A septic tank that's working correctly should be quiet, odourless and out of mind. The system gives off warning signs long before it fails completely — catching them early is the difference between a routine repair and an emergency replacement.
Urgent
If you have visible sewage on the surface, call a specialist the same day. Standing effluent is a public health risk and signals the system is no longer containing waste.
Seven signs to watch for
1
Slow drainage throughout the house
Multiple fixtures draining slowly at once (not just one sink) usually means the tank is full, the outlet is partially blocked, or the drainage field is backing up.
2
Gurgling from drains or toilets
Air drawn back up through traps as water drains — a signature of a system struggling to clear.
3
Bad smells
Inside the house (from drains or vents), outside around the tank, or across the drainage field. Persistent smells mean gases aren't venting properly or effluent is surfacing.
4
Unusually lush or boggy ground over the drainage field
Grass greener than elsewhere, spongy underfoot, or waterlogged after dry spells — the drainage field is saturated and effluent is surfacing.
5
Needing to empty the tank more often
If your emptying interval has dropped from two years to six months, something upstream has changed — soakaway failure, baffle collapse or a crack letting groundwater in.
6
Backing up indoors
Sewage coming up through lowest-level drains (downstairs toilets, showers, washing-machine outlets). Stop running water and call a specialist.
7
Age of the system
Concrete tanks from the 1970s–80s are often reaching end of life — crack or baffle failure becomes increasingly likely after 40–50 years.
What to do next
If you recognise two or more of these signs, book a site survey. A specialist can often distinguish between a repair (blocked outlet, failed pump, baffle replacement — £200–£1,500) and a full system replacement (£8,000–£20,000), and in many cases a well-timed repair buys years before replacement is actually needed.
Preventative maintenance
Empty every 12–24 months, avoid putting anything non-biodegradable down the drain, keep wipes and fats out of the system entirely, and have the drainage field inspected every 5–10 years.