Septic site prep that respects the perc test.
We stage the drainfield for the NC soil & perc evaluation, keep equipment off the field footprint, and grade the diversion that protects it — across Buncombe, Henderson, Transylvania and Haywood. The work is keyed to your lot’s soil drainage class, not a one-size script. Free on-site estimate, 24hr callback.
In North Carolina the septic permit is decided by a county soil & site evaluation (the “perc test”), and good septic site preparation makes that evaluation pass and the approved system buildable. The soil’s USDA drainage class drives the outcome: most WNC ridge soils — Evard and Ashe at 28.1–40.2% slope — are well to somewhat excessively drained, so slope and depth-to-rock limit the field, while Henderson’s Dillard valley bottoms are an Aquic soil with a seasonal water table (only 3.7% slope) where conventional fields most often fail. We clear and stage the field without compacting it, cut a diversion to keep runoff off the trenches, and place engineered fill where the design calls for it. Exact scope comes from a free on-site estimate.
The perc test is a soil verdict — site prep works around it
In North Carolina, you don’t pass or fail a perc test by pouring water in a hole. The county Environmental Health department sends a soil scientist to evaluate the ground: soil texture and structure, depth to rock, depth to the seasonal high water table, and slope, classifying the proposed area as suitable, provisionally suitable, or unsuitable for a system. That verdict is set by the soil — we can’t change it. What good septic site preparation does is make sure the evaluator sees the best available ground, and that the dirt work around the approved field doesn’t wreck it.
WNC’s two-sided soil problem
The USDA-NRCS soil survey explains why septic siting here is unlike the flatlands. Across Buncombe (NC021), Henderson (NC089), and Transylvania (NC175), the dominant ridge series — Evard, Ashe, Porters, Cullasaja, Unaka — are well drained or somewhat excessively drained. On those lots percolation is rarely the problem; slope and depth to rock are, because North Carolina limits where a field can sit on grade and Ashe ridges run a typical 40.2%. The opposite case is the one worth naming: Henderson County’s Dillard bottomland near the French Broad and Mud Creek is an Aquic soil — only moderately well drained, with a seasonal water table at just 3.7% slope. That is where a conventional field most often comes back unsuitable and an engineered or fill system gets specified.
Stage the field, don’t compact it
A drainfield works by letting effluent move down through undisturbed soil structure. The fastest way to ruin a lot the county just approved is to drive a loaded truck across the field area — it smears the structure, collapses pore space, and can turn a provisionally-suitable Tate or Evard soil into one that no longer accepts water. So we flag and rope off the approved field and its repair area, route every machine and material pile outside it, and keep the topsoil and structure intact until the installer trenches. The pad and driveway grading happens outside that footprint.
The diversion is the other half of the job
Because WNC’s ridge soils shed water fast, a summer downpour will sheet straight across a hillside field unless it’s intercepted. We grade a diversion swale upslope of the drainfield to a stable outlet so stormwater never overloads the trenches, then crown the finished grade so the lot sheds away from both the field and the foundation. On the Dillard valley flats the problem inverts — the water table comes up — so there the answer is raised, drained engineered fill and a curtain drain. Either way it’s the same discipline we bring to every steep lot, applied to protect the septic system. See drainage solutions and site preparation.
Ridge Ashe is too steep / too fast; valley Dillard is too wet. The soil’s drainage class decides the system.
Drainage class & slope, mapped to the perc outlook.
Dominant USDA-NRCS soil series in the counties we serve, with drainage class and typical slope, mapped to the likely septic soil-evaluation outlook. The county soil scientist makes the call — but these are the soils your lot is most likely sitting on, and why the verdict swings the way it does.
| Soil series | County | Drainage class | Typical slope | Perc / soil-eval outlook | What site prep watches |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tate | Henderson | Well drained | 13% | Most favorable | Well-drained foot-slope soil at gentle grade — the friendliest WNC ground for a conventional trench field. |
| Evard | Henderson | Well drained | 28.1% | Workable | Well drained, but slope often forces a benched, contour-laid field or a low-pressure-pipe design. |
| Cullasaja | Transylvania | Well drained | 31.6% | Workable | Well drained over saprolite/cobbles; depth-to-rock and slope are the variables to prove on the site visit. |
| Ashe | Henderson | Somewhat excessively drained | 40.2% | Slope-limited | Somewhat excessively drained AND steep — perc may be fine, but slope and depth-to-rock often cap usable field area. |
| Clifton | Buncombe | Well drained | 16% | Clay-break risk | Well drained at surface, but clay-over-saprolite can perch water — the soil scientist looks for the restrictive horizon. |
| Dillard | Henderson | Moderately well drained | 3.7% | High-water-table risk | Aquic soil with a seasonal high water table — the classic WNC spot for a failed perc or a required engineered/LPP system. |
Henderson County envelope: slope runs from 0% in the Dillard bottoms to 95% on the steepest ridge series — the full range a drainfield has to be sited within. Transylvania lots run larger (median 1.24 ac, 56.4% at or above an acre), which often gives more room to find a suitable field area.
Three jobs, sequenced so the field survives.
Septic site preparation isn’t one task — it’s clearing, protecting, and grading around an approved drainfield in the right order. Here’s how it breaks down on a typical WNC lot. Exact scope and pricing come from a free on-site estimate after we see the soil report and the flags.
Clear brush and trees off the proposed field and repair area so the county evaluator can dig test pits — on Evard or Cullasaja ground we clear light, leaving the soil structure intact.
Rope off the approved footprint, route all traffic outside it, and grade a diversion swale upslope so a summer storm can’t overload the trenches on a fast-draining Ashe ridge.
On Dillard bottomland with a high water table, place drained engineered fill to the installer’s spec and set a curtain drain — plus the house pad and driveway, graded outside the field.
The septic system is permitted through your county Environmental Health office; the grading falls under the NC 1-acre disturbance rule only on larger sites. Exact pricing always comes from a free on-site estimate — call (828) 510-7217 or use the form above. See site preparation and grading & excavation.
Read the report, protect the field.
Clear for the eval
We clear the proposed field and repair area so the county soil scientist can dig and classify the ground.
Flag & protect
Rope off the approved footprint and route every machine outside it — no compaction on the field.
Divert & grade
Cut the diversion above the field, build the pad and driveway outside it, place engineered fill if the design needs it.
Hand off ready
The installer trenches an undisturbed, dry, runoff-protected field — the way the permit assumed it would be.
Perc test & septic site prep — common questions
What is septic site preparation, and how is it different from the perc test in NC?
Which WNC soils are most likely to fail a perc / soil evaluation?
Can a steep WNC ridge lot still get a septic system?
Why shouldn't equipment drive over the future drainfield?
Do I need a grading permit to prepare a septic site in Western North Carolina?
How do you keep runoff off the drainfield on a mountain lot?
What about the valley flats near Etowah, Mills River, and the French Broad?
Do you do the whole site, or just the septic field area?
Prepping a lot for a septic system in WNC?
Tell us where the lot is and what the soil report says — too-wet bottom or too-steep ridge. We'll stage the field, grade the diversion, and put a real scope in writing, free.