Why Does My Drain Smell Like Sulfur? Diagnosing Sewer Gas Leaks

By Next Level Plumbing Inc. | Odor Detection & P-Trap Repair

You walk into your bathroom or kitchen, and it hits you: the distinct, rotten-egg smell of sulfur. You scrub the toilet, you pour bleach down the sink, and you take out the trash, but the smell remains. It lingers in the air, seemingly coming from nowhere and everywhere at once.

That smell isn’t just unpleasant; it is potentially dangerous. It is Sewer Gas (Hydrogen Sulfide), a byproduct of decaying waste in the city sewer system. In a properly functioning plumbing system, you should never smell it inside your Nevada, MO home.

If you do smell it, a specific barrier in your plumbing has failed. At Next Level Plumbing Inc., we are experts at hunting down these invisible leaks. This guide explains the three most common reasons your house smells like a sewer and how we fix them.

Culprit #1: The Dry P-Trap (The Most Common Cause)

Before you panic about broken pipes, check the simplest explanation first. Look under any sink in your house. You will see a U-shaped pipe called a P-Trap. This isn’t just a convenient shape; it is a brilliantly simple engineering device designed to save your life.

How It Works

The bottom of that “U” is supposed to hold a small amount of water at all times. This water acts as a seal, blocking sewer gas from rising out of the pipe and into your room. If that water evaporates, the seal is broken, and the gas flows freely into your home.

The Fix:
Do you have a guest bathroom shower you rarely use? Or a floor drain in the basement laundry room? If so, the water in the trap has likely evaporated. Go run the faucet or pour a bucket of water down that unused drain. This refills the trap and restores the seal. If the smell disappears in an hour, you just saved yourself a service call!

Culprit #2: The Clogged Vent Stack (The “Gurgle”)

Your plumbing system needs to breathe. Every time you flush a toilet, air must be pulled into the system to replace the water rushing down the pipe. This air comes from the Vent Stack—that pipe sticking out of your roof.

Imagine putting a straw in a glass of water, covering the top with your finger, and lifting it out. The water stays in the straw.
This is what happens to your drains when the vent is clogged.

If a bird builds a nest in your roof vent, or if leaves clog it, air cannot enter the system. The vacuum pressure created by a flushing toilet will then suck the water right out of your sink’s P-Trap to get the air it needs. This leaves the trap dry and open to sewer gas.

The Symptoms:

  • Gurgling sounds from the sink when you flush the toilet.
  • Slow drainage even after using a plunger.
  • Sewer smell immediately following a flush.

Culprit #3: The Failed Wax Ring

If the smell is concentrated in the bathroom and specifically near the base of the toilet, your wax ring has likely failed.

The Hidden Seal

Your toilet doesn’t actually screw into the drain pipe; it sits on top of a flange, sealed by a ring of soft beeswax. Over time, the toilet can rock back and forth, compressing the wax and breaking the airtight seal. Sewer gas (and sometimes water) escapes from underneath the toilet base.

Check the Caulk: Do NOT just caulk around the base of the toilet to trap the smell. This traps leaking water, which will rot your subfloor. The toilet must be pulled and the wax ring replaced.

How We Find the Invisible Leak: The Smoke Test

Sometimes, the source of the smell is a mystery. It could be a cracked cast iron pipe inside a wall or a loose connection under a cabinet. When we can’t see the leak, we use science.

The Smoke Test Procedure

Next Level Plumbing Inc. uses a non-toxic, odorless smoke machine. We inject thick white smoke into your plumbing cleanout valve. We then seal off the roof vents.

The smoke fills every inch of your drain pipes. Wherever there is a crack, a loose joint, or a dry trap, the white smoke will escape. We walk through your house with a flashlight. If we see smoke billowing out from behind a baseboard or under a vanity, we have found your leak.

Is Sewer Gas Dangerous?
Yes. In high concentrations, Hydrogen Sulfide is toxic. Even in low concentrations, long-term exposure can cause headaches, fatigue, and nausea. Plus, Methane (another component of sewer gas) is flammable. Do not ignore the smell.

Clear the Air in Your Home

You shouldn’t have to live with bad smells or the fear of toxic gas. Diagnosing a sewer smell requires a plumber who understands the physics of airflow and venting, not just someone who knows how to unclog a drain.

If you have tried pouring water down the drains and the smell persists, call the experts at Next Level Plumbing Inc. We will find the source, fix the seal, and make your home safe and fresh again.


Smelling Sewer Gas?

Schedule a Smoke Test Diagnosis with Next Level Plumbing Inc. today.

(816) 521-6322

Odor Detection Experts in Nevada, MO

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