Septic System Installation in Lake County
A new or replacement system in Lake County starts with a soil test and a permit — not a shovel.
Installing a septic system is the largest-ticket job a septic owner faces, and the design is dictated by your land: soil type, how fast it percolates, and how high the water table sits all decide what system you're allowed to build and what it costs.
Every legal install begins with a site evaluation and a county permit. The output of that evaluation — conventional drainfield, engineered mound, or an aerobic/nitrogen-reducing unit — is what drives the final price far more than the tank itself.
Local ground is the deciding factor in Lake County: On the ridge, the deep water table is a treatment liability (effluent reaches groundwater fast). Near lakes and wetlands, a high seasonal water table is a saturation-failure liability - the drainfield needs vertical separation above wet-season high water table, so lakefront repairs frequently require filled/mounded drainfields or elevated systems to keep the required unsaturated soil beneath the trenches. Florida code requires separation between drainfield bottom and the wet-season high water table; verify current minimum (commonly cited as 24 inches) against Ch. 62-6 F.A.C. And the rules here matter — wekiva study area / wekiwa springs & rock springs bmap: within the priority focus area, new systems must be enhanced nitrogen-reducing (target ~65% n reduction; doh recommendations cite a 10 mg/l total-nitrogen effluent standard for the protection zones), and eligible existing systems on small lots must connect to sewer or upgrade., which can raise the cost of a new system considerably.
How a septic installation works
- Site & soil evaluation. A licensed evaluator or engineer tests percolation and locates the seasonal high water table to determine what the soil can handle.
- System design. The system is sized to your soil and the number of bedrooms, and the type is chosen — conventional, mound/filled, or aerobic.
- County permit. Plans are submitted to the county health department for an OSTDS construction permit before any work begins.
- Tank and drainfield install. The tank is set and the drainfield is built to spec, with fill brought in where the water table requires elevation.
- Final inspection. The county inspects the open system and signs off before it's covered and put into use.
- System type — conventional vs. mound vs. aerobic/nitrogen-reducing
- Soil and water table (high water tables require expensive fill)
- Drainfield size, which scales with bedroom count
- Permit and engineering/site-evaluation fees
- Site access and how much excavation is needed
- Tank material and capacity
- Use a licensed Registered or Master Septic Tank Contractor
- Make sure they pull the county permit (never skip it)
- Insist the design matches your soil/site evaluation
- Get the warranty and final county approval in writing
28 septic system installation providers in Lake County
License-verified contractors (active state license) are listed first.
Bradley Suggs
Verified · Lic. SR0041455Brandon Wiant
Verified · Lic. SR0201879Brenda Haskin
Verified · Lic. SR0961240Charles Smith
Verified · Lic. SM0131721Chris Bryan
Verified · Lic. SM0011391Clark Lee
Verified · Lic. SR0201886Darrell Clay
Verified · Lic. SM0890637Douglas Jackson
Verified · Lic. SR0890574George Dulanski Sr
Verified · Lic. SM0252010Gregory Martin Jr.
Verified · Lic. SR0991462James Mcgowen
Verified · Lic. SR0941176Jeff Clay
Verified · Lic. SR0011386Jeffrey Anzaldo
Verified · Lic. SR0181830Jonathan Labruyere
Verified · Lic. SR0131730Justin Gibson
Verified · Lic. SR0991420Kami Suggs
Verified · Lic. SR0181815Kyle Craig
Verified · Lic. SM0890641Michael Ashcraft Ii
Verified · Lic. SR0181819Michael Goss
Verified · Lic. SR0201877Michael Murphy
Verified · Lic. SR0111681Richard Harrison
Verified · Lic. SR0031423Robert Smith
Verified · Lic. SR0061523Stanley Craig
Verified · Lic. SM0890792Taylor Jackson
Verified · Lic. SR0201874Wade Raulerson
Verified · Lic. SR0201883Walter Wilkerson
Verified · Lic. SR0121715Westah Blake
Verified · Lic. SR0231975Septic System Installation in Lake County — FAQ
What does a new septic system cost in Lake County?
Conventional systems commonly run from several thousand dollars to well over $10,000; mound and nitrogen-reducing systems cost more. Soil and water-table conditions in Lake County are the biggest cost driver.
Do I need a permit to install a septic system in Lake County?
Yes. Permits are issued by the Florida Department of Health in Lake County (DOH-Lake), Environmental Health / Onsite Sewage program. Lake was not part of the 2021+ transfer of the OSTDS program to FDEP, so the county health department issues construction, repair, and operating permits., and the system must pass inspection before use.
How long does an installation take?
Once permitted, the install itself is often 1–3 days, but evaluation and permitting can add weeks. Plan ahead.