Septic tank size matters more than people think. An undersized tank doesn't just need more frequent pumping — it sends more solids out to the drain field and shortens the life of the most expensive part of the system. Here's how tanks are sized in Tennessee, what to expect for a Williamson County home, and how to tell when an existing tank is too small for the house.
The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation (TDEC) sizes residential septic tanks based primarily on the number of bedrooms in the home, which is used as a proxy for likely occupancy and wastewater flow. The bedroom-based sizing approach is also what you'll see referenced on permits.
These are typical capacities — actual permitted sizes depend on the design, soil report, and any local conditions.
Square footage doesn't drive wastewater flow — people do. A 5,000-square-foot Brentwood home with two empty-nest residents produces less wastewater than a 1,800-square-foot Spring Hill home with two parents, three kids, and a teenager who showers twice a day. Bedrooms approximate maximum reasonable occupancy and have decades of empirical sizing data behind them.
Sizing by bedrooms is conservative for most homes, but a few situations push the right tank size larger:
A lot of Williamson County homes were built before modern sizing standards. We routinely encounter 4- and 5-bedroom homes around Franklin, Fairview, and College Grove on 750-gallon or 900-gallon tanks installed decades ago. Symptoms of an undersized tank include:
Most Williamson County tanks are concrete, which is what we recommend for new installations. You'll occasionally find older steel tanks — these rust through eventually and need to be replaced when they fail, not patched. Plastic tanks exist but are less common locally for residential use.
If you're planning to add a bedroom (including converting a finished basement into legal bedroom space), check your septic permit. The permitted bedroom count is what determined your tank and drain field size. Adding bedrooms beyond the permit may require upgrading the system, especially during resale or a county permit review.
Right-sizing the tank is one of the cheapest forms of insurance for the rest of the septic system. If you're not sure what size you have, we can find out during a routine inspection.
Request a free quote from a local team that knows Tennessee soil and codes.