Septic Tank Pumping in Dixie County, FL
Licensed septic tank pumping across all of Dixie County — from Cross City and Old Town to Horseshoe Beach, Jena, Suwannee, and the tidal communities along the Gulf Coast and Lower Suwannee River. Routine, emergency, and commercial service compliant with Florida Department of Health in Dixie County requirements.
Square miles of Dixie County service coverage
- Routine and emergency septic pumping
- Coastal and river corridor service
- DOH-Dixie compliant documentation
- Lower Suwannee and Nature Coast service context
Call now to schedule septic tank pumping, emergency service, or a routine maintenance visit.
One of Florida's Most Rural Counties — Where Every Property Runs on Septic and the Suwannee River Defines Everything
Dixie County covers 705 square miles of the Big Bend region of North Florida along the Gulf Coast, with a 2025 estimated population of approximately 18,038 residents at a density of just 23.8 people per square mile — one of the lowest population densities of any county in Florida. Cross City is the county seat and only incorporated town alongside Horseshoe Beach, a small Gulf Coast community. The median age is 52, the median home construction year is 1990, and the poverty rate stands at approximately 18.8% — making Dixie County one of the most economically challenged rural counties on the Nature Coast.
There is no central sewer infrastructure anywhere in Dixie County outside of small localized systems in Cross City. Every residential and commercial property in the county — from the Suwannee River community of Old Town to the coastal fishing villages of Jena and Suwannee, from the inland communities of Fletcher and Shamrock to the remote rural homesteads along county roads in the county's pine flatwoods interior — operates on a private septic system. With 10,934 housing units and a median property value of just $132,000, many of these are aging systems on modest properties where deferred maintenance is common and emergency pump-outs are the norm rather than the exception.
The Suwannee River enters Dixie County from Lafayette County to the northeast, flows through the community of Old Town, and empties into the Gulf of Mexico through the Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge — a 53,000-acre federal refuge protecting one of the largest undeveloped river delta systems in the United States. The river and its estuarine delta, the tidal marshes along the coast, and the Gulf waters off Horseshoe Beach and Jena are the ecological core of Dixie County. Every septic system in the county that is not properly maintained either drains toward the Suwannee River watershed or toward the Gulf Coast tidal system. There is no buffer between improperly maintained OSTDS and these protected water bodies.
Tidal Terrain, River Floodplains, and Flatwoods Soils — How Location in Dixie County Determines Your Septic Challenges
Dixie County's septic conditions vary significantly based on where a property sits relative to the county's three distinct terrain zones.
Coastal And Tidal Zone
The coastal and tidal zone — Horseshoe Beach, Shired Island, Jena, and the Suwannee community at the river's mouth — sits at or near sea level on tidal terrain where the water table is influenced by Gulf tidal cycles and seasonal rainfall simultaneously. These properties sit within or immediately adjacent to the Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge's coastal wetland system. Septic systems in this zone face the most challenging conditions in the county: tidal water table fluctuations that can lift the seasonal high water table to within inches of the drainfield bottom at high tide, organic coastal soils with limited filtration capacity, and proximity to the Gulf and estuarine waters where any failing system has a direct ecological impact. Florida law requires a 75-foot setback from surface water bodies under Chapter 64E-6, and many coastal Dixie County properties are near or at that boundary.
Suwannee River Corridor
The Suwannee River corridor — Old Town, Jonesboro, and the communities along US-19/98 on the river's western bank — sits on riverine floodplain soils where the Suwannee's seasonal flood pulse raises the water table in lowland areas during high-flow periods. The Suwannee River BMAP, which addresses nitrogen loading to the Suwannee River system, covers the watershed areas of Dixie County along the river corridor. Properties with septic systems draining toward the Suwannee contribute nitrogen to a river system that is formally listed as impaired for nutrients at various points along its course.
Flatwoods Interior
The flatwoods interior — Cross City, Fletcher, Dixietown, Eugene, and the rural communities in the county's pine flatwood uplands — sits on sandy, poorly drained soils typical of the Nature Coast flatwoods. These soils are moderately deep with a seasonal high water table that rises significantly during the June through September wet season, reducing drainfield absorption capacity and creating backup risk for systems whose tanks have not been pumped on schedule.
Dixie County Septic Permits — Florida Department of Health in Dixie County
Dixie County is not among the 16 Florida Panhandle counties where septic permitting transferred to Florida DEP in January 2025. All septic system permits, inspections, and operating permit renewals in Dixie County remain with the Florida Department of Health in Dixie County (DOH-Dixie), Environmental Public Health.
Environmental Health bills and fees can be paid in person, by mail, or online at Florida online environmental health permit portal.
For properties in the coastal zone near Horseshoe Beach, Shired Island, Jena, and the Suwannee river mouth communities, site evaluations assess tidal water table conditions and applicable coastal setback requirements before any permit is issued. The 75-foot minimum setback from surface water bodies under Florida Chapter 64E-6 is a controlling requirement for a large share of the county's coastal and riverfront properties. Properties with tidal influence may require engineered system designs or ATU installations rather than conventional drainfields.
