Septic System Installation in Pasco County
A new or replacement system in Pasco 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 Pasco County: High wet-season water table is the dominant septic failure mode here — when the table rises into the drainfield, effluent has no unsaturated soil to move through, so systems back up or surface (soggy yards, sewage odor) in summer. This is why filled/mounded drainfields are routine. In surge/flood zones, saltwater intrusion and tank flotation/inundation add risk after hurricanes. And the rules here matter — weeki wachee springs bmap (covers northern pasco): per hb 1379 (2023), new ostds on lots of 1 acre or less within an outstanding florida spring bmap must be enhanced nutrient-reducing systems (enr-ostds, ~65% nitrogen reduction) where central sewer is unavailable., 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
18 septic system installation providers in Pasco County
License-verified contractors (active state license) are listed first.
Billy Mckinney
Verified · Lic. SR0081607Christopher Clarke
Verified · Lic. SR0241989Christopher Leibfreid
Verified · Lic. SM0981298D. Stambaugh
Verified · Lic. SR0890237Elias Mayfield
Verified · Lic. SR0991453Gregory Mayfield
Verified · Lic. SM0101658Harold Buckingham
Verified · Lic. SR0890266John Barnett Iv
Verified · Lic. SR0252004Kenneth Jahrling
Verified · Lic. SR0131727Larry Bennett
Verified · Lic. SR0921109Matthew Walker
Verified · Lic. SR0211896Robert Mccarty
Verified · Lic. SR0231963Seth Emnett
Verified · Lic. SM0181822Shane Mills
Verified · Lic. SR0131728Tyler Chancey
Verified · Lic. SM0211898Wayne Wooten Jr.
Verified · Lic. SR0890550William Kelley
Verified · Lic. SR0211911Septic System Installation in Pasco County — FAQ
What does a new septic system cost in Pasco 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 Pasco County are the biggest cost driver.
Do I need a permit to install a septic system in Pasco County?
Yes. Permits are issued by the Florida Department of Health in Pasco County (DOH-Pasco, Environmental Health), 7509 State Road 52, Hudson FL 34667 — 727-841-4425 opt. 3 / 352-521-1450 opt. 3, PascoEH@FLHealth.gov. DOH counties handle OSTDS permitting/inspection; statewide program authority moved to FDEP on July 1, 2021 under the Clean Waterways Act., 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.