Guide · United Kingdom

What a septic tank installation costs in the UK: quotes range from £1,600 to £18,000 and nobody official publishes a thing

In short
  • No UK government publishes an installation price. Not gov.uk, not the Environment Agency, not SEPA. Every figure below was published by someone who wants the job.
  • And they do not agree: “£1600” for a small install at one firm against “£18,000 or more” at another. Eleven times.
  • The tank is the cheap part: £800–1,200 in polyethylene. The drainage field is £2,500–8,000 — three to seven times the tank.
  • Labour is where the quotes really fight: “£150 to £250 per day” over 2–7 days at one source, “£4,000–£7,000” at another.
  • The line that decides your price is the one nobody controls: your ground. Everything else is haulage.
Checked 15 July 2026 — seven price guides that never once agree

We went looking for a government figure for what it costs to put a septic tank in the ground in Britain. There is none. Emptying a tank has one official price — Northern Ireland Water publishes it. Installing one has none at all.

So the market prices itself. Price This Please: a small installation is "£1600". Tanks Nationwide: "Septic Tank | Typical Cost (Installed) | £2,000 – £3,500". MyJobQuote: "The average cost to install a septic tank is around £5,500." BookaBuilderUK: "In most UK cases, homeowners are spending between £6,000 and £18,000 for a full replacement, though more complex sites can exceed this." Homeseptic: "around £8,000-£12,000". Builders Yard UK: "cost of septic tank installation typically ranges from £12,000 to £20,000". SepticTank.co.uk: "traditional installations costing £18,000 or more".

Read that column downwards and something breaks. Tanks Nationwide's ceiling sits below MyJobQuote's average; MyJobQuote's average sits below Builders Yard's floor. The ranges never meet, so no "market rate" is being approximated here — there are several different jobs wearing the same three words. Price This Please will do the whole installation for less than Builders Yard charges for labour alone. Neither is lying. Neither has seen your garden.

Before any number: no British government body publishes what a septic tank installation costs. Not gov.uk, not the Environment Agency, not SEPA, not NRW. We went looking specifically, and there is nothing.

That absence is the market. Every figure in this article — every figure you will find anywhere — was published by a company that would like to do the work. So the useful thing is not to average them. It is to notice where they disagree, because that is where the money moves.

And they disagree spectacularly.

The eleven-times problem

Price This Please — small install£1,600
BookaBuilderUK — typical, low end£6,000
BookaBuilderUK — typical, high end£18,000+
septictank.co.uk — “traditional installations”£18,000+

Price This Please says a small tank installation is “£1600”, and an above-ground tank “will be between £900 and £1400”. septictank.co.uk speaks of “traditional installations costing £18,000 or more”. BookaBuilderUK’s itemised guide lands on “Total typical cost | £6,000 to £18,000+”.

Both ends are probably honest. They are describing different jobs and calling them the same thing.

The quote, taken apart

This is BookaBuilderUK’s own itemisation, and it is the most useful document in the subject because it shows where the money actually sits:

LineCost
Materials — tank, pipework, chambers, aggregates, membranes£2,000 to £6,000
Labour — groundworkers, plant operators, installation teams£2,500 to £7,000
Drainage field or soakaway£2,500 to £8,000
Removal and disposal of old tank£500 to £2,000
Site survey and percolation testing£300 to £1,000
Building control and compliance£200 to £600
Total typical£6,000 to £18,000+
Read the drainage field line against the tank price. The tank, in polyethylene, is "£800–£1,200". The field is "£2,500 to £8,000".

The thing you shop for — the tank, the brand, the litres, the Klargester-versus-Graf argument — is between a tenth and a fifth of the bill. The thing nobody shops for, because you cannot put it in a basket, costs several times more.

And the field’s price is not set by a manufacturer. It is set by your Vp. The formula is At = p × Vp × 0.25: four people on free-draining loam might need 40 m² of trench; the same four on heavy ground need 80 m². Same house, same tank, double the field, and the field is the expensive half.

Which is why the eleven-times range exists, and why nobody can quote you honestly over the phone. They are not quoting a tank. They are quoting your soil, and they have not seen it yet.

Labour: the line where the sources really fall out

Two firms describe labour in ways that cannot both be describing the same work.

MyJobQuote and Price This Please: “Septic tank specialists will charge £150 to £250 per day.” over “2 - 7 days”. Multiply the worst case: seven days at £250 is £1,750.

Builders Yard UK: labour is “£4,000–£7,000”.

That is a four-fold gap on the same line item.

When you get quotes, ask which one you are being sold. "£200 a day for four days" and "£5,000 for labour" are both plausible sentences, and one of them is four times the other. The difference is usually whether "labour" means a man with a spade or a team with a 13-tonne machine, a driver, spoil haulage and reinstatement.

The lines that appear after you say yes

One source is refreshingly honest about what a quote usually covers: “Most written quotes from reputable installers will include the tank supply, excavation, installation, and connection to the property’s drainage.”

