Planning range

Use the estimate after the workflow is clearer, or when the file is still too thin to trust the low end.

Start with state and job type, but keep the permit path, record gaps, and buyer timing in view. The estimate is strongest when it sharpens the next file, county, or inspection decision.

Best use case

Use this when you need one practical planning range after you identify the likely lane, or when records, permits, and inspection evidence are still incomplete and you need a cautious number before the next move.

Fast start

Choose the basics first. The secondary fields only help tighten the range.

Start with the basics

These inputs do most of the work.

Tighten the range

Add these when you know them. Unknown is still a valid starting point.

Planning only. Final sizing, system design, and permitting still need local review.

Result preview

One range, one likely system lane, and the next thing to verify.

  • Conservative tank and cost range
  • Likely system class and main cost drivers
  • Checklist for the next county, record, or quote step
Primary CTA

Get matched with local septic pros

Short form
Already know the job type?

You can request local quotes now. Run the estimate first only if you want a tighter planning range before sending the lead.

Short form only. The estimate stays visible above while you request local pricing.

When this estimate is the right next step

Best for homeowners, buyers, and agents who already know the likely permit, records, inspection, or transfer lane and now need one planning range that sharpens the next decision instead of replacing it.

  • You already know the likely lane, but still need one planning range before you call local installers or county offices.
  • The project type is roughly clear, but the file, inspection, or permit path is still incomplete enough that the low end could be fake.
  • You want one estimate that makes the next records request, state workflow page, or quote conversation more specific.

What widens the range fastest

  • Missing permit, as-built, or inspection records can keep the low end from being trustworthy even when the form looks simple.
  • Unknown soil, perc, or water-table conditions can widen the estimate faster than tank size alone.
  • Replacement, field failure, limited access, or transfer timing can make a neat statewide average useless.
Next best pages

Use the page that matches the real bottleneck before or after the estimate.

Before you trust the low end

  • The state and the closest project type, after you identify whether records, permits, inspection, or transfer timing is the real blocker.
  • Bedroom count, occupant estimate, and any garbage-disposal or ADU signal.
  • Any permit records, as-builts, inspection findings, pumping history, or seller notes already tied to the property.
  • The main uncertainty you still need the next page, county office, or local pro to settle.