Serving Fargo–Moorhead & rural Cass / Clay County · 24/7 emergency response for backups and frozen systems
Fargo Septic ProsCall (701) 419-0184

Serving Moorhead, MN — Clay County

Septic services around Moorhead, Minnesota

Moorhead itself is on city sewer — but the townships around it are septic country, and Minnesota plays by its own rules. Rural Clay County systems fall under the state's SSTS (Subsurface Sewage Treatment Systems) regulations, which matter most when a property changes hands.

The biggest practical difference on the Minnesota side of the river is regulatory: Minnesota's SSTS program governs how septic systems are designed, inspected, and certified, and Clay County commonly requires a compliance inspection when a property with a septic system is sold. If you're buying or selling a rural property around Moorhead, build that inspection into your timeline early — a system that fails compliance can become a negotiation over tens of thousands of dollars, and you want that conversation happening before closing, not after.

Beyond the paperwork, the ground doesn't care about the state line: the same Red River Valley clay, the same deep frost, the same 3–5 year pumping rhythm that keeps a drain field alive on either side of the river. Routine service for rural Moorhead, Kragnes, Oakport, and the surrounding townships works exactly like it does in Cass County.

Every septic service, one call

Wondering what a pump-out should cost? Thecost & frequency guide lays out the real numbers for the Fargo–Moorhead area — tank sizes, price ranges, and how often to pump. No email required, no games.

Cold-weather note: once the ground freezes, routine pump-outs get harder to schedule and risers buried under snow take longer to access. If your tank is due, book before freeze-up — and if a line or tank has already frozen, that's an emergency call, not a wait-until-spring problem.

Frequently asked questions

Does Minnesota require a septic inspection when I sell my rural Moorhead property?

Minnesota's SSTS rules make compliance inspections a standard part of rural property transfers, and Clay County commonly requires one at sale. Requirements vary by county and situation, so confirm specifics with Clay County — but plan on needing one, and schedule it early. A failed compliance inspection mid-transaction is a five-figure surprise.

Is septic service different in Minnesota than North Dakota?

The dirt is the same; the paperwork isn't. Minnesota licenses septic work under its SSTS program with its own inspection and certification framework. Day to day — pumping, maintenance, freeze prevention — nothing changes. Where it matters is inspections, upgrades, and new systems, which follow Minnesota rules on the Minnesota side.

Need septic service in Moorhead?

Call for straight answers and a firm quote — or send the form and we'll get back to you same day.

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