Cesspit vs septic tank vs treatment plant: same price to install, ten times the difference to own
- Install prices are nearly identical: cesspit £3,000–6,000, septic tank £3,000–6,000, treatment plant £5,000–15,000+. The purchase price tells you almost nothing.
- Running costs are a different universe: cesspit £1,500–3,500 a year, septic tank £150–400, treatment plant £300–600. That is the whole decision.
- Cesspits are illegal in Scotland. In England they are “only permitted as a last resort if the property's soil completely fails a percolation test”.
- One useful crumb: cesspit emptying is “VAT exempt for domestic users” — the only tax break in this subject.
- You do not choose between these three. Your percolation test and your outfall choose for you.
Before any contractor opens his mouth about price, the state has already told you which of these is the expensive one. It did it in litres, and almost nobody reads that far.
Gov.uk requires of a new cesspool that you "get planning permission and building regulations approval" and "make sure it has a minimum capacity of 18,000 litres per 2 users (plus another 6,800 litres per each extra user)". Approved Document H, paragraph 1.18, on the septic tank: "Septic tanks should have a capacity below the level of the inlet of at least 2,700 litres (2.7m³) for up to 4 users. The size should be increased by 180 litres for each additional user."
Read those two together and the argument is finished. A family of four must bury a cesspit of 31,600 litres and a septic tank of 2,700 — same people, same house, same drains, and the lawful vessel is more than ten times larger in one case than the other.
That is not the regulator being arbitrary. A septic tank only has to hold what is settling right now, because the liquid leaves continuously through the drainage field. A cesspit has to hold everything you will produce between one lorry and the next, because nothing leaves it at all. The volume is the design, and the design is the running cost.
So the litres are not a technicality buried in a PDF. They are the earliest honest warning you get, and they arrive free, before the first quote.
Three systems, one decision, and the sales conversation gets it backwards almost every time — because the purchase price, the thing everybody compares, is the least informative number in the whole exercise.
Here is the comparison that matters, from Kernow Septic Services, who publish both halves:
| Install cost | Annual running cost | |
|---|---|---|
| Cesspit | £3,000–£6,000 | £1,500–£3,500 |
| Septic tank | £3,000–£6,000 | £150–£400 |
| Treatment plant | £5,000–£15,000+ | £300–£600 |
Read the first column: a cesspit and a septic tank cost the same to install. Now read the second: one of them costs ten times more to own.
At the point of purchase, the two look identical. Same money, same hole, same lorry, same afternoon. Nothing in the transaction tells you that one of them has an invisible subscription attached.
And the subscription is not small. The difference between £250 a year and £2,500 a year, over twenty years, is £45,000 — several times what either system cost to install. The cesspit is not a cheaper system. It is a hire purchase agreement with no final payment.
The reason it does not feel like that is the instalment size. £250 nine times a year never triggers a decision. A £10,000 replacement quote does. So people keep paying the larger amount because it arrives in smaller pieces.
What each one actually does
The three differ in exactly one respect: how much of the treatment they do themselves.
- A cesspit has, in the regulation’s words, “no openings except for the inlet, access for emptying and ventilation”. It fills. That is the design.
- A septic tank is never the whole system. The Building Regulations do not describe one without its sequel — “Any septic tank and its form of secondary treatment” — because it only settles solids and hands the liquid to a drainage field, which does the real work.
- A treatment plant does the biology on site. As GRAF describes it, “a treatment plant will break down the solids by introducing oxygen into the system… The treated sewage is then discharged out of the tank into a soakaway or if permitted to a watercourse”.
That last clause is the only reason to buy the dearest option: a septic tank cannot discharge to a watercourse and a treatment plant can.
The cesspit’s running cost, worked through
Homeseptic does the arithmetic in public, which is rare and useful:
“A 24,000L cesspit will cost approximately £600 to have emptied and is VAT exempt for domestic users. So if you need to have the tank emptied every 40 days then you are looking at an annual cost of £5,400.”
Nine visits a year, £600 a time, £5,400. That is above Kernow’s £1,500–3,500 band and above SAM Conveyancing’s “Annual running bills: £2,500+ per year” — because it is a big cesspit emptied often. The number is not a constant; it is your water use, translated into money.
Where you are not allowed to choose
| Users | Cesspit (gov.uk) | Septic tank (AD H §1.18) |
|---|---|---|
| 2 | 18,000 L | 2,700 L |
| 4 | 31,600 L | 2,700 L |
| 6 | 45,200 L | 3,060 L |
Two hard constraints that remove the decision entirely.
Scotland. Homeseptic states it flatly: “Cesspits are illegal in Scotland. In England, you can have a Cesspit”. If you are north of the border, the cesspit column of that table does not exist for you.
England’s last-resort rule. SAM Conveyancing: a cesspit is “only permitted as a last resort if the property’s soil completely fails a percolation test”. It is not an alternative to a septic tank. It is what remains when a septic tank has been ruled out by the ground.
