BBB A+ Rated Since 1989 · Licensed & Insured · Metro Atlanta & North Georgia CALL (678) 744-7878
🔴 Emergency Service · Sandy Springs, GA

PUMP ALARM
GOING OFF IN
SANDY SPRINGS?

Red light flashing or buzzer going off in Sandy Springs? A pump alarm means your system has already detected a problem. We respond fast across Sandy Springs — and a real technician answers the phone.

BBB A+ BBB A+ Since 1989
GA Licensed
Fully Insured
NAWT Certified

Tell Us What's Going On

We respond fast · No obligation · Licensed experts

100% Private Fast Response No Obligation
✅ Got it! We'll be in touch shortly to discuss your situation.
Something went wrong. Please call us directly at (678) 744-7878.
Alarm Going Off Right Now in Sandy Springs?
Don't wait — call now and talk to a real technician immediately
(678) 744-7878
Why Your Alarm Is Going Off

PUMP ALARMS AREN'T
FALSE ALARMS

A septic pump alarm in Sandy Springs means your system has detected a problem. Here are the common causes — all need professional attention.

Pump Motor Failure

The pump motor has burned out or seized. Effluent can't move to the drain field and will back up into your home.

Critical — Call Now

High Water Level

The float switch tripped because the chamber level is too high. The pump may be failing or already failed.

Urgent

Float Switch Fault

A stuck or failed float won't start the pump — or won't stop it. Either way the alarm is real.

Needs Service

Control Panel / Breaker

A tripped breaker, failed relay, or wiring fault in the control panel cuts power to the pump.

Needs Service

Clogged or Frozen Line

A blocked discharge line stops effluent from leaving the chamber, tripping the high-water alarm.

Needs Service

Power Loss to Pump

Lost circuit or GFCI trip leaves the pump dead while the alarm runs on backup — act fast.

Urgent

The Cost of Waiting

EVERY HOUR MATTERS

What starts as a pump alarm in Sandy Springs can escalate into a full household emergency.

Sewage Backup Into Your Home

Once the chamber fills, effluent has one place to go — back through your drains and toilets. A health emergency and major property damage.

Health & Safety Hazard

Raw sewage carries harmful bacteria and pathogens that put your household at risk the longer it sits.

Drain Field Damage

Running a failing system can push solids into and clog the drain field — turning a repair into a full replacement.

What It Looks Like

WHAT A PUMP ALARM
ACTUALLY LOOKS LIKE

Real pump and control-panel work from our crews across Sandy Springs and Metro Atlanta.

Septic pump control and alarm panel opened for service by SepticRooter™ in Sandy Springs, Fulton County
A pump control panel like this is the first thing we open on a Sandy Springs alarm call — we test the breakers and find the exact fault.
Septic float switch wiring at the alarm panel terminals in Sandy Springs, GA
Float-switch wiring at the terminal block — a common culprit when a Sandy Springs alarm won't shut off.
Liberty Pumps septic alarm panel diagnosed by SepticRooter™ in Sandy Springs, Fulton County
We trace the alarm to its real cause on site in Sandy Springs — not a guess from a call center.
Septic pump and high-water alarm strobes wired at the tank in Sandy Springs, GA
Pump and high-water alarm at the Sandy Springs tank — we test the full system, not just one part.
Labeled septic pump breaker traced and tested by SepticRooter™ in Sandy Springs, Fulton County
We trace the alarm circuit back to the breaker — labeled, tested, and verified on every Sandy Springs call.
Septic effluent pumps and control panel serviced in Sandy Springs, Fulton County
Pumps and the control panel together — we check the whole Sandy Springs system on a pump alarm, not just one piece.
Weather-tight septic alarm panel install by SepticRooter™ in Sandy Springs, GA
A clean, weather-tight alarm panel — the kind of finished work Sandy Springs homeowners can count on.
Septic alarm panel and tank riser serviced together in Sandy Springs, Fulton County
The alarm panel and the tank work as one system — we check both on every Sandy Springs service call.
What Happens When You Call

FAST, CLEAR PROCESS

No runaround, no voicemail. Here's exactly what happens when you call.

1

You Call Us

A real person answers — not a call center. Describe what's happening and we assess severity immediately.

2

We Dispatch Fast

A licensed technician is dispatched to your Sandy Springs location. We tell you exactly when to expect us.

