Newly installed concrete septic tank with green lids in Prince Edward County
Homeowner Tips · Rural Properties

How to Clean Your Septic Filter — A Rural Homeowner's Guide

May 1, 2026 By Jake Bergeron

Most rural homeowners have no idea their septic tank has an effluent filter — or that it needs to be cleaned roughly once a year. It's one of the simplest maintenance tasks you can do, it takes about 15 minutes, and it protects the most expensive part of your septic system: the drain field.

I've been living on a rural property in Prince Edward County for years. This is one of those things I wish someone had walked me through earlier — because the people who skip it are usually the ones getting a $20,000 drain field repair call they weren't expecting.

$20K+
The average cost to replace a failed drain field in Ontario. A clean effluent filter is one of the simplest ways to protect it — and most homeowners don't know it exists.

Here's what the filter is, why it matters, and exactly how to clean it yourself.

The Basics

What Is a Septic Effluent Filter?

The effluent filter (also called an outlet filter or baffle filter) sits inside the outlet baffle of your septic tank — the side that flows toward your drain field. Its job is simple: catch any solids or debris before they leave the tank and enter the leaching bed.

Without it, solids can migrate into the drain field pipes over time, clogging the system and eventually causing it to fail. The filter itself is inexpensive — typically $50 to $150 to replace — but what it protects is not.

"The drain field is the most expensive component of your septic system, and the one hardest to repair. A clean filter is what stands between it and the solids in your tank."

Step by Step

How to Clean Your Septic Filter

You don't need a professional for this. You need rubber gloves, a garden hose, and about 15 minutes. Here's the full process:

1
Locate your septic tank lid

On older tanks you'll typically find two lids — one over each chamber. On newer tanks, there's often one central access riser. The filter sits on the outlet side, which is the lid closest to your drain field. If you're not sure which side is which, your pump-out company will know — or you can check the as-built drawing if your property has one.

2
Open the outlet lid

Lift the lid carefully. The filter is housed inside the outlet baffle — you'll see it once the lid is off. It typically slides straight up out of a housing sleeve, though some models twist and lock. Pull it out slowly and have your hose ready.

3
Rinse the filter back into the tank

This part matters: rinse the filter off over the open tank, not on your lawn. You're flushing solids back into the tank where they belong — not spreading them across your yard. A standard garden hose has plenty of pressure to do the job. Work from top to bottom, rotating as you go.

4
Inspect the filter while it's out

Take a quick look at the filter body. Cracks, broken fins, or visible damage mean it's time to replace it — they're inexpensive and widely available at plumbing supply stores. A damaged filter is no filter at all.

5
Reinstall and close up

Slide or twist the filter back into its housing, replace the lid securely, and you're done. Make a note of the date — you'll want to do this again in 12 months, or every six months if your household is large or you do heavy laundry and cooking.

Watch It Done

See the Full Process on Video

I've done this myself and filmed the whole thing. Watch below for a complete walkthrough — from lifting the lid to reinstalling the filter.

Full walkthrough — septic filter removal, cleaning, and reinstall. Filmed on my property in Prince Edward County.

When to Call a Professional

Buying a Rural Property in PEC?

What You Should Know Before You Sign

The majority of properties in Prince Edward County are on private septic systems — there's no municipal sewer connection in most of the County. That means when you're buying, the condition of the septic system matters just as much as the roof or the furnace.

As your agent, it's one of the first things I ask about: When was the tank last pumped? Is there a filter installed? Has it ever been inspected? Does it have a certificate of approval on file? These questions aren't just due diligence — they can shift a negotiation or save you from inheriting a problem that's been quietly developing for years.

A well-maintained system with documentation is a selling point. A neglected one — no pump-out records, no filter, no inspection — is a liability. Knowing the difference before you make an offer is exactly what I'm here to help with.

Rural property ownership in Prince Edward County is genuinely rewarding — but it comes with responsibilities that city buyers don't always expect. Septic maintenance is one of them. If you're thinking about buying a rural property in the County and want to know what to look for before you commit, I'm glad to have that conversation.
Jake Bergeron — Sales Representative, eXp Realty
Jake Bergeron
Sales Representative · eXp Realty, Brokerage

As an original "County Boy," I've lived in this region my whole life — growing up outside of Picton, spending 15 years as a Journeyman Ironworker, and now raising my family on a straw bale homestead here in Prince Edward County. I've been proudly serving buyers and sellers across Prince Edward County, Hastings, and Northumberland since 2016. Whether you're looking for rural land, a waterfront property, or your first home in the County — I'm here to make the process simple, honest, and genuinely personal.

Stay Informed

The County market, once a month — no noise.

CLAR MLS data, honest analysis, and what it means for buyers and sellers in Prince Edward County. One email a month.

No spam. Unsubscribe any time.