Ontario · Owner-builder · 2026

Can I design my own septic system in Ontario? Yes — here is the exact rule.

Most homeowners assume septic design is locked behind a licence. For your own house, on your own land, it is not. The exemption is written directly into the Building Code — and it is the reason you do not have to spend $800–$2,000 on paperwork.

The rule: under Div. C 3.2.5.1 of the Ontario Building Code, a homeowner designing a sewage system for their own residence is exempt from the BCIN qualification requirements that apply to professional designers. Design for anyone else, or for money, and you need qualifications.

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Costs, permits, contractor vetting, and the owner-builder path — updated for the 2026 Building Code.

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1 Something’s wrong2 What it costs3 The permit4 Who designs it5 The paperwork6 Approval
The part nobody tells you
Designers charge $800–$2,000 just for the paperwork in these quotes.

Ontario law lets you do that part yourself, on your own property. OntarioSepticDesigner.ca turns your answers into the same 26-page package the township clerk sees every day — calculations, drawings, forms, all of it.

Look inside a real package →

Where the right comes from

Ontario regulates who may “design” on-site sewage systems. Professionals need a BCIN — a Building Code Identification Number — earned by passing provincial exams. But Division C of the Code carves out a specific exemption: the owner of a residence may take responsibility for the design of their own house and its systems, including the sewage system. Schedule 1 of the permit application has a box for exactly this: exemption from registration and qualification.

This is not a loophole. It is the same principle that lets you wire a light switch or frame a wall in your own home: your house, your responsibility, inspected by the same officials to the same Code as everyone else.

What “designing” actually means here

Nobody is asking you to invent anything. A Class 4 septic design is a fixed sequence of Code calculations: your bedroom count sets the daily flow, the flow sets the tank size, your soil’s percolation time sets the bed size, and two clearance tables set where everything can sit on the lot. Then it all gets drawn: a scaled site plan and a cross-section. The full paperwork list is here.

The honest part

The math is not hard — it is unforgiving. A wrong T-time or a missed neighbour’s well fails the review, not partially, completely. That is why the software checks every number and every distance before you print. Same rules, no missed lines.

Where the exemption ends

Someone else’s property — you cannot design for a friend, a client, or a rental you do not live in
For compensation — the moment money changes hands, BCIN rules apply
Over 10,000 L/day — large systems leave Part 8 entirely and need engineering
Where the authority requires more — some difficult sites trigger a demand for professional design; the authority always has that power

Design it yourself, build it yourself — or split the job

The design exemption and the installation question are separate. You can design your own system and hire an excavation contractor to dig it. You can also build it yourself — the same owner-builder principle covers construction on your own property. Many owners split it: design and paperwork themselves, machine work hired by the day.

The $18,950 line that never appears on a quote

A real worked example: 3-bedroom bungalow, conventional bed. Tank supplied and set, pipe, stone, fabric, one day of machine and labour, permit allowance — $13,049 with HST. The same job quoted at $32,000. The gap is design fees, markup, and labour you may not need to buy.

Two minutes on the free checker shows the numbers your own lot generates — daily flow, tank size, risk level — before anyone quotes you.

What the reviewer holds you to

Exactly what they hold a professional to. The examiner does not grade on a curve for owners — and that is the system working as intended. Your worksheets get re-checked, your setbacks get measured against the site, and your test pit gets inspected open. Bring a complete, correct package and owner-built applications move exactly as fast as designer-built ones. Here is the whole permit process, step by step.

Design questions, answered straight

Do I need a BCIN to design my own septic system?

No. The homeowner exemption in Div. C 3.2.5.1 covers the design of a sewage system for your own residence. Schedule 1 has an exemption box for exactly this case.

Can I design a system for my cottage?

Yes, if you own it — the exemption applies to your own residential property, including seasonal dwellings.

Can my handy neighbour design it for me?

Not legally, unless they hold a BCIN. The exemption belongs to the owner. What a neighbour can do is help you understand your own design.

Does the township treat owner designs differently?

Same review, same Code, same inspections. Complete and correct is all they care about.

What if my lot is complicated — high water, bedrock, tight setbacks?

The Code still allows you to design it, but the design gets harder: raised beds, imported fill, sometimes advanced treatment. Run the free check first; if your lot flags red, get local eyes on it before you invest in paperwork.

The rule says you can. The software makes sure it is right.

Answer the questions, check every distance against the Code, print the package the township recognizes. $99.99 instead of $800–$2,000.

Ontario Septic Watch

Written by Harvey Juric — building and septic work in Simcoe County since 1979. Cost figures are planning estimates only; actual pricing depends on suppliers, trucking distance, local labour and site conditions.

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