Thompson's Station has shifted from a quiet rural village to one of Williamson County's fastest-growing markets — and most of it still runs on septic. We service older systems on the original lots and install new ones for the subdivisions and custom builds going in now.
Whether you're on five acres or a half-acre subdivision lot, we cover the full lifecycle.
Routine pumping on a 3–5 year cycle for Thompson's Station homes. We measure first, pump second.
Closing-driven septic inspections with written reports your agent and lender can use.
Soggy spots and slow drains diagnosed against Thompson's Station's mix of clay and rocky soils.
Cracked tanks, baffles, risers, and backups — fast response across Thompson's Station.
Custom new-construction installs and full replacements, sized to bedroom count and lot conditions.
We install at-grade risers during pumping visits so future Thompson's Station service is quick.
Thompson's Station is in transition. The original lots along the railroad village have older systems — often 750 to 1,000 gallon tanks that were sized when the homes were smaller and the families were smaller. Meanwhile, the new subdivisions and custom builds going in north and east (Tollgate Village, Cherry Grove, Bridgemore on the Franklin border) have modern 1,000 to 1,500 gallon systems on cleaner sites.
Soil here ranges. The flats along the West Harpeth River are mostly clay loam — slower-draining drain fields that benefit from generous sizing. Up on the ridges toward Spring Hill and west, you'll hit thinner soils over rock that limit system depth and sometimes require alternative designs.
Older Thompson's Station homes need a careful hand — we treat them accordingly.
Tollgate Village, Cherry Grove, Canterbury — we know how these neighborhoods were built.
Custom homes on larger Thompson's Station lots get systems sized for the long haul.
Installation and repair permits pulled through TDEC and Williamson County.
All of 37179 — village core, subdivisions, and rural acreage.
Yes — all of 37179, from the older homes along the original village to the newer subdivisions like Tollgate Village, Cherry Grove, and the new builds expanding north and east.
Most rural Thompson's Station homes pump every 3–5 years. Larger tanks and lower density mean you might run on the longer end of the range, but we measure layer depths at each visit so you only pump when actually due.
Yes. We design and install new septic systems for Thompson's Station new construction. We coordinate the soil evaluation and pull TDEC and Williamson County permits.
Soggy or unusually green grass in one spot — especially over where you think the drain field is — is a classic early sign of drain field saturation or surfacing effluent. Catching it early often lets us repair instead of replace.
Practical guides written for Williamson County homeowners.
Request a free quote from a local Williamson County crew that knows the village and the new neighborhoods.
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