Based in Lubbock, serving the towns and county roads around it — anywhere a truck can reach your tank.
Call (806) 000-0000City sewer stops at the city limits — and a huge share of homes around Lubbock County sit past that line, on well water and septic. These are the communities we serve most:
Acreage homes off Woodrow Road, properties along FM 1585 and FM 179, and the unincorporated pockets inside the loop that never tied into city sewer. Lubbock County is a TCEQ-authorized agent, so permitted system records are held locally at the county — useful when you're trying to find a buried tank on a property you just bought.
Fast-growing, and much of the new construction south and west of town is on septic — including many aerobic sprinkler systems on one-acre-plus lots in developments off FM 179 and US-62/82. New homeowners: your aerobic system likely needs a maintenance arrangement — see our aerobic service page.
Homes on the north side of the metro along US-84 and the farm roads around it. Older conventional tank-and-drainfield systems are common here — many are overdue for pumping, and slow drains after 5+ years without service are the classic first symptom.
Southeast along US-84. A mix of in-town sewer and rural septic on the outskirts, plus farms and shop buildings with their own systems.
North up I-27, straddling the Lubbock/Hale county line. We coordinate with the applicable county's OSSF office when repairs or alterations need permits.
East on US-62/82 and out by the lakes. Lakeside properties at Buffalo Springs and Ransom Canyon have some of the area's most space-constrained systems — regular pumping matters more when there's no room for a drainfield expansion.
We regularly run trucks to Hockley, Lynn, and Garza county properties. Distance may add a trip charge — you'll know up front.
Free quotes • Same-week scheduling • Emergency service available