Water droplets on a healthy green lawn
Yard & Site Drainage · Ships Nationwide

Yard & Site Drainage

Move surface and subsurface water off the property. Catch basins and channel drains with load-rated grates, pop-up emitters, and the fittings and pipe to tie it all together. Contractor-grade drainage from NDS, shipped fast from a nationwide warehouse network.

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Buying guide

Which drain fixes which problem

Standing water and soggy ground are two different jobs. Pick the drain by where the water sits, then tie it into pipe and daylight it clear of the house.

Drain Water it handles How it works Best for
Catch basinStanding surface water in a low spotCollects at a yard low point and pipes it outPuddles you can see in the lawn
Channel drainSheet runoff off hard surfacesA linear grate catches water along the edgeDriveways, patios and pool decks
French drain (NDS EZflow)Subsurface water with no visible puddlePipe centered in Poly-Rock aggregate, wrapped in a mesh sleeve, buried below gradeGround that stays wet with no puddle
Pop-up emitterThe discharge end of a drain lineCap lifts under water pressure, then drops shut to block debris and rodentsDaylighting a basin or downspout run

Most yards use more than one. Drop a catch basin at a low point, line hard surfaces with a channel drain, and cap the run with a pop-up emitter. See the full NDS drainage line for basins, grates, and the EZflow french drain.

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Drainage

Drainage solutions for residential and commercial sites

Catch basins, channel drains, French drain components, downspout adapters, and pop-up emitters. The drainage product line addresses surface and subsurface water management around the landscape.

Looking for an NDS valve box instead? NDS sells two parallel product lines that look similar in green plastic but serve different purposes: drainage boxes (catch basins for surface water) live in this category; irrigation valve boxes (which protect buried solenoid valves) live under Valves. For sizing an irrigation valve box, read our buying guide: How to Choose a Sprinkler Valve Box.

Catch Basin or Channel Drain: How to Choose

Match the drain to the water. A catch basin collects water at a single low point: a yard depression, a downspout, the foot of a slope. It ties into buried pipe. A channel drain (trench drain) intercepts sheet flow across a wide hard surface like a driveway, patio, or pool deck, where you need a continuous line instead of one point.

Size the rest to match. Connect runs with the right fittings and drain pipe, and choose a grate with a load rating for the traffic it will see: pedestrian, driveway, or vehicular. Where a buried line discharges above grade, a pop-up emitter opens under flow and reseals when it stops, so there is no open pipe in the lawn. Keep a fall of at least 1% on drain lines so they self-clear.

Drainage FAQ

Catch basin or channel drain: which do I need?

Use a catch basin to collect water at one low point and a channel drain to catch sheet flow across a wide paved surface. Many sites use both. Put basins at downspouts and low spots, a channel across the driveway apron.

What grate load rating do I need?

Match the grate to the traffic. Manufacturers rate grates from light pedestrian use up to driveway and vehicular (traffic) loads; check the spec for the rating class before placing a drain where vehicles cross it.

How does a pop-up drainage emitter work?

A pop-up emitter sits at the end of a buried drain line. Water pressure lifts the cap so the line can daylight above grade, then it reseals when flow stops. That keeps debris, animals, and mower blades out of an open pipe.

What size pipe should a yard drain use?

Residential surface drains commonly run 3 or 4 in. drain pipe; size up as you combine runs so the downstream pipe carries the total flow. Keep at least a 1% slope to the outlet.