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If only 1 fixture in your bathroom is blocked like just the basin, then a blockage has likely occurred somewhere from the basin trap to your main drain in the ground outside. However if a number of fixtures or the whole bathroom is blocking up then, this is usually associated with a blockage in the main house sewer line.
Every bathroom and wet area is required by law to have a floor waste which drains water that is spilt on the tiles.
There are usually 3 diameters of floor waste 50mm, 80mm and 100mm. They can be seen as a grate in the tiled floor. 50mm floor waste grates are called dry floor wastes and are just 90 degree elbows with pipe that drains water from the floor and soaks into the ground outside the building.
80mm and 100mm grates will have a trap below the grate and will be connected to the main house sewer drain.
These floor wastes will have fixtures like basins, showers, baths or sinks running into them. If you run your basin for example and look down the grate you can see the water flowing into it.
These types of floor waste grates can have anywhere between 1 and 4 fixtures running into it. The reason why we’ve explained this is because if your trap in your floor waste (80mm or 100mm) gets clogged with hair, sludge, grease or some other substance or object then it’ll start to block up and as you use the fixtures that run into these floor wastes they will appear slow draining and you may get water rising and overflowing out of the floor waste.
This may be just a buildup of hair or sludge in the trap which will require the grate to be unscrewed and taken out of the insert so you can get down the drain. Getting a bit of wire and twisting it down into the trap below may hook clumps of hair and free the blockage, also dumping a bucket of water from a height into the drain opening could push or clear sludge and free up the flow.