An overflowing drain in your garden is stressful enough without the added confusion of not knowing who’s supposed to fix it. Is it your problem, the council’s, or United Utilities’? In Blackpool’s older terraced streets — where drain runs pass beneath shared yards and back alleys serving multiple properties — the answer isn’t always obvious. This guide cuts through the confusion, explains exactly where responsibility lies, and tells you what to do right now to protect your property.
The “Shared Sewer” Definition: Understanding Your Property Boundary
The key to understanding drain responsibility in England and Wales is the distinction between a private drain and a public sewer — and understanding exactly where one ends and the other begins.
Private drains — your responsibility
A private drain is a drain that serves only your property. It runs from your household fixtures — toilets, sinks, baths, gutters — to the point where it connects to a shared drain used by other properties or to the public sewer network. Everything within that private section, including any inspection chambers that serve only your property, is your responsibility as the homeowner to maintain and repair.
Public sewers — United Utilities’ responsibility
A public sewer is any drain used by more than one property. Since the Water Industry Act 2011 transfer came into effect in October 2011, responsibility for all shared drains (also called lateral drains) transferred from homeowners to the water company — United Utilities in the North West. This was a significant change that many Blackpool homeowners are still unaware of.
Overflowing inspection chambers in older Blackpool properties are one of the most common sources of drain responsibility confusion.
Where it gets complicated in Blackpool
The responsibility boundary sounds simple in theory. In practice — particularly in Blackpool’s Victorian and Edwardian terraced streets — it is frequently unclear. Common complications include:
- Inspection chambers that serve multiple properties but sit within what appears to be a single homeowner’s yard
- Drain runs that start as private, combine with a neighbour’s drain mid-garden, and then continue as a shared lateral drain — all before reaching the back alley
- Properties where historical alterations or extensions have rerouted drain connections in ways that don’t match the original drainage plans
- Shared drain runs beneath rear access alleys that United Utilities claim responsibility for — but which homeowners don’t realise they can report
A CCTV drain survey traces the exact route of your drain, identifies where it connects to shared infrastructure, and produces a written report that clearly establishes the responsibility boundary — removing all ambiguity before any repair decision is made.
| Scenario | Responsible Party |
|---|---|
| Drain within your property boundary serving only your home | Homeowner |
| Inspection chamber within your garden serving only your drain | Homeowner |
| Shared drain used by two or more properties | United Utilities |
| Inspection chamber serving multiple properties | United Utilities |
| Drain in public highway or pavement | United Utilities |
| Manhole cover overflowing in road or back alley | United Utilities |
| Drain in shared rear alley of a terrace | United Utilities (post-2011) |
| Inspection chamber location or ownership unclear | Needs CCTV survey to confirm |
When to Contact United Utilities vs. Booking a Drainage Specialist
When a drain overflows in Blackpool, the first question is always — private drain or shared sewer?
Call United Utilities when:
- A manhole cover in the road, pavement or back alley is overflowing
- The problem is clearly affecting multiple neighbouring properties simultaneously
- The blocked or overflowing drain is in a shared rear alley used by more than one property
- You know the inspection chamber serves multiple households
- There is sewage flooding from a public sewer in the street
United Utilities emergency number: 0345 672 3723 — available 24 hours a day. They are obligated to respond to public sewer emergencies and there is no charge to you. You can also report problems online via their website.
Call a drainage specialist when:
- The overflowing drain is clearly within your property boundary and serves only your home
- The problem started inside the property — a toilet not flushing, sinks backing up
- You are unsure whether the blocked drain is private or shared and need it confirmed
- United Utilities have attended and determined the blockage is on the private section
- You need an emergency response faster than United Utilities can provide — our emergency unblocking service covers all FY postcodes with same-day response
- The overflow is causing or threatening property flood damage and you need immediate action
What if you genuinely can’t tell?
This is more common than people realise — particularly in Blackpool’s older terraced streets where drainage layouts are complex and documentation is sparse or non-existent. In these cases, the fastest and most cost-effective approach is to call us first. We can attend, carry out a CCTV survey to trace the drain run, identify whether the blockage is on private or shared infrastructure, and advise accordingly. If it turns out to be United Utilities’ responsibility, we’ll tell you — and help you report it effectively.
According to Ofwat, the industry regulator, water companies are required to maintain public sewers and respond to reported blockages promptly. Knowing your rights means you don’t pay for repairs that should be at someone else’s expense.
Immediate Risk Management: Preventing Property Flood Damage in Fylde Coast
While the question of who pays for the repair is important, it’s secondary to the immediate priority — preventing sewage from entering your home. Property flood damage from a drain overflow can be significant, and the steps you take in the first thirty minutes matter enormously.
Immediate actions when a drain overflows
Insurance and documentation
If your property has been affected by a drain overflow — even a minor one — documenting it properly is important for two reasons. First, it supports any insurance claim for damage or clean-up costs. Second, if the problem recurs and you need to establish a pattern of neglect on United Utilities’ part or demonstrate ongoing private drain issues, documented evidence of previous incidents strengthens your position significantly.
A CCTV survey report from a qualified drainage specialist is specifically accepted by most home insurers as evidence of the cause and location of a drain blockage. Our CCTV drain surveys include a written report with photographs, drain trace map and condition assessment — everything an insurer typically requests.
Confused About Who’s Responsible for Your Overflowing Drain?
Don’t spend money on a repair that might not be your responsibility — and don’t wait while your property is at risk. Our specialist Blackpool drainage team will attend, advise, and perform localised unblocking with a FREE CCTV Inspection to validate exactly where the blockage is and who owns it.
Get Immediate Help Emergency Unblocking 07739 961430 — 24/7 Blackpool & Fylde CoastAll FY Postcodes • Fixed Fee • No Call-Out Charge • Free CCTV Included



