Ontario · Design worked example · 2026

The 4-bedroom septic design: one line changes, everything follows

Four bedrooms is where family houses — and a lot of new builds — actually live. The design logic is identical to the 3-bedroom case; the inputs are one step bigger, and that one step ripples through the tank, the bed, the footprint and the bill.

The headline numbers: 4 bedrooms designs at Q = 2,000 L/day, needs a 4,500 L two-compartment tank, and on typical T=18 soil a 180 m leaching bed in 6 runs of 30 m. Roughly 25% more system than 3 bedrooms, everywhere.

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Homeowner’s Guide44 pp.

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.

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Step 1 — Daily design flow: Q = 2,000 L/day

The Code’s residential table steps 4 bedrooms to 2,000 L/day base — and the same honesty rules apply harder here: finished floor area over the threshold and high fixture counts push Q further up, and 4-bedroom houses hit those triggers far more often than bungalows. An office with a closet, a den that could take a bed, a basement room with a window — a reviewer counts what a future buyer could sleep in, not what your furniture says.

Step 2 — The tank: 4,500 L minimum

At Q = 2,000 L/day the minimum working capacity steps up to 4,500 L (1,000 gal), two compartments, effluent filter on the outlet. Same install, one size bigger — a few hundred dollars over the 3-bedroom tank, and the pump-out interval math actually improves per person.

Step 3 — The bed: the 25% that costs the most

Your soil T-time Pipe: L = 2,000 × T ÷ 200 Layout
Coarse sand 6 60 m 2 runs × 30 m
Fine sand 10 100 m 4 runs × 25 m
Sandy loam 18 180 m 6 runs × 30 m
Silty loam 30 300 m 10 runs × 30 m

Runs still cap at 30 m on 1.6 m centres. The T=18 bed footprint grows to roughly 30 m × 8.5 m plus margin — on smaller lots the 4-bedroom bed is the thing that decides where the house CANNOT go. T-time from your test holes, explained here; the silty-loam case is where small-lot problems begin in earnest.

Step 4 — Vertical check: same 900 mm, bigger stakes

The unsaturated-clearance rule does not change with bedrooms — but the raised-bed penalty does. Raising a 180 m bed on imported sand moves proportionally more material than the 3-bedroom case: the sand and stone quantities scale with the footprint, and 4-bedroom raised beds regularly clear 300 m³ of fill. Measure the water table before you fall in love with the floor plan.

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.

Step 5 — Paper: identical package, bigger numbers

The package is the same list as any residential system — forms, worksheets, site plan, cross-section — and the same consistency rule: Q, tank and bed must agree across every document, and match the bedroom count on your house drawings (reviewers cross-check against the building permit on new builds). Costs run about 25% over the 3-bedroom system: details on the new-system cost page.

4-bedroom questions, answered straight

What size septic tank for a 4-bedroom house in Ontario?

4,500 L (1,000 gal) minimum working capacity, two compartments, effluent filter.

How big is a 4-bedroom leaching bed?

L = 2,000 × T ÷ 200: from 60 m of pipe on coarse sand to 300 m on silty loam. Typical T=18 ground: 180 m in 6 runs, roughly 30 m × 8.5 m.

Is a 4-bedroom system much more expensive than 3?

About 25% more bed and one tank size up — typically $3,000–$6,000 more conventional, more if raised. The design fee and permit cost the same, which is why owners building 4-bedroom homes save the same $800–$2,000 doing their own paperwork.

We only use 3 of the 4 bedrooms. Can we design for 3?

No — the Code sizes to the house, not the household. A 4-bedroom house designs at 4 bedrooms no matter how many people live there today.

Your lot’s version of these numbers, in 2 minutes

The free check runs the 4-bedroom logic on your soil and water. The $99.99 builder prints the complete township-ready package — consistent across every form.

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.

Keep reading

Design

The 3-bedroom design

The baseline case, every number walked.

New builds

New home septic, in sequence

Where the design fits your build timeline.

Quantities

Sand & stone quantities

What 180 m of bed means in truckloads.