Operating permits — renewed annually — are required for aerobic treatment units (ATU), performance-based treatment systems (PBTS), commercial septic systems, and systems on industrial or manufacturing-zoned property.
DOH-Dixie Contact Details
Florida Department of Health in Dixie County — Environmental Public Health
Mailing Address: 149 NE 241st Street, Cross City, FL 32628
Phone: 352-498-1360
Email: EHPermitsDixie@FLHealth.gov
Website: DOH-Dixie Onsite Sewage Disposal
Septic Tank Pumping for Every Property Type Across Dixie County
Cross City And Flatwoods Interior Homeowners
Homeowners in Cross City and the flatwoods interior communities — Fletcher, Shamrock, Yellow Jacket, Dixietown, Eugene, and the rural properties along SR-349 and the county road network — operate conventional septic systems on sandy flatwoods soils where the wet season raises the water table and the systems can be decades old with no documented maintenance. With a median household income of approximately $50,110 and a poverty rate near 19%, many Dixie County homeowners have deferred pump-outs for years. A system that has not been pumped since the early 2000s in Cross City is not unusual — and in flatwoods soils, the cost of drainfield failure far exceeds the cost of routine pumping.
Coastal Communities And Vacation Properties
Homeowners and property owners in the coastal communities of Horseshoe Beach, Shired Island, and Jena operate systems in the county's most environmentally and hydraulically challenging zone. Tidal influence on the water table means these systems need more frequent attention than inland flatwoods properties, and any system failure in this zone has an immediate impact on the Gulf Coast waters that define the community's character and economy. Fishing guides, charter boat operators, and vacation rental owners in these communities depend on clean water — a failing septic system is a direct threat to the resource that sustains the local economy.
Suwannee River Homeowners
Homeowners along the Suwannee River in Old Town and Jonesboro manage systems that sit within the river's floodplain influence. The Suwannee's seasonal high-flow periods, driven by upstream rainfall in Georgia and North Florida, raise the river level and push the water table upward in the floodplain areas — putting hydraulic stress on drainfields during exactly the periods when the county also receives its heaviest rainfall.
US-19/98 Commercial Properties
Commercial properties along US-19/98 — the county's main north-south corridor connecting Cross City and Old Town — serve Dixie County's modest commercial base including the businesses that support the county's outdoor recreation and fishing economy. Commercial OSTDS on this corridor require more frequent pumping and operating permit compliance with DOH-Dixie.
Septic Services Built Around Dixie County's Coastal, River, and Flatwoods Conditions
Routine Septic Tank Pumping
Routine Septic Tank Pumping in Dixie County cannot be approached as a single-environment service. The tidal coastal zone, the Suwannee River floodplain corridor, and the flatwoods interior each create distinct septic performance conditions. The standard 3 to 5 year interval applies across the county for residential systems, but coastal and tidal-zone properties should pump every 2 to 3 years given tidal water table influence, and any system in Cross City or the flatwoods interior that has no documented pump-out history from the past decade should be treated as immediately overdue.
Emergency Septic Pumping
Emergency Septic Pumping in Dixie County is driven by two seasonal pressure points: the Suwannee River's high-flow periods from late winter through spring when upstream rainfall and reservoir releases raise river levels and push floodplain water tables up, and the June through September wet season when flatwoods soils saturate county-wide. Call [PHONE NUMBER] for same-day emergency response across all of Dixie County.
Septic Inspection And Certification
Septic Inspection and Certification is required at property sale and for operating permit renewals. For coastal and river-corridor properties, inspection reports document system type, tank condition, and proximity to surface water bodies — information that is material to real estate transactions in a county where tidal and floodplain setback compliance is a genuine property-level question. We provide written reports in the format accepted by DOH-Dixie at 149 NE 241st Street, Cross City.
Why Dixie County Property Owners Trust Us With Their Septic Systems
We understand Dixie County's three terrain zones in service terms — the tidal coastal properties near Horseshoe Beach and Jena require a different assessment approach than flatwoods properties in Cross City or river-floodplain properties in Old Town. A provider who treats all of Dixie County as one environment gives you inaccurate service recommendations.
We know DOH-Dixie's permit process at 149 NE 241st Street, Cross City — phone 352-498-1360, email EHPermitsDixie@FLHealth.gov — and the coastal and riverine setback requirements that apply to properties throughout the county's extensive water body network.
Why Customers Trust Us
- Coastal, river, and flatwoods terrain knowledge
- Suwannee River and Lower Suwannee refuge context
- DOH-Dixie permit process knowledge
- Florida DEP OSTDS certified technicians
- Residential, commercial, coastal, and rural service
- Written report after every pump-out
We understand the Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge's proximity to the county's coastal communities and the environmental obligation that creates for property owners in those zones.
