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Septic Alarm Help

Septic Alarm Going Off? Here's What It Means

High water, a failed air pump, or a tripped breaker — how to read the panel, what you can safely check, and when to get a technician out.

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An Aerobic Alarm Is a Warning, Not a Disaster — Yet

The red light or buzzer on your septic control panel means one specific thing: the system needs attention before it becomes a backup.

If your home is on an aerobic septic system — common on newer builds around Wolfforth, south Lubbock County, and acreage developments across the South Plains — the control panel on the wall or a post near the tank is its voice. When the alarm activates, the system has detected one of a short list of problems. None of them fix themselves, but almost none of them are emergencies if you respond within a day or two. Call (806) 583-3554 and describe what the panel shows.

What the alarm usually means

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Why alarms shouldn't be ignored

Texas aerobic systems are typically required to be kept under a maintenance arrangement precisely because they're active machines — pumps, air compressors, floats, chlorinators — and every component on that list eventually fails. An alarm ignored for weeks usually converts a one-part repair into a sewage backup or a spray field discharging untreated water. If your system doesn't currently have a maintenance arrangement, this is the moment to set one up.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I just silence the septic alarm and deal with it later?

Silencing the buzzer is fine — living with the light on is not. Most alarm causes get worse with time and water use, and a high-water alarm can become a backup within days. Call the same day if you can.

My septic alarm went off after heavy rain. Is that normal?

It happens — heavy rain can flood the tanks and trip the high-water float. Minimize water use for a day; if the alarm doesn't clear as the ground drains, the system needs a service visit to make sure the pump is keeping up.

How much does it cost to fix an aerobic septic alarm?

It depends entirely on the cause: a stuck float or breaker issue is minor, an aerator or effluent pump replacement costs more. You'll get a diagnosis and a firm price before any repair is made.

Does an alarm mean my tank needs pumping?

Sometimes. High sludge levels can contribute to high-water alarms, and aerobic tanks do need periodic pumping like any other. The service visit will tell you whether pumping is part of the fix.

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