3

Full Diagnosis

We inspect the pump, float switch, control panel, and chamber to find the root cause — no guessing.

4

Clear Fix & Price

You get a straight explanation and an upfront price before we do the repair.

Reviews

SANDY SPRINGS EMERGENCY REVIEWS

★★★★★
“Rob is absolutely the best for all things septic! First, he and his wife Beth are responsive, which sets a nice tone for getting scheduled. I recently moved into the house and had no idea where both septics are.”
Ron KSandy Springs, GA · via Google
★★★★★
“Everyone that I had the pleasure to speak with and/or meet with were totally professional. From the first email and phone call with Beth, to the consultation meeting with Rob, and the install by Scott and Martin, the experience was exceptional.”
Scott W.Woodstock, GA · via Thumbtack
★★★★★
“The team sent out were super helpful and friendly. They went above and beyond to explain everything I needed or wanted to know. They worked super efficiently and got me back up and running in less than a day. On top of all this, they saved me almost $8000. Would highly recommend this company!!!”
Spencer S.Lilburn, GA · via HomeAdvisor
★★★★★
“Found these guys after being upsold by a previous septic company and they were first class. Actively turned down work as told me it wasn't required and would be a waste of money.”
Pete HRoswell, GA · via Google
Rooter, the SepticRooter mascot, wearing a SepticRooter cap
Rooter's Guide

The Sandy Springs Septic Health Checklist

8 things every Sandy Springs homeowner should know

🚿 Pump every 3–5 years

Regular pumping removes solids before they reach your drain field — most homes need service every 3 to 5 years.

🚫 Never flush wipes or grease

“Flushable” wipes don't break down and grease coats your tank — both accelerate failure fast.

💧 Spread out water usage

Back-to-back showers, laundry, and dishwasher cycles can overwhelm the system. Space them out.

🌿 Keep roots away

Tree and shrub roots seek out moisture and invade tanks and lines — a leading cause of repairs.

🚗 Keep traffic off the field

Don't park or drive over the drain field — compaction crushes lines and ruins percolation.

👁 Watch for early signs

Slow drains, odors, or lush green patches in the yard are early warnings — don't ignore them.

📋 Keep your records

Save pumping and repair records — they help at resale and speed up any future diagnosis.

📞 Call at the first symptom

Catching problems early in Sandy Springs almost always means a cheaper, simpler fix.

Common Questions

Pump Alarm FAQ — Sandy Springs

My septic pump alarm is going off in Sandy Springs — what should I do?
First, stop adding water — limit showers, laundry, and dishwashing to keep the chamber from overflowing. The alarm means the water level is high or the pump has failed. Call (678) 744-7878 now; a real technician answers and we provide same-day emergency response across Sandy Springs.
Is a septic pump alarm an emergency?
Treat it as one. The alarm signals the pump chamber is filling faster than it's emptying — left alone, effluent backs up through the home's lowest drains, a health hazard and major property damage. The cost of waiting far exceeds the cost of a same-day service call in Sandy Springs.
How much does it cost to fix a septic pump or alarm in Sandy Springs?
It depends on the cause. A failed effluent or lift pump replacement typically runs $1,500–$6,500; float-switch, control-panel, or wiring faults are usually less. We diagnose the exact failed component on site in Sandy Springs and give you a price before any repair — no guessing.
Why is my septic pump alarm going off?
The most common causes are a burned-out or seized pump, a high water level from a stuck float switch, a tripped breaker or failed relay in the control panel, a clogged discharge line, or lost power to the pump. Each is a real problem that needs professional diagnosis — a pump alarm is never a false alarm.
Can I turn off the septic alarm and deal with it later?
You can silence the buzzer, but the red light stays on and the underlying problem remains. Continuing to use water in Sandy Springs while the pump is down will push the chamber to overflow. It's safe to mute the noise — but call (678) 744-7878 the same day.
How much does it cost to pump a septic tank in Sandy Springs?
In Sandy Springs, a standard 1,000-gallon septic tank pump-out typically runs $650–$900. Price depends on tank size, how long since the last service, depth and accessibility of the lids, and whether an effluent filter needs cleaning. SepticRooter™ gives you a firm price up front in Sandy Springs before any work — call (678) 744-7878.
How often should I pump my septic tank in Sandy Springs?
The Georgia Department of Public Health recommends pumping every 3 to 5 years for a typical four-person household. Larger families, homes with a garbage disposal, or properties that host frequent guests should pump every 2 to 3 years. Regular pumping in Sandy Springs is the single best way to avoid a $10,000–$25,000 drain field replacement.
Do I need a permit for septic work in Sandy Springs, Fulton County?
Yes. In Georgia, any septic installation, modification, or repair requires a permit from your county health department (the Fulton County Environmental Health office), and the work must be done by a DPH-certified contractor. SepticRooter™ is licensed and handles Sandy Springs permits and the required inspections for you.
How do I know if my home in Sandy Springs is on septic or city sewer?
If you receive a monthly sewer bill from a utility, you're on city sewer. If you don't — and especially if your Sandy Springs home is older or outside a dense municipal area — you're likely on septic. You can confirm by checking for a tank lid or cleanout in the yard, or by pulling your system records from the Fulton County health department, which we can do for you.
Are you licensed and insured to work in Sandy Springs?
Yes. SepticRooter™ is a fully licensed and insured Georgia septic contractor, BBB A+ accredited since 1989, NAWT-certified, and Eljen GSF certified. We serve Sandy Springs and the surrounding Fulton County area with same-day emergency response.
Why SepticRooter™

