Whether you're building new on a Williamson County lot or replacing a failed system on an existing home, the design and installation matters more than almost any other decision the system will face in its lifetime. We design and install new septic systems across Williamson County — Franklin, Brentwood, Nolensville, Spring Hill, Thompson's Station, Fairview, College Grove, Arrington, and the rural acreage in between.
The right system for your lot depends on soil, slope, available area, and household size. Friendly Williamson County sites get conventional gravity-fed systems. Tight or sloped sites — common in parts of Brentwood and Leiper's Fork — often need pumped or low-pressure pipe designs. The hardest sites can require aerobic treatment systems. We'll lay out which options fit your lot and what each costs before any work starts.
New septic system cost in Williamson County varies more by site than by anything else. Soil quality, slope, depth to rock, water table, and access all push the number around. Our article on new septic system cost in Williamson County walks through the pricing factors in detail.
The number of bedrooms a system is permitted for follows the property. If you're building a 4-bedroom home, permit it as a 4-bedroom. Cutting it short to save on tank size creates problems at resale and limits what you can do with the home. For the sizing details, our septic tank size guide covers it.
If your existing system has failed and you have a permitted reserve area, replacement is straightforward. If there's no reserve area, the design becomes more involved — sometimes requiring alternative system types to work within the available space. We handle either path and tell you what's realistic for your lot.
Most residential installs are completed in one to two weeks once permitting is in place. Permitting timing varies by season.
Yes. We coordinate with the licensed soil consultant and pull the system permit through TDEC as part of the project.
We work on tight, sloped, and rocky Williamson County lots regularly. The system type may need to be adjusted, but most sites are workable.
If the lot allows it, yes. A designated reserve area for a future replacement drain field is a major property value asset and gives you flexibility decades down the road.
We design, permit, and install across Williamson County. Get a written quote.