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Septic Tank Installation in Spartanburg, SC

New Septic Systems for Spartanburg Homes, Priced in Writing

Septic tank installation in Spartanburg, SC

New systems, tank replacements, and drainfields for Upstate properties, quoted from a real perc test and set to county code. Free written estimates across Spartanburg County, from Converse Heights to Boiling Springs.

  • Free written estimates
  • County permit handled
  • Workmanship guaranteed

Septic Price Watch

Straightforward breakdowns of what septic work actually costs around Spartanburg County so you can budget with real numbers.

What a Septic System Really Costs in Spartanburg County

July 1, 2026

Septic system installation cost breakdown in Spartanburg County

Septic pricing gets a bad reputation because too many quotes arrive as a single vague number with no explanation. It does not have to work that way. Once you see the parts a septic bill is built from, you can budget with confidence and spot a fair estimate from a padded one. Here is how the numbers actually break down around Spartanburg County.

The Perc Test Is Line One

Every honest septic price starts with the soil, and the soil starts with a perc test. Expect roughly $750 to $1,900 for testing and the site evaluation in this area. That test measures drainage speed and confirms the water table, and it is what sizes everything after it. Anyone quoting a full system without one is guessing, and a guess on a drainfield is an expensive thing to be wrong about.

The Tank Is Smaller Than You Think

The tank itself is rarely the big cost. A septic tank replacement usually runs $3,500 to $8,500, and much of that is the excavation and the set, not the tank. Sizing follows bedrooms, so a three bedroom home lands near a 1,000 to 1,250 gallon tank. Concrete costs more than polyethylene up front but lasts for decades under a driveway, which often makes it the cheaper choice over the life of the system.

The Drainfield Drives the Range

Here is where quotes spread apart. A conventional gravel or chamber field runs $5,000 to $15,000, and your soil decides where you land. Fast draining loam keeps the field small and the price down. Heavy clay may force an engineered mound, which pushes the total higher because it adds sand fill, pumps, and a larger footprint. This is why two neighbors can get very different numbers for the same house.

Repairs Are Often the Cheaper Answer

Not every septic problem needs a new system. A settled distribution box or a clogged effluent filter is frequently a $500 to $1,500 repair, not a five figure replacement. Before you approve anything major, insist that the contractor check the baffles, the sludge depth, and the field first. A new septic system installation is the right call when a tank is cracked or a field has truly failed, but it should never be the default.

Budget for the Whole Picture

Add it up with the permit, the as built record, and future pumping every three to five years at roughly $290 to $565 a visit. Regular pumping is the cheapest insurance you can buy, because it protects the drainfield you paid the most for. Plan for the full lifecycle and the system rarely surprises you.

Want a real number for your lot instead of a range? Call Nationalvideogamearchive at (864) 637-3170 or contact us for a free written estimate anywhere in Spartanburg County.

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Nationalvideogamearchive provides septic tank installation in Spartanburg, SC, and every quote starts with the ground, not a guess. New septic system installation, septic tank replacement, drainfield and leach field construction, aerobic treatment unit setups, perc testing and site evaluation, distribution box repair, and routine tank pumping all run through one local crew. Because we lead with a cost breakdown instead of a sales pitch, you see where the dollars go before a shovel touches the soil. We work across Spartanburg County, from the older lots near Converse Heights to newer builds out along Reidville Road inside the 29301 ZIP.

A septic price is built from a few real things, and we walk you through each one. Tank size follows bedroom count, so a three bedroom home usually needs a 1,000 to 1,250 gallon tank while a four bedroom house steps up to 1,500 gallons. Your soil sets the rest. A perc test measures how fast water drains, confirms the seasonal water table, and tells the county health department how large the drainfield has to be. Fast draining sandy loam keeps the field small and the bill lower. Heavy clay near Boiling Springs can force a chamber field or an engineered mound, and the estimate reflects that honestly.

Materials move the number too, and we never hide the spread. A watertight concrete tank costs more up front than polyethylene but holds up for decades under a Fernwood Drive driveway. Washed drainfield gravel, Schedule 40 PVC laterals, a concrete distribution box, and a screened effluent filter are line items you will actually see on the written estimate. When soil or a high water table rules out a simple gravity system, an aerobic treatment unit certified to NSF/ANSI Standard 40 adds an aerator and pumps, and we explain that added cost in plain dollars rather than burying it.

Sometimes the smart move is a repair, not a replacement, and an honest look saves you thousands. A settled distribution box that floods one trench, a cracked baffle, or a clogged effluent filter is a targeted fix, not a reason to dig up the whole yard. We inspect the sludge depth, the baffles, and the field before we recommend anything. If the tank is sound and only the drainfield has failed, we say so. Every job we do carries a written workmanship guarantee, and we pull the county permit and record the as built so the system is legal near Pine Street and every address we serve.

