Ontario · Selling · 2026

Can you sell a house with a failed septic? Yes — but read this first.

There is no law stopping the sale. The real question is what the failure does to your price, your buyer pool and your legal exposure — and whether fixing it first puts more money in your pocket than selling around it.

The math that decides it: buyers do not discount by the repair cost — they discount by the repair cost plus a fear premium, routinely $10,000–$25,000 more than the actual fix. On most properties, replacing the system before listing returns more than it costs.

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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.

Look inside a real package →

Your four ways to sell it

1Fix it first — replace the system, sell with a fresh permit file and inspection record. Strongest price, biggest buyer pool, cleanest close
2Disclose and discount — sell as-is with the failure documented in the listing. Fast, honest, and expensive: expect the fear premium off your price
3Credit at closing — agree on a holdback or credit sized to a real quote. Keeps the deal alive but invites renegotiation at every step
4Permit-in-hand listing — the smart middle: get the replacement designed and PERMITTED before listing, and sell with an approved plan the buyer can execute. Costs you the paperwork, not the excavation
Option 4 is the underused one

An approved permit converts the great unknown (“what will this cost us?”) into a line item (“the approved design, priced at $X”). Fear premium gone, and your cash outlay is the design-and-permit work — which Ontario lets you do yourself as the owner for a fraction of the $800–$2,000 professionals charge.

What you must disclose — and what silence costs

A known failed septic is a latent defect affecting habitability: conceal it and the buyer’s lawyer will find the inspection file at the health unit afterward — that is a lawsuit you lose. Disclose in writing, keep it factual: what failed, when, the reports you hold, any quotes or permits. Honest paper protects the deal AND the price; the failure discounts it once — the cover-up discounts it in court, years later, with costs. This is not legal advice; a real-estate lawyer should see your specific wording.

The rural-financing trap

Many lenders will not advance on a property with a documented failed system, and insurers ask too. A cash-only buyer pool is a small, sharky pool. This — more than the discount — is why as-is sales drag: the buyers who CAN close are exactly the ones who negotiate hardest.

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.

If you fix it: the seller’s timeline

From first call to final inspection, a straightforward replacement runs 6–12 weeks in season — the process is here. The paperwork (design, drawings, permit) is the long pole owners control: produce your own permit package in days instead of waiting weeks in a designer’s queue, then let a contractor dig while you stage the house. A seller under time pressure saves more from a faster permit than from any quote-shopping. What the whole job costs is on the replacement cost page; what quotes should look like is here.

Selling questions, answered straight

Is it illegal to sell a house with a failed septic in Ontario?

No. Selling is legal; concealing a known failure is what creates liability. Disclose in writing and the sale itself is routine.

Does a septic inspection happen automatically when selling?

Not province-wide — but most rural buyers’ agents now demand one as a condition, and some municipalities require re-inspection reports at sale. Assume the system will be looked at.

How much does a failed septic reduce a sale price?

Typically the replacement cost plus $10,000–$25,000 of fear premium, and it shrinks the buyer pool to cash. That premium is the money fixing-first recovers.

Can the buyer take over my open septic file?

Permits and orders attach to the property, so yes — deals can be written around an approved permit or an open order. Buyers accept a plan far more readily than a mystery.

Selling? Get the number first.

The free 2-minute check gives you the replacement range for your lot — the number every conversation with agents, buyers and lawyers starts from.

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

Failure

Failed inspection: next steps

The file behind the disclosure — and how to close it.

Costs

Replacement cost, in full

The real number to weigh against the discount.

Process

The replacement process

The 6–12 week timeline before listing day.