All technicians hold Florida DEP OSTDS contractor certifications. We are fully insured for residential, commercial, coastal, and rural property septic service across Dixie County's 705 square miles.
Same-day emergency service available county-wide — from the coastal communities of Horseshoe Beach and Shired Island to Cross City, Old Town, and the remote rural properties along county roads in the county's interior.
Every service visit includes a written report documenting tank condition, system type, baffle status, drainfield observations, and recommended next service interval based on your terrain zone and property location. We stand behind every pump-out with a satisfaction guarantee.
Every City, Town, and Community We Serve in Dixie County, FL
We provide septic tank pumping to both incorporated municipalities and all unincorporated communities across Dixie County's 705 square miles.
Incorporated Municipality
Census Designated Places And Unincorporated Communities
How Septic Tank Pumping Works in Dixie County — 4 Steps
STEP 1 — SCHEDULE YOUR SERVICE
Call [PHONE NUMBER] or book online. Provide your address and property type. For coastal properties in Horseshoe Beach, Shired Island, and Jena, let us know at booking so we can plan the assessment with tidal water table conditions in mind. For properties in the Old Town and Jonesboro area along the Suwannee River, note the proximity to the river so we can factor floodplain conditions into our service documentation.
STEP 2 — ON-SITE ASSESSMENT BEFORE WE PUMP
Our licensed technician locates all tank access points and assesses the system before pumping. In the coastal zone, we assess tidal water table influence around the drainfield before opening the system. In the flatwoods interior, we note drainfield saturation signs from the previous wet season. In the Suwannee corridor, we check for floodplain soil saturation indicators.
STEP 3 — FULL PUMP-OUT AND SYSTEM INSPECTION
We pump the tank completely and inspect the inlet baffle, outlet baffle, tank walls, and visible drainfield conditions. On Dixie County properties with systems from the late 1980s and early 1990s — the median construction year of 1990 means many systems are now over 30 years old — baffle deterioration and tank wear are common findings. Any damage or drainfield stress is documented and communicated directly before we leave.
STEP 4 — WRITTEN REPORT AND NEXT STEPS
You receive a written service report before we leave documenting tank volume pumped, system condition, terrain zone context, and recommended next service interval. For operating permit renewals, the report is prepared in the format accepted by DOH-Dixie at 149 NE 241st Street, Cross City.
Septic Tank Pumping in Dixie County — Frequently Asked Questions
A: The Florida Department of Health in Dixie County (DOH-Dixie), Environmental Public Health, at 149 NE 241st Street, Cross City, FL 32628 — phone 352-498-1360, email EHPermitsDixie@FLHealth.gov. Dixie County is not among the 16 Panhandle counties where permitting transferred to Florida DEP in January 2025.
A: These communities sit at or near sea level on terrain where the water table is influenced by Gulf tidal cycles in addition to seasonal rainfall. At high tide, the seasonal high water table can rise to within the critical 24-inch minimum separation from the drainfield bottom required by Florida Chapter 64E-6. This tidal influence means coastal Dixie County properties have less margin for a full or overloaded tank than inland flatwoods properties. Pumping every 2 to 3 years rather than the standard 3 to 5 year interval is appropriate for tidal-zone properties. For more information on the Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge's coastal ecosystem and why it matters for local septic maintenance, visit Lower Suwannee National Wildlife Refuge coastal ecosystem.
A: Properties in the Suwannee River corridor in Old Town and Jonesboro fall within the watershed area covered by the Suwannee River Basin Management Action Plan, which addresses nitrogen loading to the river system. The Suwannee River has been formally determined to be impaired for nutrients at various points along its course. Regular septic maintenance reduces your system's nitrogen contribution to the watershed. For BMAP boundaries and specifics, visit Florida DEP Basin Management Action Plans.
A: Every 3 to 5 years for a standard residential household in the flatwoods interior. Coastal tidal-zone properties in Horseshoe Beach, Shired Island, and Jena should pump every 2 to 3 years given tidal water table influence. Properties in Old Town and the Suwannee River floodplain corridor should pump at the 3-year end of the standard range. Any Dixie County property with no documented pump-out history from the past decade should be serviced immediately.
A: Yes. Florida law requires a minimum 75-foot setback between any septic system component and the edge of a surface water body — including the Suwannee River, tidal creeks, the Gulf of Mexico shoreline, and their tributaries. Many properties in Dixie County's coastal and river corridor communities are close to or at this boundary. Contact DOH-Dixie at 352-498-1360 to confirm setback requirements for your specific parcel before planning any system work.
Schedule Septic Tank Pumping in Dixie County Today
We serve all 705 square miles of Dixie County — from Cross City's flatwoods communities to the Gulf Coast fishing villages of Horseshoe Beach and Jena, and from the Suwannee River corridor at Old Town to the remote rural homesteads along the county's interior roads. Licensed under Florida DEP OSTDS requirements, current on DOH-Dixie's permit process at 352-498-1360, and available for same-day emergency response.