Septic services in Gwinnett County
Gwinnett County is a major metro county of roughly 957,062 people, and an estimated 21% of its homes run on a septic system instead of municipal sewer.
Why septic is different in Gwinnett County
Gwinnett County is a major metro county of roughly 957,062 people, and an estimated 21% of its homes run on a septic system instead of municipal sewer. Around Lawrenceville and the surrounding area, the ground is saprolite-derived red and yellow clay loams over weathered granite/gneiss (cecil, madison, pacolet series) — slow to moderate; high clay content limits percolation — which matters more than most homeowners realize: Dense clay accepts effluent slowly, so drainfields must be larger and many lots need shallow-trench or alternative designs. Steep, rolling terrain complicates field layout. The water table is generally deep (10+ ft) on uplands; shallow in valley bottoms and near creeks, and Upland siting is workable, but the clay — not the water table — is the binding constraint. Bottomland lots near streams can fail on wetness. Spring/summer rain saturates already-slow clay, stressing marginal drainfields; winter freeze occasionally cracks shallow piping From Lawrenceville outward, the practical takeaway is the same: local soil and groundwater — not just tank size — decide how often a system needs service and what a repair will cost. Georgia's rules set the rest: Counties like Gwinnett, Cobb, and Fulton run active environmental health offices with online permit portals and as-built records Every contractor we list in Gwinnett County is checked against the state license registry, so you can confirm who's actually licensed before you call.
Local rules in Gwinnett County
Permitting authority: Local authorized agent / county health department in Gwinnett County, under Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH), Environmental Health Section.
- Counties like Gwinnett, Cobb, and Fulton run active environmental health offices with online permit portals and as-built records
- Some metro counties require connection to public sewer where it is available rather than allowing new septic
- Clay soils frequently trigger required alternative-system designs and larger absorption areas
By service
Browse Gwinnett County contractors by what you need done.
Septic contractors in Gwinnett County
License-verified contractors are listed first as we ingest the state registry.
Action Septic Pro, LLC
Verified · GA DPHC W Septic Tank Service 1
Verified · GA DPHCentral Septic
Verified · GA DPHD.C. Tullis Enterprises, Inc.
Verified · GA DPHEasy Clean Septic LLC
Verified · GA DPHFor the most current information, please contact the State Environmental Health Office at (404) 657-6534.
Verified · GA DPHGlobal Septic Services
Verified · GA DPHGreen Septic Clean
Verified · GA DPHPumpco Septic, LLC
Verified · GA DPHRight Time Septic
Verified · GA DPHRooter Pro Xpress LLC
Verified · GA DPHSeptic On Call LLC
Verified · GA DPHSimply Septic Services
Verified · GA DPHSouthern State Construction
Verified · GA DPHThe Dickerson Group, Inc.
Verified · GA DPHTim Chen Plumbing Inc
Verified · GA DPHTrapp Enterprises Inc.
Verified · GA DPHTrison Property Group, Inc.
Verified · GA DPHUbuild Home Septic Solutions LLC
Verified · GA DPHFrequently asked questions
How much does septic pumping cost in Gwinnett County?
Pumping a typical residential tank in Gwinnett County generally runs $275–$450. Local range for a routine residential pump-out; repairs and drainfield work run well above this.
How often should I pump my septic tank in Gwinnett County?
Most households should pump every 3–5 years, though local soil and water-table conditions matter. Upland siting is workable, but the clay — not the water table — is the binding constraint. Bottomland lots near streams can fail on wetness.
How do I know a septic contractor in Gwinnett County is licensed?
Every contractor we list is cross-checked against the official Georgia state registry. Look for the green “Verified” badge, which shows the license number and the date we confirmed it.
We have no paid listings and no reviews of our own. Every contractor is cross-checked against the official Georgia license registry — the green badge shows the license number and the date we confirmed it. Ratings link out to the company's public Google profile so you can read real reviews at the source.