  1. Cost-first, in writingYou get an itemized written estimate after a real perc test, not a vague phone number. The price we quote is the price you pay.
  2. Repair before replaceIf a D-box reset or a new effluent filter fixes it, we tell you, instead of selling a full system you do not need.
  3. Workmanship guaranteeEvery install carries a written guarantee on our labor, and we stand behind the tank set and the drainfield we build.
  4. Permit and code handledWe pull the Spartanburg County health department permit, meet setback rules, and file the as built record for you.

Pricing Questions We Hear Most Often

How much does a new septic system cost in Spartanburg?
A full conventional system for a three or four bedroom home typically runs $3,500 to $12,500, with the site, the soil, and the drainfield size driving the spread. We put the firm number in writing after a perc test, and the permit fee is already included.
What size septic tank do I need?
Tank size follows bedroom count. A three bedroom home usually calls for a 1,000 to 1,250 gallon tank, and a four bedroom house steps up to 1,500 gallons. We confirm the sizing against the county health department code before we order the tank.
Do I need a perc test before you install?
Yes. A perc test measures how fast water drains and confirms the seasonal water table, and the county will not permit a drainfield without it. Testing runs roughly $750 to $1,900 here, and it sets the size of the field that follows.
Should I repair my system or replace it?
It depends on what failed. A settled distribution box, a cracked baffle, or a clogged effluent filter is a targeted repair, often $500 to $1,500. If the tank is cracked or the drainfield has truly failed, replacement is the honest call, and we show you the evidence either way.
Concrete, polyethylene, or fiberglass tank?
Concrete is the heaviest and longest lived and holds up well under a driveway. Polyethylene and fiberglass weigh less and resist corrosion, which helps on tight lots with poor access. We price all three so you can weigh the cost against the site.
How often should the tank be pumped?
The EPA guidance is every three to five years, depending on tank size and household water use. Regular pumping near $290 to $565 protects the drainfield, which is the most expensive part of the system to replace, so it pays for itself.
Do you handle the permit and inspection?
Yes. We pull the Spartanburg County health department permit, meet the setback rules, keeping the tank at least 50 feet from a private well, and file the as built record. If you are selling, we also handle the point of sale septic inspection buyers and lenders require.

The Septic Services Behind Every Estimate

One local Spartanburg crew for the whole system, from the first soil test to the day the drainfield goes in the ground.

01New Septic System Installation
Full design and install of the tank, distribution box, and drainfield, sized from bedroom count so a three bedroom home lands on a 1,000 to 1,250 gallon tank matched to your soil.
02Septic Tank Replacement
We remove a failed or cracked tank and set a new watertight concrete, polyethylene, or fiberglass unit, most often a 1,000 to 1,500 gallon tank matched to your household.
03Drainfield and Leach Field Installation
Gravel trench or plastic chamber fields sized straight from the perc rate, so treated effluent disperses into the soil without surfacing or backing up into the house.
04Perc Test and Site Evaluation
Soil percolation testing that measures drainage speed, confirms the seasonal water table, and sets the drainfield size the county health department will actually permit.
05Aerobic and Mound Systems
Advanced treatment units certified to NSF/ANSI Standard 40 and engineered mound systems for small lots, heavy clay, or a high water table where gravity alone will not pass.
06Pumping, Inspection, and D-Box Repair
Routine pumping every three to five years, point of sale inspections, and distribution box repair that restores even flow across every drainfield lateral.

Neighborhoods and Towns Included in Our Rates

We install and service septic systems across Spartanburg and the surrounding Spartanburg County towns. From Converse Heights and Hampton Heights on the city side to Inman and Boiling Springs out in the county, the rates we quote already include the drive.

  • Spartanburg, SC (29301, 29303, 29307)
  • Boiling Springs, SC
  • Inman, SC
  • Roebuck, SC
  • Duncan, SC
  • Moore, SC
  • Woodruff, SC

Not sure if your lot along Country Club Road or out past Cowpens is in our area? Call (864) 637-3170 and we will confirm.

What You Will Pay for a Septic System in Spartanburg

Septic pricing comes down to three things: the tank you set, the drainfield your soil will accept, and whether the site needs advanced treatment. A perc test near East Main Street tells us which bucket your lot falls into. The ranges below are typical for the Spartanburg area, and we put the firm number in writing after the site evaluation, with the permit fee and the as built record already included.

Tank Replacement$3,500 to $8,500New Conventional System$3,500 to $12,500Drainfield or Leach Field$5,000 to $15,000
  • New 1,000 to 1,500 gallon tank
  • Concrete, poly, or fiberglass
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  • Tank, D-box, and drainfield
  • Sized from your perc test
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  • Gravel trench or chamber field
  • Mound systems quoted higher
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Get a Detailed Written Estimate

Ready to price your septic project the right way? We will evaluate the site, run the perc test, size the tank and drainfield to your soil, and hand you a clear written estimate with the permit and as built already included. No pressure, and no surprise line items on install day. Call the number below and a real person will schedule your site visit anywhere in Spartanburg County.

Call (864) 637-3170