And then lists what is “Often Charged Extra”:

Percolation / soil testing£300–1,000 — and it should happen BEFORE the quote
Excess spoil removalskip hire — a big hole makes a big pile
Ground reinstatement£200–800 — lawn, path or drive
Concrete base or anchoring£300–800 — required in wet ground
Planning / permit fees£150–600
Additional excavation“difficult ground” — roughly £400+ beyond a straightforward dig

Every one of those is a real cost that a low headline price simply moves to a later invoice. The spoil is the one people never picture: a drainage field is a lot of trench, and the soil that comes out has to go somewhere that is not your garden.

Concrete anchoring deserves a note, because it connects to a failure mode rather than a fee. Tanks in wet ground get lifted by groundwater — the hydrostatic lift that cracks pipework. The concrete base is not the installer padding the bill. It is what stops your tank floating.

The tank, by material

Every published total · July 2026 Nobody official publishes one. These are the firms who would do the work.
Who says itTheir total
Price This Please (small tank)£1600
Tanks Nationwide£2,000 – £3,500
MyJobQuote (average)around £5,500
BookaBuilderUK£6,000 to £18,000
Homeseptic£8,000-£12,000
Builders Yard UK£12,000 to £20,000
SepticTank.co.uk£18,000 or more
Four of these seven share no overlap at all. That is not scatter — that is seven different jobs.

For completeness, since it is the part everyone focuses on:

MaterialPrice
Plastic (polyethylene)£800–£1,200
Fibreglass£1,000–£1,400
Concrete£1,200–£2,000+

We checked this ourselves rather than trusting a summary. A GRAF Carat 2,700 L — the size Approved Document H sets as the minimum for up to four users — came out at £925 at The Tank Shop, £935 at Direct Drainage and £1,176.80 including VAT (£980.67 ex VAT) at JDP, on their live pages. That sits neatly inside the polyethylene band above.

Use the septic tank size calculator to get the capacity the regulation actually requires before you price anything — the litres come from a formula, not from a salesman’s estimate of your family.

How to read a quote

  1. Insist the percolation test happens first. A quote produced without one is a guess about the most expensive line in it. Yes, it costs £300–1,000. It is the cheapest thing here.
  2. Find the drainage field line. If it is not itemised, the quote is incomplete — that is the biggest single number in the job.
  3. Ask what “labour” means. £150–250 a day for 2–7 days, or £4,000–7,000? Both exist. Only one is in your quote.
  4. Ask for the extras list in writing. Spoil, reinstatement, concrete base, permits. Get them priced now or receive them later.
  5. Do not negotiate on the tank. You might save £250 across the whole market. The field and the ground are where the thousands are.
  6. Two quotes minimum, and compare line by line, not total to total. Totals hide which job each firm is describing.
Is there an official installation price?

No. No British body publishes one, caps one, or names anyone who does.

Which guide should I believe?

Whichever describes your ground. They are pricing sites, not tanks.

Frequently asked questions

How much does it cost to install a septic tank in the UK?

There is no official answer — no UK government body publishes installation prices, so every figure comes from a company that would like to do the work. Those companies range from “£1600” for a small installation (Price This Please) to “£18,000 or more” (septictank.co.uk). BookaBuilderUK's itemised guide puts the typical total at “£6,000 to £18,000+”. The honest summary: a simple job on good ground with easy access is a few thousand; a hard site with a big drainage field is five figures.

Why is the range so enormous?

Because the tank is a small part of it and the ground is most of it. The tank in polyethylene is “£800–£1,200”. The drainage field is “£2,500 to £8,000” — several times the tank. A site where a digger reaches the spot and the soil takes water is a cheap job. A site with clay, a high water table, no access, or spoil to cart away is a different job with the same tank in it.

What should a written quote include?

One source says most reputable quotes cover “the tank supply, excavation, installation, and connection to the property's drainage.” The same source lists what is “Often Charged Extra: Percolation/soil testing, Excess spoil removal (skip hire), Ground reinstatement (lawn, path, drive), Concrete base or anchoring (if required), Planning permission or permit fees, Additional excavation for difficult ground.” Every item on that second list is a bill you will receive after you have agreed a price.

What does the tank itself cost by material?

One commercial breakdown gives: “Plastic (polyethylene)... £800–£1,200”, “Fibreglass... £1,000–£1,400”, “Concrete... £1,200–£2,000+”. Our own check of live seller pages found a GRAF Carat 2,700 L at £925 to £1,177 depending on the shop, which is consistent.

Do I need building control approval?

Budget for it: itemised guides put “Building control and compliance costs” at “£200 to £600”, and another at “Permits and building control approval | £150–£400”. That is the fee, not the process — the process is that a septic tank is drainage work and Building Control has a view on it.

How long does the job take?

Sources quoting a daily rate assume “2 - 7 days”. That is the digging and fitting; it does not include the percolation test that should happen before anyone quotes, or the reinstatement of whatever the digger drove over.

Rob Hollis

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.

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