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SEPTIC SYSTEMS HOME
SEPTIC INFO ARTICLES
Drainfield Location
  Why Look For the Drainfield?
  Using Septic System Records
  Where to Look
  Areas Not Likely
  Locate Piping Precisely
  Excavating to find Drainfield
  Surprising Leachfield Locations
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PHOTO of melting snow and depressions indicating septic drain field trench locations.

Just Where to Look to Find the Septic Drainfield
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  • How to find the septic drainfield or leach field - where are the most likely locations?
  • Where to look to find septic system components - key visual clues help locate septics
  • What visual clues tip off probable location of septic components
Our site offers impartial, unbiased advice without conflicts of interest. We will block advertisements which we discover or readers inform us are associated with bad business practices, false-advertising, or junk science. Our contact info is at inspect-ny.com/appointment.htm.

This article and our accompanying septic system location videos explains how to find the leach field or drainfield portion of a septic system. We include sketches and photos that help you learn what to look for, and we describe several methods useful for finding buried drainfield components. (Septic drain fields are also called soil absorption systems or seepage beds.) Also see How to Find the Septic Tank.

The septic system video#3 at right describes walking an 18 year old homesite by a lake to find the septic system components. We observe one area that by its space and absence of trees and rocks is almost certainly the drainfield location - a fact later confirmed by the owner. This particular drainfield is uphill from the septic tank and the home which it serves. A septic pumping system will be needed. More videos on septic system location & maintenance are at SEPTIC VIDEOS.More videos on septic system location & maintenance are at SEPTIC VIDEOS.

Citation of this article by reference to this website and brief quotation for the sole purpose of review are permitted. Use of this information at other websites, in books or pamphlets for sale is reserved to the author. Technical reviewers and content suggestions are welcome and are credited at "References."

This is a chapter of Inspecting, Testing, & Maintaining Residential Septic Systems an online book on septic systems. © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use the links at page left to navigate this document or to go to Other Website Topics. Green links at left show where you are in our document & website.

Visual Clues that Indicate Drain Field Location

Where should we expect to find a septic system drainfield or leachfield when we're exploring an existing homesite?

Suppose we have no documentation and no idea where the drainfield is located. You can walk the building site looking for where a septic field could possibly be placed based on space, soil, and terrain conditions as well as distances from property boundaries and from a well if one is present. Our video at the top of this page gives a site walkthrough example of that procedure.

If you cannot find any candidate locations for a drainfield, go back to "square one" and start with our Septic Tank Location article. Once we can find the septic tank itself, the septic tank outlet defines the location of the effluent drain line that leads to the leach field. But remember that a drainfield may not be installed at all. There could be a seepage pit, or nothing, yet the septic system may appear to be working, depending on the level of its usage and soil characteristics.

PHOTO of an apparent drain field location where fill has been added.An experienced contractor or inspector can often tell where the leach field is by a simple visual check of the property since s/he knows the typical size, elevation, and soil requirements - in other words, we look to see where a leach field could possibly be fit at a property.

In the photo our client is pointing to a filled-area at the front of his home - which we determined was the probable drainfield area. Unfortunately the installer put his fill right across a creek bed (look in the upper photo at the natural lay of the land). So the drain field did not have much of a life before its effluent leaked into groundwater, appearing in our test as pink-dyed effluent in a nearby stream.

Our article Absorption Field Design discusses how to locate the septic field and how to determine septic field size for a conventional drain field. Knowing these most basic design considerations can tell you where to look for septic fields at a building site by knowing where a working field might be expected to be installed.

PHOTO of a stepped-mound system with inappropriate plantings on its sides.If a property has an alternative design system such as a mound or raised bed or other special absorption field designs, those will be more obvious as a terrain feature. You'll see a rather large, rather flat area of raised soil or filled soil on the property. Sizes can vary widely but a small constructed drainfield made of fill might be 30' wide x 50' long. In the photo a two-level or "tiered" septic mound was installed perhaps 20 years ago; the lower mound is visible in the foreground. The shrubs are a bit close to the septic field, which we found was in failure - dyed septic effluent appeared in the driveway in the close foreground, and could be seen quickly in this drain basin intended we were told to remove water from the driveway. Actually it was removing septic effluent from the drive.

 

There may be good visual clues that indicate the drainfield location, especially if you know what to look for.

Lawn shown is a candiate for locating septic tank and drainfieldAreas Cleared of Rocks and Major Trees Often Marks the Location of an Older Drainfield

This older and mature lawn is free of large trees and rocks though those items are found at other areas of this building site. This is where we expected to find the septic tank and drainfield.

Often it is possible to see long parallel depressions which mark leach field trenches. You cannot see them in this photo (a tank and seepage pit were found later) but you can see them in the next section of this article. These depressions are caused by earth fill settlement over the drainfield trenches.

They may be visible in systems of almost any age. Long parallel depressions, perhaps 24 to 30" wide and many feet long, perhaps 20' to 40' and spaced perhaps 4' to 6' apart are suggestive of drain field trenches.

PHOTO of melting snow and depressions indicating septic drain field trench locations.

Areas of Snow Melt may Show Drainfield Layout, Trench Lines, Location

In northern climates when there is light snow cover, the drain field depressions may be easier to see for a couple of reasons:

  1. the snow cover forms a smooth blanket which more easily shows-up depressions, especially in late afternoon light when the sun is low in the sky and shadows are more obvious.
  2. Because septic effluent is flowing into an in-use drainfield the trench areas may be a bit warmer than the surrounding soil, causing snow to melt or be thinner over the trenches, and adding to the "depression" effect.

Wet Areas may Show a (failing) Drainfield Location

Image of a failed septic system and deep snow cover

It's too bad, but sometimes the leaching bed or drainfield location becomes obvious because it is in failure mode.

If a drainfield is failing by pushing effluent to the surface that is a rather obvious clue of the field location.

The effluent breakout most-often occurs at the low-end of the failing drainfield line(s), but it can occur anywhere that a pipe is clogged, damaged, or leaking. In this photo, which we discuss in more detail below, the septic system failure and thus the septic field location was visually evident even under deep snow cover.

Often it is possible to see an area of raised-fill which was built to house the leach field.

 

 

 

Visual Clues to Location contains additional clues that telltale where you can expect to find the septic drainfield.

Use links just below or at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.

SEPTIC DRAINFIELD LOCATION
  Why Look For the Drainfield?
  Using Septic System Records
  Where to Look
  Areas Not Likely
  Locate Piping Precisely
  Excavating to find Drainfield
  Surprising Leachfield Locations
  SEPTIC VIDEOS show how to find the drainfield and tank

Detailed Guide for Finding Other Septic System Components

SEPTIC SYSTEMS HOME
HOW TO FIND A SEPTIC TANK
SEPTIC SEARCH SAFETY
WHO KNOWS SEPTIC LOCATION?
FIND MAIN WASTE LINE EXIT
DISTANCE TO TANK
POSSIBLE SEPTIC TANK LOCATIONS
  VISUAL CLUES LOCATE TANK
  WHERE TO LOOK
  SEPTIC TANK DEPTH
SEPTIC TANK LOCATING EQUIPMENT
SEPTIC TANK COVERS
DOCUMENT TANK LOCATION
DRAINFIELD LOCATION

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Particular thanks are due to experts and also consumers who read these articles and suggest corrections, changes, and additions to the material.

  • Daniel Friedman - principal author
  • Technical reviewers are invited to comment or ask questions - contact us

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04/13/2008 - 12/24/2006 www.inspect-ny.com/septic/Septic_Drainfield_Location4.htm © Copyright 2008-1995 Daniel Friedman - all rights reserved