Cleaning Tools
Drain Snake Hair Clog Remover — Unclog Sinks & Showers Without Chemicals
Grab the hairball — skip the chemicals and the $200 plumber.

The problem
The sink drains slower every week — and you know it's hair.
It starts as a gurgle, then a puddle that lingers in the basin after you brush your teeth. Down in the trap just below the drain, hair and soap scum have knotted into a plug, and the water has to squeeze around it. Caustic drain cleaners barely soften a packed hair clog — and they're hard on your pipes and your lungs. A plumber wants $150 or more for five minutes of work. And nobody actually wants to unscrew the drain and go fishing by hand.
The fix
Reach past the stopper, grab the clog, pull it out
Clears the clog in seconds
Feed the barbed shaft down to the blockage, give it a twist, and pull — the hair and gunk come up on the teeth and the water drains freely again.
No chemicals, no plumber
Skip the caustic drain cleaner and the $150 call-out. Clear the clog yourself in a couple of minutes, with nothing harsh going down your pipes.
Slips past the stopper, and it's reusable
Thin and flexible, it bends through the trap without removing the drain. It's solid plastic, so rinse it off and keep it under the sink for next time.
Three steps
How it works
Feed it down the drain
Slide the flexible end into the drain — on most sinks and tubs there's no need to unscrew the stopper or strainer. Let it follow the bend of the pipe.
Push to the clog and twist
Work it down until you feel the blockage, then twist so the backward-facing barbs dig into the hair and grip it tight.
Pull out the gunk
Draw it back up slowly and the hair clog comes with it. Bin the gunk, rinse the tool, and run the water to check it flows.

Clear drains in minutes — or your money back
Give the Drain Snake a try for 30 days. If it doesn't pull the clog out and get your water flowing again, reach out for a full refund. Every order is backed by real human support.
The details
Specs & what's included
- Use on
- Bathroom & kitchen sinks, showers, tubs, floor drains
- Material
- Flexible ABS plastic with barbed teeth
- Handle
- D-shaped finger-loop grip
- Length
- Approx. 50 cm (19.7 in) reach
- Reusable
- Rinse and reuse — not single-use
- In the box
- Drain cleaning hook(s)
Good questions
Before you ask
Usually not. The shaft is thin and flexible enough to slip past most pop-up stoppers and strainers, so you can feed it straight in. A few stopper styles sit very tight — if yours does, lift it out first, which takes seconds.
No. It's soft ABS plastic, not metal, so it flexes around the bends in your trap and won't gouge PVC or metal pipes the way a rigid wire auger can.
Yes — that's the advantage of a solid plastic hook over disposable wand-style snakes. Pull the hair off, rinse it under hot water, let it dry, and store it for the next clog.
It clears clogs where they almost always form: in the trap just below the drain, within its length. For a blockage deep in the main line you'd need a longer powered auger — but that's rarely where a hair clog sits.
The barbs are firm so they grip hair well, so handle the toothed end with a little care. Hold the finger-loop handle to push it in and pull it out and you'll keep your fingers clear of the teeth.
Yes. Bathroom and kitchen sinks, shower and tub drains, even floor drains — anywhere hair and soap scum collect and slow the water down.
Free-flowing drains, today
Stop bailing water — grab the clog
Proof it works
What buyers say
"Works well — unclogged my drain within 2 minutes."
"This thing does the work. I bought 3 thinking it may easily break, but it did not."
"Strong thorns that catch everything including parts of the pipe and drains, but they really catch all the hair so they definitely work."
"As advertised. Hair clog be gone!"
"Easy to use and quite useful."
"Works well. I had to use it the day after it arrived — and it worked. Fast delivery too."


