Drain Field Services
Septiclear Inc provides professional drain field services that keep your septic system functioning safely, efficiently, and within code.
5 Highlights on Drain Field Services
- Full drain field inspection and diagnosis — Septiclear Inc uses camera inspection, soil probes, and monitoring wells to pinpoint exactly where your leach field is failing, saturated, or clogged before any work begins.
- Biomat removal and lateral line restoration — Our certified technicians flush, jet, and treat perforated pipe laterals to break down biomat buildup that blocks effluent from percolating into the subsoil.
- Perc testing and soil evaluation — We conduct on-site percolation rate assessments and soil evaluations to determine hydraulic loading capacity and guide repair or replacement decisions.
- Drain field repair and replacement — From damaged distribution boxes to collapsed lateral lines, Septiclear Inc repairs or replaces absorption field components using engineered aggregate, filter fabric, and infiltrator chambers.
- Alternative system installation — When conventional drain fields can’t be restored, we design and install mound systems, drip irrigation systems, and aerobic treatment units tailored to your site plan and permit requirements.
Our Drain Field Services:
- Drain Field Repair
- Drain Field Replacement
- Drain Field Hydro-Jetting
- Drain Field Remediation
Why Choose Our Drain Field Services
Drain field services require more than a pump truck and a shovel. Septiclear Inc brings licensed, certified technicians to every job, backed by years of hands-on experience diagnosing and repairing residential and commercial absorption fields across a range of soil conditions and system types.
We don’t guess. Every drain field service call starts with a structured site evaluation — soil probing, effluent sampling, and camera inspection of lateral lines — so we know exactly what we’re dealing with before we recommend any repair. That approach saves you money and prevents unnecessary excavation.
Our team works with conventional gravity-fed systems, pressurized drip irrigation systems, mound systems, and chamber-based fields. We carry the permits, maintain the inspection reports, and follow all local and state regulations on drain field work. You won’t need to chase paperwork or coordinate with a third party.
Septiclear Inc also offers maintenance contracts that include scheduled pumping, effluent filter cleaning, and hydraulic loading checks. Catching a saturated or compacted drain field early costs far less than a full replacement. Our clients trust us because we show up, explain what we find, and do the work right the first time.
Signs You Need Drain Field Services
Slow drains and sewage backup inside the home: When your drain field can’t absorb effluent fast enough, hydraulic pressure builds back through the system. You’ll notice toilets flushing slowly, drains gurgling, or raw sewage backing up into tubs and sinks. This signals the absorption field is overloaded, clogged, or failing.
Wet or soggy ground over the leach field: Standing water, spongy turf, or unusually green grass directly above your lateral lines means effluent is surfacing instead of percolating into the subsoil. A saturated drain field can’t filter pathogens, coliform bacteria, or nitrogen before they reach groundwater.
Sewage odors near the absorption field: A functioning drain field contains and decomposes organic waste underground. When you smell sewage near the leach field or distribution box, effluent is surfacing or the biomat layer has blocked infiltration entirely.
Failed perc test or soil evaluation: If a perc test shows your soil’s percolation rate has dropped below acceptable levels, the drain field can no longer handle your system’s hydraulic loading. Compacted or clay-heavy subsoil, a rising water table, or years of organic loading can all cause this.
Alarm activation on a dosing pump or control panel: Pressurized drain field systems use float switches and dosing pumps to distribute effluent across lateral lines. An active alarm on your control panel often means the pump chamber is flooding because the drain field isn’t accepting flow — a direct sign the absorption field needs service.
Our Drain Field Services Process
Step 1 — Site Assessment and Diagnosis We start every drain field service with a full site walkthrough. Our technicians probe the soil, check the water table depth, and inspect the distribution box for signs of uneven effluent flow or structural damage.
Step 2 — Camera Inspection of Lateral Lines We run a video camera through each perforated pipe lateral to locate biomat buildup, root intrusion, collapsed sections, or sediment blockages. This tells us exactly which lines need jetting, relining, or replacement.
Step 3 — Hydro-Jetting and Flushing Where lateral lines are clogged but structurally intact, we use a hydro-jetter to flush biomat and organic debris from the perforated pipe and surrounding aggregate. We follow with bacterial additive or enzyme treatment to restore biological activity in the soil.
Step 4 — Repair or Replacement Damaged laterals, failed infiltrator chambers, or a collapsed distribution box get repaired or replaced. We backfill with clean aggregate and geotextile filter fabric, then grade the surface to match the original site plan.
Step 5 — Final Inspection and Service Report We test effluent flow through the restored drain field, document findings, and provide a full service report. We also review pumping frequency and maintenance contract options to protect your system going forward.
Brands We Use
Septiclear Inc uses trusted, industry-proven brands on every drain field service job. These products meet or exceed residential and commercial septic system standards.
- Infiltrator Water Technologies
- Orenco Systems
- Zoeller Pump Company
- Bio-Microbics
- Jet Inc.
- Hancor (ADS)
- Polylok
- SeptiTech
- Terralift International
- Presby Environmental
We use manufacturer-approved installation methods and follow all permit and inspection requirements. Every product we install is selected for long-term performance and compatibility with your existing septic system.
Other Services
| Drain field services | Leach field services | Septic absorption field repair |
| Drain field repair | Drain field restoration | Perforated pipe lateral cleaning |
| Drain field replacement | Absorption field replacement | Biomat removal septic system |
| Drain field inspection | Leach field inspection | Perc test soil evaluation septic |
| Drain field installation | Alternative drain field system | Mound system drip irrigation septic |
FAQs About Drain Field Services
What is a drain field?
A drain field — also called a leach field or absorption field — is the underground network of perforated pipe laterals, aggregate, and filter fabric that receives treated effluent from your septic tank and disperses it into the surrounding soil for final filtration.
When does a drain field need service?
Most drain fields need professional inspection every 3 to 5 years. You need service sooner if you notice sewage odors, soggy ground over the lateral lines, slow drains, or an alarm on your dosing pump control panel.
Why does a drain field fail?
Drain fields fail from hydraulic overloading, biomat buildup on lateral walls, compacted or saturated soil, root intrusion into perforated pipe, and neglected pumping schedules that allow sludge to migrate from the septic tank into the absorption field.
How does drain field restoration work?
Restoration typically involves hydro-jetting the lateral lines, applying bacterial additives or enzyme treatments to break down biomat, and in some cases using soil fracturing equipment like a Terralift to aerate compacted subsoil and restore percolation rates.
Can a drain field be repaired without full replacement?
Yes. Many failing drain fields can be restored through jetting, flushing, and biological treatment if the perforated pipe and distribution box are structurally sound. A camera inspection determines whether repair or replacement is the right call.
Does Septiclear Inc handle permits for drain field work?
Yes. We manage the permit process, coordinate with local health departments, and provide all required inspection reports for drain field repair, replacement, and new installation projects.