Septic Services · Medford, MA

Septic Services in Medford, Massachusetts

Compare contractors serving Medford, Middlesex County — call them directly, or send one request and let qualified pros come to you.

50 contractors serving Medford — including 2 based in town.

Contractors serving Medford

Septic Services in Medford — what to know

Rebates & incentives

Mass Save does not cover septic. It funds heating, cooling, water heating, and weatherization, not sewage disposal, so an energy-rebate pitch tied to septic is wrong. Medford is in Eversource territory, but that electric-utility fact is irrelevant to septic, which Medford homes do not have.

For any essentially hypothetical Medford parcel on-site, the Massachusetts Title 5 tax credit through the Department of Revenue on Schedule SC would apply to a failed-system upgrade, worth up to roughly $18,000 total spread across years subject to annual caps per the MA DOR. MassDEP betterment and Community Septic Management loans exist statewide but play no practical role in a fully sewered city like Medford.

Permits in Medford

Title 5 (310 CMR 15.00) governs on-site systems statewide, requiring a Board of Health permit and a sanitarian- or engineer-stamped design for any install or repair. In Medford this does not come up because the city is sewered. The pre-sale Title 5 inspection applies only to septic-served properties, and Medford properties connect to the municipal system. Sewer connections, permits, and stormwater rules through the city's inspectional and public health channels are the relevant wastewater concerns here, not septic.

Typical project cost

Septic costs are academic in Medford because the city is sewered. Statewide, a Title 5 inspection runs a few hundred dollars to about $1,000, tank pumping a few hundred dollars, a full conventional replacement roughly $20,000–$35,000, and a nitrogen-reducing I/A system $30,000 or more. Given Medford's dense, tight lots, any hypothetical on-site work would land at the top of those ranges, but Medford homeowners do not face these costs in practice.

About Medford homes

Medford is a dense inner-core city north of Boston in Middlesex County, with about 61,748 residents across roughly 26,761 housing units and a median home age near 83 years. The city is fully built out and connected to municipal sewer, so private septic is essentially nonexistent here.

Medford's residential streets, from Medford Square to West Medford and the Mystic River neighborhoods, were developed on public infrastructure. A homeowner here deals with sewer-line and plumbing questions, not septic tanks or leach fields.

Common questions — Septic Services in Medford

Is my Medford home on septic?
No, in practice. Medford is a dense, fully sewered inner-core city, and its roughly 27,000 housing units connect to municipal sewer. Private septic is essentially nonexistent here, so your wastewater goes to the public system.
Do I need a Title 5 inspection to sell in Medford?
No, in practice. Title 5 pre-sale inspections apply only to septic-served properties, and Medford homes are on municipal sewer. A septic inspection is not part of a normal Medford sale.
Who handles wastewater issues for a Medford property?
Sewer connections, stormwater, and related permits go through Medford's inspectional and public works departments, not a septic installer. Because the city is sewered, most homeowners never engage a licensed septic contractor.
Does any septic program apply in Medford?
The statewide Title 5 tax credit and MassDEP betterment loans target failed on-site systems, which Medford homes do not have, so they rarely apply. Mass Save never covers septic anywhere, since it funds only energy work.