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UT

Septic Services in Utah

15% of Utah homes rely on septic systems β€” approximately 150,000 systems statewide.

2
Cities
5
Providers
15%
On Septic

Utah Septic Regulations

Utah septic systems are regulated by the Utah Division of Water Quality (DWQ) under the Utah Department of Environmental Quality (UDEQ). Rules are codified in the Utah Administrative Code R317-4 (Onsite Wastewater Systems). County health departments serve as the primary permitting authority and conduct inspections. New installations require a site evaluation, soil profile, and percolation test. Systems within 200 feet of surface water or in sensitive groundwater recharge zones require advanced treatment. The Wasatch Front and rural counties each apply the state baseline with varying local supplements. Bedrock proximity in canyon communities often requires engineered mound or drip-irrigation systems.

Licensing Requirements

Installers must hold a Utah Onsite Wastewater System Installer license issued by the Utah Division of Occupational and Professional Licensing (DOPL). Pumpers require a solid or liquid waste hauler license from UDEQ and must dispose of septage at approved facilities.

Environmental Considerations

Utah soils vary dramatically from alkaline desert caliche and clay soils in the Wasatch Front valley floors to well-drained alluvial soils along river benches and rocky decomposed granite in the Wasatch and Uinta mountains. High alkalinity and calcrete layers can interfere with absorption. Shallow bedrock in canyon communities, combined with limited rainfall, makes leach field sizing critical. The Great Salt Lake watershed requires extra nitrogen safeguards.

Cities in Utah

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Services in Utah

Find providers for every septic and well service in Utah.