Sewerage is a system people only remember when it leaks, smells or clogs. In Israel it has specifics: warm climate, dense housing, hard water, shared-building ownership and standard ת"י 1205.3. Below is an overview of how it is built, what can go wrong and whom to call.
How Israeli residential sewerage is built
In Israel, domestic drainage is a gravity system: wastewater flows from fixtures to the city main along sloped pipes. Inside apartments the flows gather in a shared vertical riser (קולטן) and exit through a horizontal trunk in the basement to the municipal network. Villas add a yard section with clean-outs (נקודות ביקורת) and sometimes a grease trap for the kitchen.
- Riser (קולטן) — 100–160 mm vertical pipe, usually PVC, or cast iron in older buildings.
- Horizontal branches — 40–50 mm for sinks, 50 mm for a washer, 100 mm for a toilet.
- Vent stack — opens on the roof to protect water traps.
- Clean-outs — service hatches for rodding and cleaning.
Codes and standards
Israeli sewerage is governed by standard ת"י 1205.3 — "Sanitary installations: drainage and ventilation". It sets pipe diameters, minimum slopes, vent stack positioning and material requirements. For Vaadat Binyan approval the design must comply with this standard and may only be signed by a licensed plumbing engineer (מהנדס אינסטלציה).
- Horizontal slope — minimum 2% (2 cm per metre) for 50–75 mm pipes.
- Materials — PVC, PP, cast iron; butt joints without a coupling are prohibited.
- Vent stack — required for every bathroom.
- Municipal tie-in — must be coordinated with the תב"ע / engineering department of the local iriya.
Sewerage in an apartment and a shared building
The apartment section of the system ends where the pipe enters the common riser. Everything inside apartment walls is the owner's responsibility. The riser and the horizontal trunk under the building are common property (רכוש משותף) maintained by the vaad bayit. This matters in emergencies: a leak from the riser is fixed from vaad funds; a leak from your in-slab pipe is on you, plus possible damage to the neighbour below.
- Check the vaad log — it often records when the riser was last replaced.
- During a renovation confirm that the vaad clean-out is preserved.
- Home insurance (bituach dira) typically covers a burst but not wear.
Villas and private houses
A villa has a longer and more complex system: several bathrooms, kitchen, laundry, pool, often a basement. It adds its own in-house network, a yard outlet, an inspection manhole and a main run to the municipal collector. In settlements without a municipal sewer, a septic tank is installed (בור ספיגה or a biological system) — its operation is regulated by the environmental authority.
- Inspection manhole (שוחת ביקורת) — required in the yard before the tie-in.
- Kitchen grease trap — needed for a commercial kitchen or a large family.
- Septic — often the only option in parts of the Galilee, Negev and Judea/Samaria.
- Storm water drainage — a separate system, never mixed with sewage.
Common problems
- Smell from drains. Most often a dried-out trap (a rarely used floor drain) or a broken vent stack.
- Clogs. Hair, grease, kids' toys. In Israel, hard water and scale that narrow the pipe are a frequent accomplice.
- Leaks in the screed. A cracked in-slab pipe — classic after 15–25 years or after an earthquake.
- Back-flow during heavy rain. Older parts of Tel Aviv and Haifa see city-sewer overflow that floods basements.
- Noise. A thin PVC riser without acoustic wrap — you hear the neighbour above at night.
Diagnostics
Modern sewerage work does not start with "open the floor" but with diagnostics. The main methods:
- CCTV inspection (סנוור מצלמה) — a camera on a flexible cable travels through the pipe and records video. Finds cracks, offsets and blockages. Cost 350–900 ILS per section.
- Smoke test (בדיקת עשן) — harmless smoke is pumped into the system and escapes through leaks. Used to find odour sources.
- Hydrostatic test — filling a section with water and watching for level drop.
- Thermal imaging — indirect, but effective for locating warm drains under tile.
Maintenance
Sewerage does not need frequent intervention, but preventive care extends its life by decades. Recommendations from Israeli plumbers:
- Every 1–2 years — preventive pressure flushing of risers and horizontal runs (ביוב לחץ).
- Every 3–5 years — CCTV inspection of critical sections in a building over 20 years old.
- Check traps of seldom-used drains (guest bathroom).
- Make sure nobody flushes "wet wipes" — the main killer of pumps and risers in Israel for the last decade.
What sewerage works cost in Israel
- Rodding a single branch — 250–500 ILS
- Pressure flushing a riser — 600–1,500 ILS
- CCTV inspection — 350–900 ILS per section
- Replacing a 1–2 m pipe segment inside an apartment — 800–2,500 ILS (excluding finishing works)
- Full riser replacement in a 4-storey building — 8,000–25,000 ILS (split between apartments)
- Inspection manhole repair in a villa yard — 2,000–6,000 ILS
- Trenchless relining — 700–2,000 ILS per metre, without breaking the floor
When to call a specialist urgently
- Sewer smell in a living room. You do not "get used to it" — it usually means a cracked riser or a broken vent.
- Water seeps through tile or into the neighbour below. Every day of delay compounds the damage.
- A clog that "travels" from bathroom to bathroom. Signals a riser problem, not a branch issue.
- The toilet gurgles after the neighbour above flushes. Broken venting or a narrowed riser.
- Overflow into the yard during rain. Could be a stormwater/sewer mix — a city case, but diagnosis is a plumber's job.
FAQ
Who is responsible for sewerage in a multi-unit building?
The pipe inside your apartment (up to the riser inlet) is yours. The common riser, horizontal trunks under the building and the section to the city main are common property maintained by the vaad. If unsure where the boundary sits, ask the vaad bayit representative for the latest maintenance protocol.
Can I flush "wet wipes" labelled flushable?
No. Virtually every Israeli water utility and plumber agrees: the word "flushable" means nothing. These wipes do not break down for days or weeks, and they are the cause of 60–70% of residential sewer emergencies in large Israeli cities in recent years.
How often should sewerage be cleaned?
In a 7–15 year old apartment, pressure-flush the kitchen and bathroom branches roughly every 2–3 years. In older buildings with cast-iron risers (50+ years), annual inspection. In a villa with a septic tank, tank clean-out every 1–3 years depending on the system.
Can cast iron be replaced with PVC in an old building?
Yes, and it is a common upgrade. But: replacing a common riser requires a vaad vote and coordination between apartments. Replacing only your section is up to you, but the "cast iron → PVC" transition needs a dedicated coupling and must allow for thermal expansion. Cost 2,500–6,000 ILS per apartment.
Why does the toilet occasionally gurgle?
Usually a symptom of compromised vent stack operation or a partial clog upstream. When upstairs neighbours flush heavily, a vacuum forms inside the riser and pulls water out of your trap. If it becomes chronic, have a plumber inspect the vent.