Septic Tank Pumping in Duval County, FL
Licensed septic tank pumping across all of Duval County and Jacksonville — from the Northside and Westside neighborhoods to the Beaches, Baldwin, Mandarin, and the rural communities in the county's western reaches. Routine, emergency, and commercial service compliant with Florida Department of Health in Duval County requirements.
Remaining private septic systems across Duval County
- Jacksonville and Duval County coverage
- STPO-aware septic service
- Flood-zone and coastal property support
- DOH-Duval compliant documentation
Call now to schedule septic tank pumping, emergency service, or a routine maintenance visit.
Jacksonville Has 43,000 Septic Systems Remaining — and an Active Phaseout Program That Every Property Owner Needs to Understand
Duval County is governed exclusively by the consolidated City of Jacksonville — the only consolidated city-county government in Florida and one of the largest cities by land area in the contiguous United States at 762 square miles. With a 2025 estimated population of approximately 1,062,963 residents, Jacksonville is Florida's most populous city and Duval County is the sixth most populous county in the state.
Despite its urban scale, Duval County has approximately 43,000 remaining private septic systems — neighborhoods that developed before JEA's sewer infrastructure reached them, rural western areas around Maxville, Whitehouse, and Baldwin, and flood-prone northwest Jacksonville communities that were served by septic for decades after surrounding areas connected to the sewer grid. The St. Johns River runs through Jacksonville, and nutrients from failing or improperly maintained septic systems in the city's neighborhoods directly affect the river's water quality.
The City of Jacksonville and JEA launched the Septic Tank Phase Out (STPO) Program in 2016, approved by Jacksonville City Council on August 23, 2016, specifically to eliminate existing septic systems and reduce harmful nutrient loading into the St. Johns River and other local waterways. Three neighborhood projects have been completed — Biltmore C, Beverly Hills East and West, and the associated northwest Jacksonville areas. The Christobel project is in design with a $41.2 million construction budget and has met the required 70% resident participation threshold. The Riverview project, covering more than 2,400 parcels and representing one of the largest STPO projects to date, achieved 70% participation on November 10, 2025 and is now advancing into design.
For property owners in the approximately 43,000 Duval County addresses that still have septic systems, the STPO program is the regulatory and planning context that shapes every maintenance decision. Whether your neighborhood is in an active STPO zone, a future priority area, or a rural western location that will not reach the program for years, your septic system needs to be properly maintained until the moment a JEA sewer connection becomes available and required.
The St. Johns River, Flood-Prone Neighborhoods, and Why Septic Maintenance in Jacksonville Carries Public Health Urgency
Lower St. Johns River Nutrient Context
The St. Johns River bisects Duval County — flowing north through the heart of Jacksonville before emptying into the Atlantic Ocean near Mayport. The Lower St. Johns River Main Stem has a formally adopted Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) for nutrients, meaning the river has been identified as impaired and the amount of nitrogen it can receive from all sources — including septic systems — is legally capped. The City of Jacksonville's Septic Tank Phase Out Program was specifically structured as part of the city's effort to meet the Lower St. Johns River TMDL compliance obligations. Every septic system in Duval County that is not properly maintained contributes to a nitrogen load that the river is already struggling to process.
Flood-Prone Neighborhoods And Septic Risk
The neighborhoods prioritized for early STPO conversion — Biltmore, Beverly Hills, Christobel, and Riverview — were specifically chosen because they are flood-prone. Septic tanks in flood-prone regions are particularly dangerous: when a neighborhood floods, stormwater can inundate septic tanks and drainfields, pushing raw or partially treated sewage into floodwaters and directly into the St. Johns River and its tributaries. A properly pumped and maintained tank has less volume available to overflow during a flood event, reducing the contamination risk to the surrounding community.
Rural Western Duval County And Beaches Conditions
Outside the northwest Jacksonville STPO priority areas, the county's rural western communities — Maxville, Whitehouse, Yukon, and the areas around Baldwin along US-301 — sit well beyond any near-term JEA sewer extension plan. These properties on sandy, flatwoods-type soils operate conventional septic systems that are their permanent wastewater solution, and routine pumping is their only protection against system failure.
Jacksonville Septic Context 4
The Jacksonville Beaches communities — Atlantic Beach, Jacksonville Beach, and Neptune Beach — sit on barrier island sandy soils where the water table is shallow and proximity to the Atlantic and the Intracoastal Waterway creates the same coastal septic sensitivity that affects barrier island properties throughout Florida.
Duval County Septic Permits — Florida Department of Health in Duval County
Duval 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 Duval County remain with the Florida Department of Health in Duval County (DOH-Duval), Environmental Health Section.
Environmental Health bills and fees can be paid in person, by mail, or online at Florida online environmental health permit portal.
JEA UTILITY TAP-IN PROGRAM (UTIP): For Duval County property owners whose OSTDS needs repair or replacement, JEA's Utility Tap-In Program offers deferred payment loans to assist low- to moderate-income residents with water and sewer line connection fees, associated plumbing costs, and septic tank, drainfield, and well repairs or replacement. This program is available citywide. For the northwest Jacksonville STPO neighborhoods where JEA is extending sewer, connection to the new sewer system and abandonment of the existing septic system is provided at no cost to property owners who participate. Visit JEA Septic Tank Phase Out Program for current program information.
