sewer scope sits in the $200 to $300 band at most specialty providers (Golds Sewer Line Indianapolis). The Marion County sewer line install averages $3,956, with most homeowners spending an amount that varies by plumber (Angi Indianapolis). A full Orangeburg lateral replacement runs a wide range that varies by plumber in the Indy market depending on depth, footage, and surface restoration (Patriot Dirt).
The scope is not a tax. It is the cheapest piece of information in the closing. A buyer who finds Orangeburg at day 4 of the option period has every tool: ask the seller to repair, take a concession equal to the bid, or walk. A buyer who finds it three weeks after closing has paid the cost themselves.
Indiana option periods are typically 7 to 14 days. Schedule the scope inside the first 3 to 5 days. That leaves room for the 24-hour report, the buyer plumber bid, and a written negotiation before option closes (NAR buyer guidance).
Marion County housing is split roughly half pre-1980 and half post. The Orangeburg pipe (peaked 1945 to 1972) and cast iron lines (50 to 100 year lifespan, deterioration after 25) both stop appearing in newer construction. Standard buyer home inspections do not include sewer scoping. InterNACHI flags it as recommended for any pre-1980 build (InterNACHI).
Marion County ZIPs with highest Orangeburg risk: 46220 Broad Ripple, 46226 Devonshire-Lawrence, 46227 Southport, 46208 Crown Hill, 46201 Irvington. Deformation begins around 30 years. Known failures inside 10. Useful life around 50 years ideal (InspectAPedia).
Cast iron lifespan 50 to 100 years. Deterioration commonly begins after 25 (Balkan Plumbing). Indianapolis clay-heavy soils retain moisture and accelerate the corrosion. A 1960s Indy home today is statistically mid-life and almost certainly scaled.
Most laterals post-1980 are PVC. Lower defect rates. Scope still useful as cheap insurance, particularly for root intrusion which crosses every era. The Indianapolis ZIP risk lookup classifies Carmel 46033, Fishers 46038, and Brownsburg 46112 as LOW risk for material reasons.
FHA does not require a sewer scope on homes connected to a public city sewer in Indiana. The FHA appraiser is required to flag visible signs of failure but is not required to scope the line (FHA News Blog, FHA.com).
However, individual Indianapolis-area lenders sometimes add a sewer scope condition for homes built before 1980 or for properties in known-issue ZIPs (46201, 46202, 46208, 46220, 46226). For homes on septic instead of Indianapolis city sewer, FHA does require a septic inspection by an approved professional, and minimum distance requirements apply between well, septic, and property lines.
The other reason to scope outside the FHA conversation: Rocket Mortgage and NACHI both publish buyer guidance recommending scope on any pre-1980 home regardless of loan type (Rocket Mortgage, InterNACHI). The lender does not need to require it. The cost math does.
Same-week appointment standard across Marion, Hamilton, and Hendricks counties. Buyer or agent calls (317) 210-0084 or books. We coordinate access with the listing agent.
25 minutes on site. Camera runs from cleanout to Indianapolis city tap. HD video plus video capture of any finding. If there is no cleanout (common in pre-1950 Indy bungalows), we tell you before we start.
PDF and video link delivered to the customer, who can share it as they see fit.
Ask the seller to repair before close. Take a price concession equal to the buyer plumber bid. Walk. The point is decisions made on real facts, not surprises after signing.
Indianapolis-localized People Also Ask, May 2026.
For any Indianapolis home built before 1980, yes. Roughly half the homes selling in the Marion County metro right now hit that pre-1980 cutoff, which is the Orangeburg and cast iron window. For pre-1972 Indy stock specifically, the chance of Orangeburg in the lateral is high enough that the scope pays for itself many times over on most transactions.
Source · NuFlow, Wikipedia: Orangeburg pipeSchedule the scope within the first 3 to 5 days of your Indiana option period. That leaves time for the 24-hour report, the buyer plumber to bid the fix if needed, and a written negotiation with the seller before option expires. Same-week appointments are standard across Marion, Hamilton, and Hendricks counties.
Source · Rocket MortgageNo. Sewer scope is an ancillary inspection. Most Indianapolis home inspectors do not run sewer cameras themselves, though some subcontract a specialist. Order the scope separately, either through Sewer Scope Indianapolis directly or as an add-on through your home inspector. InterNACHI documents the value of separating the camera operator from any party with a repair interest.
Source · InterNACHIFHA does not require a sewer scope on homes connected to public city sewer in Indiana. FHA appraisers must flag visible failure but cannot scope the line. For septic homes, FHA does require a separate septic inspection. Some Indianapolis-area lenders add a sewer scope condition for pre-1980 builds or in known-issue Marion County ZIPs.
Source · FHA News Blog, FHA.comYou get the report, the seller gets the report, both sides know the same facts. Most Indianapolis buyers either ask the seller to repair before closing, take a price concession equal to the buyer plumber bid, or walk. The point is to know before signing, not after. Sewer Scope Indianapolis is not the buyer plumber and never bids the fix, so there is no upsell pressure on the report.
Source · Angi Indianapolis, Carter My Plumber IndianapolisSame-week appointments across Marion, Hamilton, and Hendricks counties. booking. (317) 210-0084.