Septic services in Davidson County
Davidson County is a major metro county of roughly 745,904 people, and an estimated 18% of its homes run on a septic system instead of municipal sewer.
Why septic is different in Davidson County
Davidson County is a major metro county of roughly 745,904 people, and an estimated 18% of its homes run on a septic system instead of municipal sewer. Around Nashville and the surrounding area, the ground is thin cherty silt loams and clay residuum over fractured limestone (central basin) grading to deeper, well-drained highland rim silt loams — often slow over clay residuum and shallow bedrock in the basin; better on the highland rim where soils are deeper — which matters more than most homeowners realize: Thin soils over limestone severely limit drainfield depth and treatment; many basin lots need engineered/alternative systems or extra acreage to find adequate soil The water table is highly variable due to karst; perched water in clay over bedrock, with rapid conduit flow underneath, and Effluent reaching bedrock fractures gets little filtration before entering the karst aquifer, so soil depth and sinkhole avoidance dominate permit approval Wet winter/spring saturates shallow soils; summer droughts can crack clay and stress fields From Nashville 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. Tennessee's rules set the rest: Sinkhole and karst-feature setbacks are strictly enforced; fields cannot discharge toward closed depressions Every contractor we list in Davidson County is checked against the state license registry, so you can confirm who's actually licensed before you call.
Local rules in Davidson County
Permitting authority: Local authorized agent / county health department in Davidson County, under Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (TDEC), Division of Water Resources.
- Sinkhole and karst-feature setbacks are strictly enforced; fields cannot discharge toward closed depressions
- Shallow-soil lots frequently require engineered alternative or drip-dispersal systems with operating permits
- Davidson County (Metro Nashville) runs a delegated permitting program; rapid-growth counties have long permit queues
By service
Browse Davidson County contractors by what you need done.
Septic contractors in Davidson County
License-verified contractors are listed first as we ingest the state registry.
5th Generation Builders/Bryan Sauer
Verified · Lic. 13569A Team Footers and Excavation LLC
Verified · Lic. 18977A-1 ADVANCED ENERGY SOLUTIONS
Verified · Lic. 11700A-TEAM SEPTIC
Verified · Lic. 13212A. Goedeke Services
Verified · Lic. 18094A&B Excavating Brad Moss
Verified · Lic. 12917AA Land Development
Verified · Lic. 14833Abm Landscaping LLC
Verified · Lic. 14311Adam Nash Enterprise
Verified · Lic. 12573Adam Verone
Verified · Lic. 19545Adams Backhoe
Verified · Lic. 420Adriel
Verified · Lic. 14350Advanced Lawn and Land, LLC.
Verified · Lic. 19594Alcorn Drainage and Land Works
Verified · Lic. 18310ALEXANDER BACKHOE & DOZER
Verified · Lic. 10320All-Pro Plumbing, LLC
Verified · Lic. 17932Allen Plumbing and Septic
Verified · Lic. 13157American Dirtworks
Verified · Lic. 13741American Excavation, LLC
Verified · Lic. 14286Anthony Bowling Backhoe
Verified · Lic. 778anthony collins
Verified · Lic. 10092Ashley Daniels, Cove Haven Farm LLC
Verified · Lic. 13542Ashworth's Backhoe Service, LLC
Verified · Lic. 10416Austyn Carter
Verified · Lic. 18563B3 Construction LLC
Verified · Lic. 13206Bagwell Waste LLC
Verified · Lic. 1026BATES SEPTIC PUMPING LLC
Verified · Lic. 954Beyond Drain Solutions
Verified · Lic. 14290Bison Developments, LLC
Verified · Lic. 18677Frequently asked questions
How much does septic pumping cost in Davidson County?
Pumping a typical residential tank in Davidson County generally runs $275–$550. 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 Davidson County?
Most households should pump every 3–5 years, though local soil and water-table conditions matter. Effluent reaching bedrock fractures gets little filtration before entering the karst aquifer, so soil depth and sinkhole avoidance dominate permit approval
How do I know a septic contractor in Davidson County is licensed?
Every contractor we list is cross-checked against the official Tennessee 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 Tennessee 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.