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-Duval Contact Details
Florida Department of Health in Duval County — Environmental Health Section
Physical Address: 921 N. Davis Street, Building B, Suite 350, Jacksonville, FL 32209
Phone: 904-253-1280
Fax: 904-253-2390
Website: DOH-Duval Onsite Sewage Disposal
Septic Tank Pumping for Every Property Type Across Duval County
Northwest Jacksonville And Northside Homeowners
Homeowners in northwest Jacksonville's Northside communities — Garden City, Oceanway, Pecan Park, Dinsmore, and the neighborhoods adjacent to the completed and ongoing STPO project areas — are closest to the active sewer conversion program. Even if your specific street is not yet in an STPO project, the program is working outward and regular pump-outs maintain your system in the best condition until sewer connection becomes available. A well-maintained system also reduces emergency calls and property damage risk during Jacksonville's seasonal flooding events.
Westside And Southwest Jacksonville Properties
Homeowners in the Westside and Southwest Jacksonville communities — Argyle Forest, Wesconnett, Cedar Hills, and the neighborhoods along US-17 south toward Mandarin — include a mix of properties that connected to JEA sewer during suburban growth phases and older neighborhoods that remain on septic. Properties in these areas near Black Creek, Goodby's Creek, and the St. Johns River tributaries have setback and water quality obligations consistent with the TMDL compliance framework.
Rural Western Duval County Owners
Rural property owners in Maxville, Whitehouse, Yukon, and the Baldwin area — the western rural fringe of Duval County — operate systems on sandy, low-lying soils that are the most similar to Baker County and Clay County rural conditions. These properties have no near-term sewer option and septic maintenance is their permanent infrastructure obligation.
Southside, Arlington, Mandarin, And East Arlington
Homeowners in Jacksonville's Southside, Arlington, Mandarin, and East Arlington — Jacksonville's major suburban residential growth corridors — include properties from both the 1970s-1980s development era where concrete tanks are now 40-plus years old, and newer subdivisions from the 1990s and 2000s where systems are more recent. Proximity to the St. Johns River and its tributaries throughout this corridor means setback and nutrient compliance are relevant to a significant share of Southside properties.
Jacksonville Beaches Properties
The Jacksonville Beaches — Atlantic Beach, Neptune Beach, and Jacksonville Beach — sit on barrier island soils with a shallow coastal water table where routine pumping prevents the kind of drainfield overloading that creates nitrogen pathways to the Intracoastal Waterway and the Atlantic Ocean.
Commercial And Institutional OSTDS
Commercial and institutional properties throughout Duval County that are not connected to JEA sewer — along commercial corridors in Baldwin, in industrial areas, and at institutions outside the sewer service boundary — operate commercial OSTDS that require more frequent pumping and operating permit compliance with DOH-Duval.
Septic Services Built Around Jacksonville's STPO Context and Diverse Neighborhoods
Routine Septic Tank Pumping
Routine Septic Tank Pumping in Duval County serves the approximately 43,000 properties still on septic across one of the most diverse urban landscapes in Florida — from the flood-prone northwest Jacksonville neighborhoods prioritized for STPO conversion, to the barrier island beach communities, to the rural western fringe around Baldwin and Maxville. The standard 3 to 5 year residential interval applies county-wide; flood-prone northwest Jacksonville properties and coastal Beaches properties should pump at the 3-year mark. Rural western Duval County properties — Maxville, Whitehouse, Yukon — should maintain a documented pumping schedule given their permanent-septic status.
Emergency Septic Pumping
Emergency Septic Pumping in Duval County is most urgent during and after Jacksonville's seasonal flooding events. The city's low-lying topography and the St. Johns River's tidal influence create flooding conditions that can inundate drainfields throughout the county from June through September. A tank that has been properly pumped has significantly more buffer capacity against flood-event overflow. Call [PHONE NUMBER] for same-day emergency response across all of Duval County.
Septic Inspection And Certification
Septic Inspection and Certification is critical for Duval County real estate transactions because buyers in STPO-adjacent or STPO-zone properties need to understand both current system condition and the timeline for potential mandatory sewer connection. We provide written inspection reports in the format accepted by DOH-Duval at 921 N. Davis Street, Building B, Suite 350, Jacksonville, and can document whether a property falls within a designated or adjacent STPO project area.
Why Duval County Property Owners Trust Us With Their Septic Systems
We understand the JEA Septic Tank Phase Out Program in operational terms — which neighborhoods have completed conversion, which are in active design or construction (Christobel at $41.2 million, Riverview with 2,400+ parcels having achieved 70% participation November 10, 2025), and what the program means for property owners in adjacent areas. A provider without this knowledge cannot give accurate guidance to Jacksonville homeowners navigating the intersection of septic maintenance and STPO planning.
