Septic Services · Randolph, MA

Septic Services in Randolph, Massachusetts

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50 contractors serving Randolph.

Contractors serving Randolph

Septic Services in Randolph — what to know

Rebates & incentives

Mass Save does not cover septic. The program funds heating, cooling, water heating, and weatherization, not sewage disposal, so any septic-rebate pitch tied to energy programs is wrong. Randolph's Eversource electric service is an electric-utility detail unrelated to septic eligibility.

For the rare Randolph property on a private system, the relevant incentive is the Massachusetts Title 5 tax credit on MA DOR Schedule SC, which offsets part of a failed-system upgrade up to roughly $18,000 over several years, subject to annual caps per the DOR. In a largely sewered town, the practical fix for a failing cesspool is usually connecting to the municipal sewer rather than rebuilding private septic, though MassDEP betterment loans exist statewide.

Permits in Randolph

Septic in Massachusetts is governed by Title 5 (310 CMR 15.00) and permitted by the local Board of Health, with a licensed installer and an engineer- or sanitarian-stamped design. In Randolph, because most of the town is sewered, a property on a cesspool is usually abandoned and connected to the municipal system through the Randolph Board of Health and the department of public works. Lots near the town's reservoirs, ponds, or wetlands draw Conservation Commission review. A Title 5 inspection is still required before most transfers of any property still on private septic.

Typical project cost

Because Randolph is largely sewered, the common homeowner cost is a sewer connection and cesspool abandonment rather than a new field, with price driven by lateral distance and street-opening permits. Where a private system must be replaced on an outlying lot, South Shore eastern-MA labor puts a conventional system at roughly $20,000–$35,000. A Title 5 inspection runs a few hundred to about $1,000, and tank pumping a few hundred. Sewer-lateral distance and site access, not soil, are the main cost factors here.

About Randolph homes

Randolph is a Norfolk County town of 34,691 people across about 12,817 housing units, with a median home around 61 years old, much of it postwar single-family and two-family neighborhoods. The developed core and most residential streets are on municipal sewer.

That makes Randolph a largely sewered South Shore community where private septic is uncommon, confined to a few outlying or larger-lot parcels near the town's ponds and the wooded edges toward Canton and Avon that never connected. For most homeowners, the septic-relevant moment is a Title 5 inspection at sale that confirms a sewer connection. Where private systems exist, older conventional fields on fringe lots are the typical case.

Common questions — Septic Services in Randolph

Is my Randolph home on septic or sewer?
Almost certainly municipal sewer. Randolph is largely built out and sewered, so private septic is an edge case on a few outlying or larger-lot parcels. The Randolph Board of Health can confirm your connection.
Do I need a Title 5 inspection to sell my Randolph house?
Only if it is on a private septic system. Homes on the municipal sewer, which is most of Randolph, are exempt from Title 5 inspection at sale.
I have an old cesspool in Randolph. What should I do?
Because most of the town is sewered, the usual remedy is to abandon the cesspool and connect to the municipal sewer rather than rebuild a private system. The Randolph Board of Health and DPW coordinate that work.
What would a new private septic system cost in Randolph?
On the rare outlying lot that needs one, a full conventional replacement runs roughly $20,000–$35,000. Where municipal sewer is at the street, a connection is often the simpler and cheaper path.

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