Septic Tanks and Cesspools: 2020 General Binding Rules, BS EN 12566 and Environment Agency Registration

Quick Answer: From 1 January 2020, septic tanks discharging directly to watercourses (rivers, streams, ditches) must comply with the General Binding Rules (GBRs) — meaning either upgrade to a full sewage treatment plant or divert discharge to a drainage field. Properties sold after January 2015 with a direct discharge must address this at point of sale. Cesspools require no treatment but must be pumped out regularly and are not permitted for new installations in most planning contexts. New systems must comply with BS EN 12566.

Summary

Off-mains drainage serves approximately 5% of UK properties — around 1.3 million homes — mostly in rural areas without access to the public sewer network. Septic tanks and cesspools are fundamentally different in function: a septic tank is a treatment system that reduces biological oxygen demand before discharge; a cesspool is simply a sealed collection vessel requiring regular emptying. Both are subject to environmental and planning regulation.

The Environment Agency (EA) in England, Natural Resources Wales (NRW), SEPA (Scotland) and NIEA (Northern Ireland) regulate septic tank discharges under the Environmental Permitting Regulations 2016. The 2020 General Binding Rules changed the regulatory landscape significantly. Previously, many old septic tanks discharged legally to watercourses under deemed consents. After January 2020, direct discharge to any watercourse became non-compliant unless the property has a specific EA permit — which is rarely granted for septic tank effluent.

For plumbers, drainage engineers and builders working on rural properties, understanding the current rules is essential. Installing a non-compliant system, or failing to advise a client of the need to upgrade, creates liability exposure.

Key Facts

Quick Reference Table

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System Type Discharge Permitted Permit Required Regular Maintenance
Septic tank → drainage field Yes (if meets BS EN 12566) Registration only (GBRs) De-sludge annually; inspect drainage field
Septic tank → watercourse No (from Jan 2020) Bespoke EA permit (rarely granted) N/A — must upgrade
Package sewage treatment plant → watercourse Yes (if meets GBRs) Registration only De-sludge per manufacturer
Cesspool No discharge at all None required Pump out every 6–8 weeks
Mains sewer connection Yes No Adoption by water company

Detailed Guidance

General Binding Rules 2020: What Changed

Before 2020, many septic tanks operated under a "deemed consent" — they predated the regulatory framework and their discharge was effectively grandfathered. The 2020 changes ended this:

Key changes:

  1. All direct discharges of septic tank effluent to watercourses became non-compliant
  2. Owners had until January 2020 to either obtain a bespoke permit (rare) or upgrade
  3. Properties changing ownership from January 2015 onwards were specifically called out: direct discharge is a known issue that must be addressed at sale
  4. The Environment Agency can enforce against non-compliant discharges; penalty: fixed penalty notice (£300) or criminal prosecution with fines up to £50,000

What still complies under GBRs:

What requires a bespoke permit:

Septic Tank Design and Sizing

A septic tank is a multi-chamber vessel (typically two or three chambers) in which:

  1. Heavy solids settle to the bottom (sludge)
  2. Floating material (scum) collects at the top
  3. Partially clarified liquid (effluent) exits through a T-pipe outlet to the drainage field

Sizing per BS EN 12566-1:

Two-chamber design:

Modern GRP (glass-reinforced plastic) tanks:

Drainage Field Design and Installation

The drainage field (soakaway) is the second and most critical element of a compliant septic tank system. It must be designed to match the soil percolation rate.

Soil percolation test (Vp test):

  1. Dig 3 trial holes to distribution pipe level (typically 500–600mm deep)
  2. Fill with water and allow to drain over 24 hours (saturation)
  3. Refill to 300mm above invert level
  4. Measure time in seconds for water level to fall 150mm (from 300mm to 150mm above invert)
  5. Repeat twice; take the mean
  6. Vp = mean time in seconds / 150 (expressed as time for water to fall 1mm)

Drainage field area calculation (BS EN 12566-3 method):

Distribution pipe layout:

Exclusion zones:

Cesspools: Where They Are Still Used

A cesspool (cesspit) is a sealed underground tank with no outlet. It collects all wastewater from the property and must be pumped out regularly. It is not a treatment system.

Where cesspools are appropriate:

Sizing (BS EN 12566-4):

Pumping frequency: Depends on tank size and occupancy. A 18,000L tank for 4 persons (600L/day) fills in 30 days — monthly pumping. A 27,000L tank fills in 45 days. Most waste contractors offer scheduled service.

Planning implications:

EA Registration Process

Under the GBRs, before installing a new septic tank or package treatment plant, you must register with the Environment Agency (England):

  1. Complete EA's online registration for a Small Sewage Discharge
  2. Provide: property address, type of system, capacity, destination of effluent
  3. No fee for standard registration
  4. Registration must be completed before installation starts
  5. EA may object within a specific period; if no objection, proceed

For replacement of an existing system: registration required for new system if the destination of discharge changes.

In Wales: NRW handles registrations; process similar but check NRW website. In Scotland: SEPA; Water Environment (Controlled Activities) (Scotland) Regulations 2011; different threshold sizes.

Frequently Asked Questions

Our septic tank discharges to a ditch — is this legal since January 2020?

No, unless you have a bespoke permit from the Environment Agency (which is rarely issued for septic tank effluent). From January 2020, direct discharge from a septic tank to any watercourse including ditches is non-compliant under the General Binding Rules. You need to either install a drainage field (soakaway) to divert the discharge, or replace the septic tank with a full package sewage treatment plant (which can discharge to a watercourse under GBR conditions if it meets the treatment standard).

Can I connect a septic tank to a public sewer if one becomes available?

Yes, and in most cases the local water company will request or require connection when a public sewer is brought within a certain distance of the property (typically 30m under Water Industry Act 1991). Connection is usually the most cost-effective long-term option, as it removes ongoing maintenance costs and compliance risk. Costs include connection charge and plumber's work; the water company may contribute if they have constructed the new sewer.

How often should a septic tank be emptied?

A properly designed septic tank with a drainage field requires annual desludging for a typical household. The sludge level should be checked annually; if sludge occupies more than 1/3 of the first chamber volume, desludge required. If the drainage field is working correctly, the septic tank does not "fill up" — it maintains a constant liquid level with effluent draining into the field.

What signs indicate a drainage field is failing?

A failing drainage field is often caused by: bio-mat clogging (excess solids entering field from undersized or poorly maintained septic tank), root intrusion, soil compaction from vehicle traffic, or saturated ground.

Regulations & Standards