We know DOH-Duval's permit and documentation process at 921 N. Davis Street, Building B, Suite 350 — phone 904-253-1280, fax 904-253-2390 — and the Lower St. Johns River TMDL compliance framework that shapes the regulatory urgency behind Jacksonville's 43,000 remaining septic systems.
Why Customers Trust Us
- JEA Septic Tank Phase Out Program context
- DOH-Duval documentation knowledge
- Lower St. Johns River compliance awareness
- Flood-zone and Beaches septic service
- Florida DEP OSTDS certified technicians
- Written report after every pump-out
All technicians hold Florida DEP OSTDS contractor certifications. We are fully insured for residential, commercial, and flood-zone septic service across all 762 square miles of Duval County.
Same-day emergency service available county-wide — from northwest Jacksonville's STPO neighborhoods to the Beaches, from Mandarin and Southside to Baldwin and Maxville.
Every service visit includes a written report documenting tank condition, system type, baffle status, drainfield observations, and recommended next service interval. For properties in STPO zones, the report notes current program status as context. We stand behind every pump-out with a satisfaction guarantee.
Every City, Town, and Community We Serve in Duval County, FL
We provide septic tank pumping to all 5 incorporated municipalities and all neighborhoods and communities across Duval County's 762 square miles.
Incorporated Municipalities
Neighborhoods, Communities, And Populated Places
How Septic Tank Pumping Works in Duval County — 4 Steps
STEP 1 — SCHEDULE YOUR SERVICE
Call [PHONE NUMBER] or book online. Provide your address and property type. Let us know if your property is in or near a JEA STPO project area, is in a flood-prone neighborhood, or is in the rural western Duval County communities around Baldwin or Maxville — each affects what we document in your service report and what we recommend about near-term system planning.
STEP 2 — ON-SITE ASSESSMENT BEFORE WE PUMP
Our licensed technician locates all tank access points and assesses the system before pumping. In northwest Jacksonville's flood-prone neighborhoods, we note any signs of past flood inundation of the drainfield area — compacted or disrupted soil around drainfield trenches is a telltale indicator of previous flood stress. In the Beaches communities, we assess the drainfield for tidal water table influence.
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 older Jacksonville properties with concrete tanks from the 1970s and 1980s, baffle deterioration and tank cracking are the most common findings. Any damage, flood evidence, or drainfield stress is documented and communicated 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, baffle status, drainfield observations, STPO zone context if applicable, and recommended next service interval. Reports are prepared in the format accepted by DOH-Duval at 921 N. Davis Street, Building B, Suite 350, Jacksonville.
Septic Tank Pumping in Duval County — Frequently Asked Questions
A: The Florida Department of Health in Duval County (DOH-Duval), Environmental Health Section, at 921 N. Davis Street, Building B, Suite 350, Jacksonville, FL 32209 — phone 904-253-1280, fax 904-253-2390. Duval County is not among the 16 Panhandle counties where permitting transferred to Florida DEP in January 2025.
A: The Septic Tank Phase Out (STPO) Program was approved by Jacksonville City Council on August 23, 2016, and is jointly funded by the City of Jacksonville and JEA to eliminate septic systems in designated neighborhoods and reduce nutrient loading to the St. Johns River. Three projects are complete. The Christobel project is in design at a cost of $41.2 million. The Riverview project — covering more than 2,400 parcels — achieved 70% participation on November 10, 2025 and is advancing into design. For properties in STPO zones, connection to the new sewer system and abandonment of the existing septic tank is provided at no cost. To check current STPO project status and whether your address is in a designated area, visit JEA Septic Tank Phase Out Program.
A: Every 3 to 5 years for a standard residential household. Flood-prone northwest Jacksonville neighborhoods and coastal Beaches properties should pump at the 3-year mark. Rural western Duval County properties around Maxville, Whitehouse, and Baldwin — which have no near-term sewer connection prospect — should maintain a documented 3-year pumping schedule and treat their systems as permanent infrastructure. Any Duval County property that has not had a documented pump-out since before a major flooding event should be inspected immediately.
A: Yes. Until JEA extends sewer to your specific street and connection becomes available and required, your septic system is your active wastewater treatment system and must be maintained. A well-maintained system also performs better during flooding events — a primary concern in Jacksonville — and creates less nutrient loading to the St. Johns River while you await sewer expansion.
A: JEA's Utility Tap-In Program (UTIP) offers deferred payment loans to assist low- to moderate-income Duval County residents citywide with water and sewer line connection fees, associated plumbing costs, and septic tank, drainfield, and well repairs or replacement. For more information and current eligibility requirements, visit JEA Septic Tank Phase Out Program or contact JEA directly.
Schedule Septic Tank Pumping in Duval County Today
We serve all 762 square miles of Jacksonville and Duval County — from the northwest Jacksonville STPO neighborhoods to the Beaches, from Mandarin and Southside to Baldwin, Maxville, and Whitehouse. Licensed under Florida DEP OSTDS requirements, current on DOH-Duval's permit process at 921 N. Davis Street, Building B, Suite 350, familiar with the JEA Septic Tank Phase Out Program and the Lower St. Johns River TMDL compliance context, and available for same-day emergency response.