Septic Pumping Pine Island FL

No central sewer anywhere on the island. Tanks and drainfields on every lot, and the water on every side is what makes them complicated.

Mon–Sat, 7:00 AM – 7:00 PM · Emergency service 24/7

There is no utility main on Pine Island and no project queued to bring one. The tank in your yard is the property's permanent wastewater system.

An island that never got a main

Lee County's 2023 Countywide Wastewater Management Plan put about 75% of the county population on centralized sewer. Pine Island sits in the other share, and unlike the septic north of Cape Coral above Pine Island Road, none of it is queued for conversion. When a drainfield gives up here, there is no main at the street to tie into.

Why the water changes the system design

The island takes about 57 inches of rain a year, about two-thirds of it between June and September, so the 24 inches of separation Florida requires between the drainfield and the seasonal high water table under Rule 62-6.006(2), F.A.C. is not a given. Where the lot cannot make it, clean sand fill raises the absorption surface and you are building a mound rather than a conventional field at natural grade.

A septic tank access lid at ground level in a Southwest Florida lawn
A riser brings a buried access point to grade so future service starts with a visible lid.

Getting a truck to the island

Everything reaches the island the same way: west on Pine Island Road, through Matlacha, over the bridge. There is no alternate route, so call with the address and preferred service window. A scheduled inspection can catch a filling tank before it becomes an emergency.

Groves, farms, and houses that sit empty

A house occupied four months a year sits unwatched: a clogged effluent filter announces itself to nobody until someone opens the place up in October. Have the tank looked at on the way back in.

The rest of the island

St James City at the south tip is canal-front and seasonal. Bokeelia at the north tip is rural and entirely on septic. Matlacha, the gateway, is tight lots with water on both sides.

For routine service, start with septic pumping. If the yard is already telling you something (soggy ground, a green stripe, slow drains), read drainfield repair first.

Land application of septage has been prohibited in Florida since January 1, 2016 under Fla. Stat. 381.0065(6). Septage pumped from your tank must be hauled to a receiving facility approved by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection.

Pine Island septic questions

Is there central sewer anywhere on Pine Island?

No. The island runs on onsite systems from St James City at the south end to Bokeelia at the north, with Pine Island Center and the groves in between. There is no utility main to connect to.

Does the Cape Coral UEP sewer conversion apply to Pine Island?

It does not. The Utilities Extension Project is a City of Cape Coral program funded by assessments on Cape Coral parcels. Pine Island is unincorporated Lee County. No Notice of Availability is coming, no 180-day connection clock applies, and nothing about the UEP obligates an island owner to do anything.

How often should a Pine Island tank be pumped?

Every three to five years for a normal household. That is EPA and UF/IFAS guidance, not a Florida rule: the state sets no required interval for a conventional tank. A seasonal house sitting empty half the year stretches toward the long end; a full-time household on a small tank with a garbage disposal plans on the short end.

Why is a drainfield so expensive to replace out here?

Because the island rarely gives you the vertical room the rule requires. Florida wants 24 inches between the bottom of the absorption surface and the seasonal high water table under Rule 62-6.006(2), F.A.C. Where a lot cannot make that, clean sand fill raises it and you are building a mound.

Do I pay extra because you have to cross the bridge?

Possibly. Whether Pine Island fits a route depends on where the truck starts its day, since a Bokeelia call and a Pine Island Center call are not the same drive. Ask when you book.

My lot backs onto water. Does that change where the tank can go?

Yes. Chapter 62-6, F.A.C. sets minimum separation distances between an onsite system and surface water, and on a narrow waterfront lot those setbacks often decide whether a replacement drainfield fits. The governing distance depends on the water body and your site plan. The Florida Department of Health in Lee County applies it and will tell you: 239-690-2100.

The system flooded during a storm. What do I do first?

Stop putting water into it. During Hurricane Ian in September 2022, more than 12 inches of rain and surge across Lee County put onsite systems underwater. A saturated drainfield cannot accept effluent however empty the tank is, so pumping right away often just refills the tank with groundwater. UF/IFAS publication AE591 covers flooded systems.

Booking a pump-out?

Tell us where on the island you are and roughly when the tank was last pumped. We will tell you what the visit typically runs.

Call (239) 555-0173 Septic pumping · Cape Coral & Lee County