Same-day pumping, emergency repair, and inspection from licensed Vermont septic haulers. We answer the phone β and we show up.
Tell us what's going on and we'll text you back fast.
From routine pumping to 2 a.m. emergencies, we handle every part of a septic system. Pick the service that matches your situation.
Routine tank pumping every 3β5 years prevents drain field damage. Most Central VT homes need 1,000β1,500 gallon service.
Slow drains, gurgling toilets, sewage odor, or alarm going off? We diagnose the system and fix the cause β not just the symptom.
Sewage backing up into the house or pooling in the yard is an emergency. We respond same-day across Washington County.
Buying or selling a home with a septic system? We provide written inspections that satisfy lender and Vermont state requirements.
Septic problems don't wait for business hours, and neither do we. Here's what makes us different.
No phone trees. No callbacks 3 days later. A real person picks up β even at 11 p.m.
We live in Central Vermont. We know the soil, the systems, and the towns. We're not a national franchise.
Written quote before any work begins. No surprise add-ons after the truck leaves.
For emergencies, we dispatch within hours β not days. Most service calls are scheduled inside 48 hours.
We serve homeowners and small businesses across Washington County and the surrounding towns. If you don't see your town, call β we probably cover it.
Real answers from real Vermont septic work β not copy-pasted from somewhere else.
Most Central Vermont homes need pumping every 3 to 5 years. Heavy use, garbage disposals, and smaller tanks shorten the interval. We'll measure sludge depth on every visit and tell you exactly when to schedule next.
Routine pumping for a standard 1,000-gallon residential tank typically runs $350β$525 in this area. Larger tanks, heavily compacted sludge, or hard-to-find tank lids increase the price. We give a written quote before pumping starts.
Watch for slow drains throughout the house, gurgling toilets, sewage odor in the yard, soggy ground over the drain field, or a septic alarm. Any of these means call now β drain field replacement is dramatically more expensive than catching it early.
Routine pumping and most repairs don't require a permit. New installations, system replacements, and significant alterations require a Vermont Wastewater System and Potable Water Supply Permit through the Department of Environmental Conservation. We handle the permit paperwork for projects that need it.
Yes. We answer 24/7 across Washington County and the immediate surrounding towns. If sewage is backing into your home or pooling in the yard, call us β don't wait until morning.