Citrus and Hernando counties, Florida
Septic service on the Springs Coast starts with one question: where does your parcel sit?
Springs Coast Septic is a free matching service for homeowners in Citrus and Hernando counties. We connect you with independent licensed local septic contractors for new system installation, drainfield repair and replacement, enhanced nitrogen-reducing (ENR) upgrades, and real-estate septic inspections. Whether the new nitrogen rule reaches your project depends on your parcel, so that is where the planning begins.
The 2025 rule, in one paragraph
Effective December 15, 2025, a permit application to repair or modify a septic system on any size lot inside a spring Priority Focus Area in Citrus or Hernando County must include an enhanced nitrogen-reducing (ENR) system design. The trigger is the permit application, not a home sale.
Sources: Florida Department of Health in Citrus County notice, 2025-10-09; Florida Department of Health in Hernando County notice, 2025-10-10.
What the nitrogen mandate means for a septic project here
Three first-magnitude spring systems drive the rule: Crystal River and Kings Bay, the Homosassa and Chassahowitzka group, and Weeki Wachee. Each has a Basin Management Action Plan (BMAP) under Florida law because its water is impaired by nitrogen, and each BMAP draws a Priority Focus Area (PFA) where septic nitrogen reaches the spring vent fastest. In the Kings Bay springshed, septic tanks are the largest single nitrogen source per the Florida DEP plan documents.
If your parcel is inside a PFA:
a repair or modification permit filed since 2025-12-15 must include an ENR design, on all lot sizes, per the DOH-Citrus and DOH-Hernando notices. One exception exists: the requirement is waived where central sewer will be available within five years, per section 373.807, Florida Statutes.
If your parcel is outside every PFA:
conventional repair and replacement rules still apply, through the same county health department permit. Much of eastern Citrus County and the Brooksville Ridge falls here, but membership is parcel-level, so verify your address on the Florida DEP map rather than assuming from your town name.
Planned septic work, matched to a licensed contractor
The big tickets
New system installation, drainfield and leach field replacement, and the enhanced nitrogen-reducing upgrade the BMAP mandate now requires inside the Priority Focus Areas. These are engineered, permitted projects, and the contractor you are matched with carries them from soil evaluation to final inspection.
The transaction lane
Septic inspections for home purchases and sales, requested by buyers and commonly required by FHA and VA lenders. Florida law sets no point-of-sale inspection mandate (section 381.00651, Florida Statutes), so this lane is due-diligence work, scheduled calmly around your closing.
Repairs and upkeep
Tank, line, and baffle repairs, permitting and soil evaluation support, and routine pumping. When a repair inside a PFA rises to a modification, the ENR rule can apply, and the contractor explains that before work starts.
Not sure whether the rule reaches your address, or what it costs at full price now that both county incentive programs have closed? Start with the guide: Do I need a nitrogen-reducing septic system in Citrus or Hernando County?
Budget at full price, and treat any new funding as upside
An enhanced nitrogen-reducing system costs more than a conventional one. Reported Florida ranges run roughly $15,000 to $35,000 or more installed in a BMAP springs zone, a premium of roughly $8,000 to $20,000 over conventional. Those are labeled estimates triangulated from published cost data, not quotes; the contractor you are matched with prices your parcel.
There is no federal income-tax credit or rebate for a residential septic system or ENR upgrade, per IRS residential-energy guidance. Any budget that assumes one is planning with money that does not exist.
Both county incentive programs are spent. The Citrus County Septic Upgrade Incentive Program was reimbursing up to $7,000 toward approved nitrogen-reducing systems; as of 2026-07-18 it is closed to new applicants with funding exhausted, per the county program page. The Hernando County Septic Upgrade Incentive Program offered up to $7,500 inside the Weeki Wachee Springs PFA, opened applications 2026-03-11, capped at 132 systems, and has been reported funding-expended, per the county program page.
The demand driver is the mandate, not a subsidy. Plan the project at unsubsidized cost, and if either county opens a new funding round, treat it as a bonus.
Three springsheds, one parcel-level question
The Priority Focus Areas radiate out from the spring vents, which is why coastal and western parcels are more likely to sit inside one, while much of the eastern Tsala Apopka and Withlacoochee side sits outside. Town names are a hint, never an answer: check your parcel on the Florida DEP Priority Focus Area map or ask the county health department.
Crystal River / Kings Bay
Citrus County. More than 70 documented spring vents feed Kings Bay, and the Florida DEP BMAP identifies septic tanks as the largest nitrogen source in the springshed. Crystal River and the coastal strip lean inside the PFA.
Homosassa / Chassahowitzka
Citrus County. The spring group behind Homosassa's river bowl and the Chassahowitzka wilderness coast. Parcels around Homosassa and the coastal lowlands lean inside the PFA.
Weeki Wachee
Hernando County. The Weeki Wachee PFA reaches into Spring Hill, the largest community on the Springs Coast, and the Florida DEP BMAP counts over 30,000 septic tanks in the springshed.
Springshed and nitrogen-load figures: Florida DEP Crystal River / Kings Bay BMAP (2018 adoption) and Weeki Wachee BMAP (2018); Priority Focus Areas per the DOH-Citrus (2025-10-09) and DOH-Hernando (2025-10-10) notices.
Tell us about your parcel and project
When you submit this form, your information is shared with a licensed septic contractor for the purpose of scheduling your free inspection or quote.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Springs Coast Septic free for homeowners?
- Yes. Requesting a match costs nothing and carries no obligation. We are paid a referral fee by the professional we match you with, and that fee never increases the price you pay for your project. The full explanation is on our How We Make Money page.
- Who does the septic work?
- An independent state-registered septic tank contractor. Florida registers septic tank contractors under Chapter 489, Part III of the Florida Statutes, and the contractor you are matched with holds that registration, pulls the county health department permit, and performs the work. Springs Coast Septic is a matching service and never performs septic work.
- Do I have to install a nitrogen-reducing system?
- Only if your project triggers the rule. Since December 15, 2025, a permit application to repair or modify a septic system on a parcel inside a spring Priority Focus Area in Citrus or Hernando County must include an enhanced nitrogen-reducing design, per the county health department notices of October 2025. Parcels outside a Priority Focus Area are not covered by that requirement, and membership is decided parcel by parcel, so check your address before assuming either way.
- What areas do you cover?
- All of Citrus and Hernando counties, Florida, including Spring Hill, Crystal River, Homosassa, Weeki Wachee, Brooksville, Inverness, and the surrounding communities.