Septic Services · Abington, MA

Septic Services in Abington, Massachusetts

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50 contractors serving Abington — including 1 based in town.

Contractors serving Abington

Septic Services in Abington — what to know

Rebates & incentives

Mass Save does not cover septic work. Mass Save funds heating, cooling, water heating, and weatherization, not sewage disposal, so any energy-rebate pitch attached to a septic job is misapplied. Abington is in Eversource territory, but utility status is an electric-utility matter unrelated to septic.

For homes on septic, the real financial angle is the Massachusetts Title 5 tax credit, claimed through the Department of Revenue on Schedule SC, for upgrading a failed system to comply with Title 5. It is worth up to roughly $18,000 total spread across years, subject to annual caps per the MA DOR. MassDEP Community Septic Management betterment loans also fund Title 5 repairs at low interest, repaid through the property tax bill.

Permits in Abington

Under Title 5 (310 CMR 15.00), any septic installation or repair in Abington needs a permit from the Abington Board of Health, with the design stamped by a registered sanitarian or professional engineer. Where municipal sewer is available, the town may require a failing system to connect rather than rebuild, so check with the Board of Health and DPW early. Work near Island Grove Pond, the Shumatuscacant River, or wetlands can trigger Conservation Commission review under the Wetlands Protection Act. A Title 5 inspection is required before most transfers of septic-served homes.

Typical project cost

Abington septic costs sit in the South Shore range. A Title 5 inspection at sale typically runs a few hundred dollars up to about $1,000, and tank pumping is usually a few hundred dollars. A full conventional system replacement commonly runs roughly $20,000–$35,000, while a nitrogen-reducing Innovative/Alternative system runs higher at $30,000 or more where required. As in many sewered South Shore towns, the bigger cost question is often whether a failed system must tie into available sewer, which carries its own betterment and hookup fees.

About Abington homes

Abington is a Plymouth County town of about 17,003 residents across roughly 6,445 housing units, with a median home age near 60 years. As a compact, fairly built-up South Shore town, Abington carries substantial municipal sewer through its denser neighborhoods, so a large share of homes are already on public sewer.

Private septic mostly persists on outlying lots and at the edges toward Rockland, Whitman, and Brockton where sewer never reached. Because Abington is a mixed town, two nearby houses can be on different systems, so the practical first step is confirming which one serves your property.

Common questions — Septic Services in Abington

Is my Abington home on septic or sewer?
It depends on the neighborhood. Abington has substantial municipal sewer in its denser areas, while outlying lots toward Whitman and Brockton are often on private septic. Confirm with the Abington Board of Health or DPW rather than assuming.
If sewer is available, can I still replace my septic system?
Sometimes the town requires connecting to available sewer instead of rebuilding a failed septic system. Check with the Abington Board of Health and DPW early, since a sewer tie-in changes the cost picture and carries its own betterment charges.
Do I need a Title 5 inspection to sell my Abington house?
Yes, if the home is on septic. Title 5 requires a passing inspection before most transfers. If your property is on municipal sewer, no septic inspection applies, which is why confirming your system first matters here.
What does a failed septic upgrade cost in Abington?
A full conventional replacement commonly runs roughly $20,000–$35,000, with I/A systems higher. A required sewer connection has its own fees instead. The Title 5 tax credit through the MA DOR can offset part of a qualifying septic upgrade, subject to annual caps.
Does Mass Save help pay for septic work in Abington?
No. Mass Save covers energy work, not sewage disposal. For a failed system, the Massachusetts Title 5 tax credit and MassDEP betterment loans are the real cost-offset programs, not any energy rebate.