Last updated: May 3, 2026

New Systems · Poway, CA

New Systems in Poway, CA.

New Systems for Poway homes, done by experienced San Diego County technicians. A new septic system is a 30-year decision. We handle the full project, perc test, soil profile, system design, county DEH permit, install, inspection, and final sign-off, so you're not coordinating an engineer, a tank supplier, an excavator, and an inspector on your own.

Poway: Poway is mostly city sewer through the City of Poway Water and Wastewater infrastructure, with private septic concentrated on the rural-edge equestrian properties, the Old Coach Road area, Espola Road corridor outskirts, and the larger-lot residential zones in the surrounding hills. The septic side runs conventional gravity systems with shorter pump intervals (2-3 years) on horse properties common in the area.
newly installed septic system showing tank, distribution box, and freshly graded drain field
Local angle

Why is new systems different in North County Inland San Diego?

Inland new-system installs are the most common in the county, Escondido, Valley Center, Bonsall, Ramona new builds and ADU additions. Standard gravity systems work on most lots; ATU systems where soil class or lot size demand.

What's included in new systems in Poway?

  • Site evaluation and feasibility review (gravity-fed vs. pressure-dosed vs. ATU)
  • Perc test coordination with county-approved soil engineer
  • System sizing per SD County DEH formula (bedrooms + soil class + slope)
  • Engineered system design and county permit submittal
  • Tank install, concrete or polyethylene, sized to bedroom count
  • Drain field install, gravity trench, gravelless chamber, or pressure-dosed bed
  • Distribution box, effluent filter, and riser install to grade
  • Final county inspection coordination and permit close-out

When does a Poway home need new systems?

  • You're building a new home or ADU outside city sewer service
  • Existing system has failed and is unrepairable
  • You're adding bedrooms and the existing system is undersized per current code
  • County violation notice requires a full system upgrade
  • You inherited a non-permitted system and want to bring it to code at sale
  • Property purchase is contingent on a permitted, current septic system

What do Poway homeowners ask about new systems?

How fast can you get to Poway for new systems?

Same-day service in Poway on most weekdays. Morning slots book fastest, so call before 10 a.m. for the best same-day availability. After-hours emergency calls are answered by an on-call technician, not a dispatcher.

What does new systems cost in Poway?

Standard 3-bedroom gravity system $15,000-$28,000 · pressure-dosed and ATU systems $25,000-$55,000. Pricing is the same across San Diego County, with no mileage upcharge for Poway. We confirm a flat-rate quote before any work starts.

How does Poway's climate affect this service?

Poway is mostly city sewer through the City of Poway Water and Wastewater infrastructure, with private septic concentrated on the rural-edge equestrian properties, the Old Coach Road area, Espola Road corridor outskirts, and the larger-lot residential zones in the surrounding hills. The septic side runs conventional gravity systems with shorter pump intervals (2-3 years) on horse properties common in the area.. Inland new-system installs are the most common in the county, Escondido, Valley Center, Bonsall, Ramona new builds and ADU additions.

How long does a full new septic install take from start to finish?

Plan for 2 to 4 months from first call to closed permit. The actual digging and installing is one week. The other 7-15 weeks are county DEH timelines: perc test scheduling, plan review, permit issuance, and final inspection. We push paper on the slow steps so you're not the one chasing the county.

What is the difference between gravity, pressure-dosed, and ATU systems?

Gravity systems are simplest, cheapest, longest-lasting, they need good soil and slope. Pressure-dosed systems use a pump to spread effluent evenly across the field, needed for marginal soils or flat sites. ATUs (Aerobic Treatment Units) treat effluent with oxygen for sites that fail standard perc, required on small lots or near sensitive water features. Cost goes up in that order.

Serving Poway

Need new systems in Poway?

Call for a free quote. Same-day service on most repairs, next-day on most installs.