Fair pricing, licensed local pros, and a real person answering when you call. Serving Amarillo, Canyon, Bushland, Panhandle, Claude, and every rural spread inside a 40-mile radius.
Call (806) 615-3390Septic problems don't wait for business hours. If your tank is backing up on a Saturday morning, or the alarm on your aerobic system has been beeping since Sunday night, the last thing you want is a voicemail. When you call the number on this page, a real person picks up, takes down what's going on, and gets a licensed local pro headed your way — usually the same business day.
The Texas Panhandle is septic country. Somewhere between one in three and one in four homes outside Amarillo city limits runs on a private on-site sewage facility (OSSF), and the mix of caliche soil, expansive clay, and freeze-thaw cycles from November through February means those systems work harder here than they would almost anywhere else in Texas. Regular pump-outs — every 3 to 5 years for conventional tanks, more often for aerobic systems — are the single cheapest thing you can do to keep a septic system from turning into a five-figure repair.
Three services cover 95% of the calls this line takes. All dispatched to TCEQ-licensed Amarillo-area pros.
Standard 750–1,500 gallon residential tanks, larger commercial tanks, and grease-trap-adjacent pump-outs when part of a residential system.
Learn more →Spray-head cleaning, chlorine tablet replacement, timer / pump / air compressor checks, and pump-outs on 500–600 gallon aerobic units. Common on Bushland, Colonies, La Paloma and rural Randall County lots.
Learn more →Overflow, sewage in the yard, tanks alarming at 2am. Nights, weekends, holidays.
Learn more →Canyon · Bushland · Panhandle · Claude · Umbarger · Wildorado · Happy · Bishop Hills · Lake Tanglewood · Fritch · Borger (edge) · every rural address between.
If you're between towns and not sure whether you're in the coverage area, call the line and give the intersection or FM road — we'll tell you in 30 seconds. No pressure, no gimmick.
Standard residential septic pump-outs in the Amarillo area run roughly $320 to $450 for a conventional 1,000-gallon tank in an easily accessible location. Aerobic system service calls typically run $150 to $250; a full aerobic pump-out plus service is usually in the $600 to $900 range. Real numbers vary by tank size, access difficulty, how long it's been since the last pump-out, and whether there's a repair needed.
You'll get a firm quote before any work starts — never a "we'll see when we get there" surprise. If a job turns out to need more than the quote, we tell you what and why before the invoice grows. That's the deal.
Prices are typical Amarillo-market ranges as of 2026 and are not a guaranteed quote — the pro who calls you back gives the firm number.
One call, no obligation. Real Panhandle pros, real pricing, real answers.
Every 3 to 5 years for a conventional tank with a household of 2 to 4 people is the standard rule of thumb. Aerobic systems generally need service every 4 months for the chlorine and inspection, with pump-outs every 2 to 3 years. If you have a garbage disposal you use heavily, plan on the shorter end of the range.
If it's a red-light alarm on an aerobic system, yes — the system has stopped safely treating wastewater. If it's on your phone or a smart-home sensor, it might be a low-level warning that can wait until morning. When in doubt, call the line and describe what you see; we can usually tell in a minute of conversation whether it needs a same-day call-out.
Yes. Licensed septic inspections for real estate transactions in Potter and Randall County are one of the more common calls this line takes. Turnaround is usually 48–72 hours from call to signed inspection report.
Everywhere inside a 40-mile radius of Loop 335: Amarillo, Canyon, Bushland, Panhandle, Claude, Umbarger, Wildorado, Happy, Bishop Hills, Lake Tanglewood, Fritch, and edge of Borger. See all service areas.