And the siting, which quietly rules out plenty of plots: “The cesspit must legally sit at least 7 metres away from any habitable building and 2 metres from any boundary line.” Approved Document H adds the one that actually decides it — a cesspool must be “within 30m of a vehicle access”, because a cesspit a tanker cannot reach is not a system, it is a future emergency.
The decision, in the order it actually happens
Notice that budget appears nowhere in that list. You do not pick a system by price; you find out which ones are lawful on your plot, and the list is usually one item long by the time you have run the percolation test.
It is actually the most consequential purchase decision in the process, because it determines whether you spend £250 a year or £2,500 a year for the next thirty years. A Vp of 40 and a Vp of 110 are the difference between a septic tank and a cesspit, and therefore between £7,500 and £75,000 over that period.
People skip it to save £500, buy the system the salesman recommends, and find out afterwards. That is the expensive order.
Other people’s numbers, for triangulation
Because no two firms agree, here are others on the same question, so you can see the shape rather than trust a point:
- TEKNEKA on septic tanks: “installation costs may be from £5,500 and running costs are from around £180 per year”.
- TEKNEKA on treatment plants: “Installation costs for materials and labour can be from £6,500… running costs of around £600 per annum”.
- SAM Conveyancing on cesspits: “Single tanker emptying [Cesspool]: £150 to £300+ per visit… Annual running bills: £2,500+ per year… Catastrophic failure replacement: £10,000 to £20,000”.
Every one of those is a company with something to sell, and yet the pattern survives all of them: septic tank running costs in the low hundreds, treatment plants a few hundred, cesspits in the thousands. The sources disagree about everything except the ranking.
What to do
- Run the percolation test before you talk to anyone about tanks. It decides which systems are even on your list.
- Ask every quote for the annual cost, in writing. Install price is the number they lead with; running cost is the number you live with.
- If you are in Scotland, cross cesspits off. They are illegal there.
- If you have a cesspit and the ground would take a field, price the conversion against ten years of tankers. Kernow’s own numbers make that comparison lopsided.
- Do not let the cheapest install win. A cesspit and a septic tank cost the same on day one and £45,000 apart by year twenty.
"a minimum capacity of 18,000 litres per 2 users (plus another 6,800 litres per each extra user)" — 31,600 litres for a family of four.
2,700 litres. The law sizes them more than ten times apart.
Frequently asked questions
What is the difference between a cesspit, a septic tank and a treatment plant?
A cesspit stores and does nothing else — no outlet, no treatment. A septic tank settles solids and passes liquid to a drainage field, where the soil does the treatment. A treatment plant does the biology itself, with air, and produces effluent clean enough to enter a watercourse. In that order they treat nothing, half, and all — and in that same order they cost less, then more, to own.
Which is cheapest?
To install, a cesspit and a septic tank are the same: Kernow Septic Services puts both at “£3,000–£6,000”, with a treatment plant at “£5,000–£15,000+”. To own, they are not remotely the same: “Cesspit £1,500–£3,500” a year against “Septic Tank £150–£400” and “Treatment Plant £300–£600”. A cesspit is the cheapest thing to buy and by far the most expensive thing to have.
Can I choose a cesspit to avoid the rules?
No, and it would be an expensive way to try. In England a cesspit is “only permitted as a last resort if the property's soil completely fails a percolation test”. In Scotland it is not an option at all — “Cesspits are illegal in Scotland.” A cesspit is what you are left with when nothing else is lawful, not something you opt into.
How much does emptying a cesspit really cost?
Homeseptic works it through: “A 24,000L cesspit will cost approximately £600 to have emptied and is VAT exempt for domestic users. So if you need to have the tank emptied every 40 days then you are looking at an annual cost of £5,400.” SAM Conveyancing puts single visits at “£150 to £300+ per visit” with “Annual running bills: £2,500+ per year”. The spread depends on your household's water use, because that is literally what fills it.
Is cesspit emptying really VAT free?
Homeseptic states it plainly for domestic users: a cesspit empty “is VAT exempt for domestic users”. It is the only tax relief anywhere in this subject — and it takes 20% off a bill you will be paying nine times a year, which is the point at which you should be asking whether the cesspit itself is the problem.
So how do I actually decide?
You mostly do not. Run the percolation test. If your Vp lands between 12 and 100 and there is room, a septic tank with a drainage field is legal and cheap to run — take it. If the ground fails but there is a watercourse, it is a treatment plant. If the ground fails and there is no watercourse and no sewer, it is a cesspit, and the running cost is the price of the plot's geology.
Researcher & editor, off-mains drainage
Writes independent guides on septic tanks, cesspits and sewage treatment plants for homes off the mains. Cross-checks the general binding rules and the Environment Agency, SEPA, NRW and NIEA against real prices, British Standards and what owners actually report on the forums.