That charming farmhouse on five acres in Leiper's Fork probably isn't connected to city sewer. Neither is the newer construction tucked into the rolling hills south of town. In Williamson County, septic systems are far more common than many buyers—especially those relocating from urban areas—expect.
If you've always lived in homes connected to municipal sewer, the shift to septic can feel like stepping back in time. It's not. Modern septic systems are reliable, cost-effective, and environmentally sound when properly maintained. The trouble starts when buyers don't know what they're getting into.
Everything that goes down your drains flows into an underground tank, usually made of concrete or fiberglass. Solids settle to the bottom, bacteria break down waste, and liquid effluent flows out into a drain field—a series of perforated pipes buried in gravel trenches across your yard.
That drain field is doing the real work. The soil filters and treats the wastewater naturally before it reaches groundwater. When the system is sized correctly for the home and maintained properly, it operates quietly for decades.
The key word is "maintained." Unlike city sewer, where your responsibility ends at the street, you own the entire system. That tank needs pumping every three to five years. The drain field needs protection from compaction and root intrusion. The bacteria need the right conditions to do their job.
Standard home inspections don't include septic evaluation. A general inspector will note that a septic system exists and maybe locate the tank, but they won't pump it, inspect the baffles, or evaluate the drain field.
You need a separate septic inspection from a licensed professional. In Franklin, expect to pay between $300 and $500 for a thorough evaluation that includes pumping the tank, inspecting internal components, and checking for signs of drain field failure.
What they're looking for:
Tank condition – Cracks, corrosion, damaged baffles, or improper previous repairs. Concrete tanks in our area typically last 40+ years, but they're not indestructible.
Sludge and scum levels – These indicate how well the system's been maintained and how soon it will need pumping again.
Drain field performance – Slow drainage, wet spots, or unusually green grass over the field can signal failure. Once a drain field fails, you're not fixing it—you're replacing it.
System size vs. home size – A three-bedroom home from the 1970s might have a 750-gallon tank that was adequate for the original owners but undersized for modern water usage patterns.
A failing drain field is the scenario that keeps buyers up at night, and rightfully so. Replacement costs in Williamson County typically run $8,000 to $25,000, depending on soil conditions, system size, and how much of your yard needs to be excavated.
If your inspection reveals drain field issues, you have options:
Negotiate repair or replacement – Sellers often don't know their system is failing. A clear inspection report gives you leverage to request repairs or a price reduction.
Get multiple contractor bids – Septic costs vary significantly. What one company quotes at $18,000, another might accomplish for $12,000.
Understand the timeline – A drain field showing early warning signs might function for another year or five. Your inspector can help you understand urgency.
Walk away if the numbers don't work – Sometimes the math doesn't add up, especially if other repairs are also needed.
Minor issues—a cracked lid, a deteriorated baffle, a tank that's overdue for pumping—are typically inexpensive to address and shouldn't derail a purchase.
The biggest adjustment for city-sewer transplants is behavioral. Septic systems have rules:
No garbage disposals – Or at least, use them sparingly. Food waste doesn't break down well and fills your tank faster.
Watch what you flush – "Flushable" wipes aren't. Neither are feminine products, cotton swabs, or anything besides human waste and toilet paper.
Limit harsh chemicals – Bleach, antibacterial soaps, and drain cleaners kill the bacteria your system depends on. Use them sparingly.
Protect the drain field – No parking vehicles over it, no planting trees nearby, no building structures on top of it. That area needs to stay accessible and undisturbed.
Spread out water usage – Running the dishwasher, washing machine, and multiple showers simultaneously can overwhelm the system. Stagger heavy water use throughout the day.
Ask the seller for maintenance documentation: pump-out receipts, repair records, and the original permit if available. In Williamson County, the health department maintains records of septic permits and can tell you when the system was installed, its design capacity, and any documented repairs.
No records? That's not automatically a red flag—many homeowners don't keep detailed files—but it makes your pre-purchase inspection even more important.
If the home has been a rental property, pay extra attention. Tenants don't always treat septic systems with the care owners do, and landlords don't always stay on top of pumping schedules.
Williamson County's soil composition varies significantly. The limestone bedrock common throughout Middle Tennessee affects how drain fields are designed and how well they function. Soil percolation rates—how quickly water drains through the ground—determine what type of system a property can support.
Homes in areas with poor percolation may have alternative systems: mound systems built above grade, aerobic treatment units that require electricity, or drip irrigation fields. These systems work well but require different maintenance and sometimes annual inspections.
Your septic inspector can explain what type of system the property has and what that means for ongoing care and costs.
Budget for pumping every three to five years—roughly $350 to $500 in the Franklin area. That's your primary recurring expense. A well-maintained system otherwise costs nothing to operate (no monthly sewer bill) and should last 25 to 30 years or longer before major components need replacement.
Compared to city sewer fees, which run $50 to $100+ monthly in many municipalities, septic ownership often costs less over time. The trade-off is responsibility: you're maintaining infrastructure that city dwellers never think about.
For most buyers, that trade-off is worth it—especially when the alternative is missing out on Franklin's most scenic properties.
Excellence, Without Exception.™
At Redbird Real Estate, we specialize in residential sales, property management, and commercial real estate services in and around Franklin,...
Franklin, Tennessee
View full profile