What An Inspection Covers

More than a glance in the tank.

A real inspection means locating and opening the system, measuring sludge and scum levels, checking the tank structure and baffles, evaluating the drainfield, and testing the components specific to your system type.

You get a clear, documented report on the system's condition and what — if anything — needs attention. No guesswork, no vague "looks fine," and no surprises after the fact.

Perry performing a hands-on septic inspection
Real-Estate & Point-of-Sale

Buying or selling? An inspection is almost always required first.

We handle point-of-sale inspections across the Treasure Valley, with the documentation lenders and title companies need to close.

Thirty-three years of inspections means there are few surprises we haven't already seen. The goal is simple: catch what matters before it becomes the buyer's problem or the seller's deal-breaker.

Canyon Septic working a rural Idaho property
Why Experience Matters

Not every system is inspected the same way.

An inspector who only knows conventional systems will miss things on an aerobic unit or a mound. Each system type has its own failure points, its own components, and its own warning signs.

We're certified across the five major system types and know what trouble looks like on each one — long before it surfaces in the yard.

See the systems we service
Canyon Septic accessing a septic tank for inspection
★★★★★
"Perry, in 20+ years at this house, you were the most informative and took care of us superbly."
— The O'Neals · longtime customer

Need an inspection scheduled?

Point-of-sale, routine, or a second opinion on a system you're worried about — we'll get you a clear answer.