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Septic System Installation in Rome, NY

New install, replacement, mound, pressure, conventional. Oneida County contractor, NYS Department of Health Appendix 75-A compliant. Real price by address.

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Septic Install in Rome typically runs

$8,000
to
$28,000
$8K - $13KConventional gravity system, good soil
$10K - $15KChamber system (Infiltrator), tight site
$13K - $19KPressure distribution, marginal soils
$22K - $28KEngineered mound, high water table
$3.5K - $6.5KTank-only replacement, field still working

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What Backwell Handles in Rome

Backwell installs new septic systems and replaces failed systems across Rome, NY and the rest of Oneida County. Every install is built to NYS Department of Health Appendix 75-A standards and inspected by the local health department before backfill.

Septic Pricing in Rome

Most Rome installs land between $8,000 and $28,000 all in. The driver is your soil, not your house size. A well-perc'd sandy site gets a conventional gravity system at the bottom of that range. A clay-bound lakefront lot gets an engineered mound at the top.

Until we run the perc test, anyone quoting you a hard number is guessing. Our process: free site walk, perc test, written quote based on the actual soil result.

Counties & Soils We Know in This Area

Rome sits in Oneida County. We work septic systems across the full CNY footprint: Onondaga, Oswego, Madison, Oneida, Cayuga, Cortland, Wayne, and Jefferson counties. Each county runs its own health department and inspection process. We file your permit and coordinate with the inspector.

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Septic Systems in Nearby Areas

Geography & Site Conditions in Rome, NY (Oneida County)

Rome sits on the upper Mohawk River in western Oneida County, on the historic portage between the Mohawk and the Wood Creek / Oneida Lake drainages. Soils across the city's commercial and industrial corridors are a mix of Palmyra gravelly loam and Howard gravelly loam on the outwash terraces, Lamson very fine sandy loam on the flatter river and creek flats, and Madrid fine sandy loam on some of the surrounding upland parcels.

The Mohawk River, Wood Creek, and the Erie Canal all cross the city, and the Griffiss International Airport / former Griffiss Air Force Base legacy footprint defines a substantial fraction of the commercially zoned land. Commercial excavation in Rome routinely involves variable historic fill and former industrial subsurface on the Griffiss parcels, dewatering on the river and canal flats, and stormwater design that ties into the Mohawk River watershed. NYS Canal Corp review applies adjacent to the canal. Bedrock is deep across the city's buildable land. Frost depth is substantial given the interior Mohawk Valley climate.