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A marketing service connecting Marion County property owners with licensed septic contractors. Compass Camper LLC is not a licensed contractor and does not perform septic work.

Marion County Septic

Buying Rural Property With a Septic System in Marion County

By the Marion County Septic Editorial Team Reviewed June 2026

Most rural and acreage property in Marion County is on septic, and the system can be one of the largest hidden variables in a purchase. This guide helps buyers and real-estate agents know what to check before closing, whether the lot has an existing system or is raw land.

Why septic is a buyer issue, not a formality

On acreage, horse property, and rural homesites across Marion County, the septic system is the wastewater infrastructure, and replacing or upgrading one can run well into five figures. Treat it like the roof or the well: something to understand before you commit, not after.

Buying a home with an existing system

Before closing, work through this checklist:

  • Get a septic inspection. A licensed contractor checks the tank, the drainfield, and the flow. See our real-estate septic inspection page.
  • Match the permit to the house. Confirm the system was permitted for at least as many bedrooms as the home has. An under-sized system is a future problem.
  • Ask for records. Construction and repair permits, pumping history, and any maintenance contracts for an advanced system.
  • Locate the system and the well. Florida requires a drainfield to sit at least 75 feet from a private well, among other setbacks. Crowded older lots sometimes fall short.
  • Check the springs status. If the parcel is in a Priority Focus Area, a future replacement may need to be an ENR system.

Buying raw land

On vacant land, there is no guarantee a buildable, affordable system will fit until the soil is tested. The seasonal high water table, the soil texture, and the lot dimensions all decide what is possible.

For real-estate agents

A septic inspection is a natural transaction trigger, and being the agent who flags it early builds trust. Pointing buyers and sellers to neutral, accurate information on permits, springs rules, and likely costs reduces surprises late in a deal. You are welcome to share these guides with clients.

How we help

Marion County Septic is a free matching service. If a buyer or seller needs an inspection or a quote on a new or replacement system, tell us about the property and we connect them with a licensed local contractor. For likely numbers, see our Florida cost guide.

Sources and where to verify

Ready to get matched with a licensed contractor?

Tell us about your project and get a free, no-obligation quote from a licensed local septic contractor.

Frequently asked questions

Should I get a septic inspection before buying a home on septic?

Yes. A pre-purchase septic inspection is one of the most cost-effective checks you can make, since a failed system can cost many thousands to replace. In Florida, inspections commonly run about $250 to $500. Most lenders expect one, and a licensed contractor can perform it.

How do I know if vacant land can support a septic system?

You do not know for certain until a site evaluation reads the soil and the seasonal high water table. A real-estate contract on raw land can be made contingent on a passing site evaluation. The result determines what system the lot supports and how much it will cost.

Could springs rules add cost to a property I am buying?

Yes. If the parcel is inside a Silver Springs or Rainbow Springs Priority Focus Area, a new or replacement system may have to be an advanced nutrient-reducing (ENR) system, which adds significant cost. Check the FDEP Priority Focus Area map before you close.

What records should I ask the seller for?

Ask for the original construction permit, any repair or modification permits, the number of bedrooms the system was permitted for, and recent pumping or maintenance records. A mismatch between the permitted bedrooms and the actual house is a common and costly problem.