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Best plumbing inspection cameras 2026 — pro picks tested

Mine was a Saturday. Slow floor drain in a tenant's basement laundry. I'd grabbed a $30 USB endoscope off Amazon the week before — felt like a pro move. Plugged it into my phone, fed it into the drain, got about 18 inches in, and the cable went limp at the first P-trap. I needed three things that endoscope didn't have: push-rod stiffness to get through the trap, self-leveling head so "up" stays up, and 30+ feet of cable because the actual clog was past the floor-drain stub, in the main lateral. The product category looks like one thing on Amazon — "inspection camera, IP67, 1080p, $39 with coupon" — but it's actually four different tools wearing the same costume. This page tells you which one you actually need.

Reviewed by Al, the Building Doctor.
IUOE Local 39 Stationary Engineer (commercial plumbing) 30 years facilities — drain cameras through cast iron stacks in high-rise
The four tools wearing the same costume

(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

For "let me just take a peek"

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.

SpecValue
Cable length16.4 ft (semi-rigid)
Camera diameter5.5 mm (0.22 in)
Resolution1080p
ScreenNone — phone via USB-C/Lightning
Price$25-$30
Where to buy

2. Best Wi-Fi endoscope under $60 — Teslong NTS300

What the Depstech wanted to grow up to be

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.

SpecValue
Cable length16.4 ft semi-rigid
Camera diameter5.5 mm
Resolution1080p, dual-lens models available
Screen4.3" built-in LCD (no phone needed)
Price$50-$70
Where to buy

3. Best mid-range sewer camera — Sanyipace S5517DC

The one I tell 80% of homeowners to buy

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.

SpecValue
Cable length65 ft or 100 ft fiberglass push-rod
Camera diameter23 mm head / 5 mm push-rod
Resolution1080p, IP68
Screen5" daylight LCD
Price$199-$299
Where to buy

4. Best pro-grade with sonde locator — VEVOR 165ft / Sanyipace S830

When you're going to dig

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.

SpecValue
Cable length165 ft fiberglass
Camera diameter23 mm self-leveling head, 7 mm rod
Resolution1080p IP68, 24 LEDs
Screen7" LCD + 512 Hz sonde + receiver wand
Price$499-$899
Where to buy

5. Best for HVAC duct + behind-wall — Anykit Dual-Lens 7.9mm

A building tool, not a sewer tool

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.

SpecValue
Cable length16.5 ft semi-rigid
Camera diameter7.9 mm dual-lens (front + side)
Resolution1080p, IP67
Screen4" or 6" IPS, Wi-Fi capable
Price$80-$130
Where to buy

Use-case table — which camera for which job

JobRight toolWrong tool
Clog in kitchen sink, <6 ft from trapDepstech / Teslong endoscope$500 sewer camera (overkill)
Recurring main-line clog, root suspicionSanyipace S5517DC 100 ftEndoscope (won't reach)
Leak between floors, listening for dripAnykit dual-lens behind-wallSewer camera (too stiff)
Sewer lateral inspection (home sale)Sanyipace 100 ft, or hire itEndoscope (can't reach city tap)
Behind-wall mouse/mold huntAnykit dual-lens or TeslongAnything with push-rod
HVAC duct interior, dirty-sock smellAnykit dual-lens 7.9mmSewer camera (won't bend)
Collapsed pipe needing excavationPro-grade with 512 Hz sondeAnything 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.