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WY

Septic Services in Wyoming

25% of Wyoming homes rely on septic systems β€” approximately 60,000 systems statewide.

2
Cities
10
Providers
25%
On Septic

Wyoming Septic Regulations

Wyoming regulates onsite wastewater systems through the Wyoming Department of Environmental Quality (WDEQ) Water Quality Division under Wyoming Statutes 35-11 and DEQ Chapter 25 regulations. County planning and zoning offices administer local permits in coordination with state guidelines. All new installations require site evaluation, soil percolation testing, and a permit from the appropriate county. Subdivisions require a wastewater feasibility analysis before approval. Systems in the Yellowstone caldera region and near trout streams face the strictest setback and performance standards in the state. High altitude mountain communities require frost-protected installations with tank burial depths often exceeding 5 feet.

Licensing Requirements

Wyoming requires all septic system installers to hold a valid WDEQ Registered Wastewater Installer credential. Pumpers must register with WDEQ and hold a Septage Hauler permit. Work near state waters requires additional WDEQ Surface Water Quality permits.

Environmental Considerations

Wyoming soils span a wide range from expansive Bentonite-rich clays in the Bighorn Basin to well-draining sandy alluvium along river valleys and shallow rocky soils in mountainous terrain. Bentonite clay soils have extremely low percolation rates and often require engineered mound systems. Frost depths of 4 to 6 feet are common. The state's abundant clear streams and rivers used for fly fishing and livestock watering demand strict setbacks and high-performing systems.

Cities in Wyoming

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Services in Wyoming

Find providers for every septic and well service in Wyoming.