(1) USB endoscope: 5.5mm cable, ~16ft, for peeks. (2) Wi-Fi endoscope: same but with screen + app. (3) Mid-range sewer camera: 65-100ft fiberglass push-rod, 23mm self-leveling head, for diagnosing drains. (4) Pro-grade with sonde locator: 165ft + 512Hz transmitter so you can find the clog from above ground. Each one solves a different problem. Buying the wrong one is the Saturday-morning mistake.
The 5 plumbing cameras worth owning in 2026 (ranked)
1. Best USB endoscope under $30 — Depstech 5.5mm USB
Good for shower P-traps, dryer vents, in-wall stud bays, the back of a dishwasher motor. What it cannot do: make it past a 90° in a 2-inch drain without help, light up anything past 12 feet, or stay oriented. Buy it knowing it's a peek tool, not a diagnose tool. If a clog is more than two feet from the opening, you want pick #3.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Cable length | 16.4 ft (semi-rigid) |
| Camera diameter | 5.5 mm (0.22 in) |
| Resolution | 1080p |
| Screen | None — phone via USB-C/Lightning |
| Price | $25-$30 |
- Depstech 5.5mm USB on Amazon — $25-$30
2. Best Wi-Fi endoscope under $60 — Teslong NTS300
Built-in 4.3" screen is the upgrade that matters — you're not fumbling with a phone app in a wet crawlspace. Better optics than the Depstech, noticeably better low-light. Still the same physics limit though — 5.5mm cable in a 4-inch sewer pipe is a noodle in a hallway. Great for walls, ducts, behind appliances. Not your main-line tool.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Cable length | 16.4 ft semi-rigid |
| Camera diameter | 5.5 mm |
| Resolution | 1080p, dual-lens models available |
| Screen | 4.3" built-in LCD (no phone needed) |
| Price | $50-$70 |
- Teslong NTS300 on Amazon — $50-$70
3. Best mid-range sewer camera — Sanyipace S5517DC
Fiberglass push-rod with a real 23mm head means it actually pushes through a 3" or 4" line. 100 feet reaches the city tap on most lots. Speaker/mic, on-screen recording, SD-card video. No sonde locator at this price — meaning you can see the clog but you can't mark where it is on the ground above. For 95% of clogs (kitchen, laundry, main stack within sight of a cleanout), that doesn't matter — you see roots at 47 feet, you tell the rooter guy "47 feet from the cleanout," done.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Cable length | 65 ft or 100 ft fiberglass push-rod |
| Camera diameter | 23 mm head / 5 mm push-rod |
| Resolution | 1080p, IP68 |
| Screen | 5" daylight LCD |
| Price | $199-$299 |
- Sanyipace S5517DC on Amazon — $199-$299
4. Best pro-grade with sonde locator — VEVOR 165ft / Sanyipace S830
Add a 512 Hz transmitter sonde in the camera head, add a separate handheld receiver, and now you can do what only RIDGID guys could do five years ago: stand in the yard, sweep the wand, put an X on the dirt right over the clog. You only need this if you're going to dig (collapsed clay, root mass requiring excavation) or you're a small contractor billing for inspections. For a homeowner doing one camera job a year? Overkill — rent it or hire it out.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Cable length | 165 ft fiberglass |
| Camera diameter | 23 mm self-leveling head, 7 mm rod |
| Resolution | 1080p IP68, 24 LEDs |
| Screen | 7" LCD + 512 Hz sonde + receiver wand |
| Price | $499-$899 |
- Sanyipace S830 / VEVOR 165ft on Amazon — $499-$899
5. Best for HVAC duct + behind-wall — Anykit Dual-Lens 7.9mm
For ductwork, attic chases, behind drywall, and inside cabinets, the dual-lens side-view is the feature that earns its keep — you can look at duct walls without bending the camera into a U. Semi-rigid cable holds its shape when you push it across a horizontal trunk run. Not a sewer tool.
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Cable length | 16.5 ft semi-rigid |
| Camera diameter | 7.9 mm dual-lens (front + side) |
| Resolution | 1080p, IP67 |
| Screen | 4" or 6" IPS, Wi-Fi capable |
| Price | $80-$130 |
- Anykit Dual-Lens 7.9mm on Amazon — $80-$130
Use-case table — which camera for which job
| Job | Right tool | Wrong tool |
|---|---|---|
| Clog in kitchen sink, <6 ft from trap | Depstech / Teslong endoscope | $500 sewer camera (overkill) |
| Recurring main-line clog, root suspicion | Sanyipace S5517DC 100 ft | Endoscope (won't reach) |
| Leak between floors, listening for drip | Anykit dual-lens behind-wall | Sewer camera (too stiff) |
| Sewer lateral inspection (home sale) | Sanyipace 100 ft, or hire it | Endoscope (can't reach city tap) |
| Behind-wall mouse/mold hunt | Anykit dual-lens or Teslong | Anything with push-rod |
| HVAC duct interior, dirty-sock smell | Anykit dual-lens 7.9mm | Sewer camera (won't bend) |
| Collapsed pipe needing excavation | Pro-grade with 512 Hz sonde | Anything without sonde |
What the pros use
RIDGID SeeSnake is the union shop standard. SeeSnake Compact2, Mini, and Standard reels cover 1.5"-12" lines with 200 ft of cable, integrate with RIDGID line-locators, and cost $3,500-$8,000 per kit. The Micro CA-150 ($350-$450) is RIDGID's homeowner-priced inspection scope — 3.5" screen, 3 ft cable plus extensions — and it's overpriced for what it is. You're paying for the brand and the toolbox compatibility.
The pro-grade reality: in commercial facilities work, when we ran cameras through 6" cast iron stacks in a high-rise, we used SeeSnake. For the same work at home, the $250 Sanyipace pushes the same picture to the same human eye. The difference is daily-abuse durability and parts availability — both irrelevant to someone running a camera twice a year.
FAQ
Do I need a plumbing camera at all, or just call a plumber?
If you've had two clogs in the same line in 12 months, yes — a $200 camera pays for itself versus one $300 service call. One-time issue, hire it.
How far can you push a drain camera?
5mm fiberglass push-rod + 23mm head: 75-100 ft in a clean 3-4" lateral. 2" line with two 90s: 40-50 ft. Endoscope (5.5mm gooseneck): 12-15 ft before it goes limp.
Endoscope vs drain camera — what's the difference?
Endoscope: semi-rigid gooseneck, 5-8mm head, 16 ft max — for peeks. Drain camera: fiberglass push-rod, 23-25mm self-leveling head, 50-200 ft — for full pipe runs.
Do I need the sonde locator?
Only if you're going to dig. For 95% of jobs with an accessible cleanout, you don't.
Will a plumbing camera work in a toilet?
Pull the toilet first, or feed from the cleanout. Cameras don't survive the porcelain trap.
The bottom line
For 95% of homeowners, buy the Sanyipace S5517DC with 100 ft cable for ~$250. It handles the actual job people Google this for — finding a recurring drain clog and seeing what's down there. Add the Depstech USB endoscope ($30) for peeks behind appliances. Skip the sonde tier unless you're a contractor or excavating. Skip RIDGID-branded homeowner stuff — you're paying for a toolbox color, not better optics. Two cameras, $280 total, covers every job a working facility runs into.
Affiliate disclosure: Building Talks may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases. Pricing subject to change.
Editorial standards: Cited authorities include RIDGID SeeSnake product documentation, Spartan Tool cable/head sizing guidance, Insight Vision 512 Hz pipe-locator documentation. Reviewed by Al, Building Doctor — IUOE Local 39 Stationary Engineer.