WHY SANDY SPRINGS HOMEOWNERS
CALL SEPTICROOTER™

Sandy Springs sits in Fulton County, where local soil, mature tree roots, and aging drain fields are the usual culprits. Here's why neighbors trust us with it.

🧭

We Know Fulton County

We work in Sandy Springs and across Fulton County every week — we know the local soil, lot layouts, and what the county health department requires for septic pump alarm service.

Same-Day Response

Septic problems don't wait. We offer same-day response to Sandy Springs and answer the phone with a real technician, not a call center.

💲

Honest, Upfront Pricing

You get a clear price before we start — no surprise add-ons. For many Sandy Springs homeowners, the problem is smaller than they feared.

🛡️

Licensed, Insured, BBB A+

A fully licensed and insured Georgia septic contractor, family-owned since 1989 and BBB A+ accredited — standing behind every job in Sandy Springs.

Fulton County Permits & Soil

SEPTIC PERMITS & SOIL
IN FULTON COUNTY

Septic work in Sandy Springs runs through Fulton County's health department, and local soil decides what's possible. Here's what that means for your property — and how we handle it.

🏛️

Permits Are Required

In Georgia, septic work is governed by the Department of Public Health under Rule 511-3-1, and Fulton County Board of Health, Environmental Health Services handles permitting and inspections locally. Fulton's Environmental Health Services reviews and inspects on-site sewage management systems and confirms lots are properly sized before approval.

🧪

Soil Drives the Design

North Fulton's Piedmont clay and rolling, wooded lots (common around Roswell, Alpharetta, Milton, and Johns Creek) mean drain field siting and lot size matter a great deal. New systems require a Level 3 soil report from a state-certified soil classifier — the old “perc test” is no longer used.

📏

Setbacks & Lot Size

State rules require a drain field to sit at least 100 feet from a well and the lot to be properly sized for both the system and a replacement area. We design every Sandy Springs job to pass county review.

We Handle the Paperwork

We're a state-certified Georgia contractor and pull the permits, schedule the Fulton County inspections, and stand behind the work — so you don't have to navigate the county process yourself.

Serving Sandy Springs, Fulton County

Sandy Springs, Georgia, located in north Fulton County inside the Perimeter along the Chattahoochee River, is home to the Heritage Sandy Springs Museum, Morgan Falls Overlook Park, and City Springs. We serve homeowners throughout Dunwoody, Roswell, and Brookhaven and the surrounding communities.

Explore more in Sandy Springs: Repairs in Sandy Springs · Replacement in Sandy Springs · Septic Service in Sandy Springs · Tank Pumping in Sandy Springs

The SepticRooter Family & Crew

The SepticRooter teamSepticRooter crew on a jobRob and his son by the truckRob on a tough repairRob at the controlsCrew digging inRob at the tank lidRob inside the tankRob at a job siteRob Simmons on Fox 5 AtlantaRob on the excavatorRob and his son by the vanTeam on the jobRob and son after the jobTwo happy techniciansFull crew on siteRob selfie in the trenchTeam by the truckRob waving from the trenchTeam photo indoorsRob with the pipesRob in the pitRob selfie with equipmentRob after the jobThe SepticRooter teamSepticRooter crew on a jobRob and his son by the truckRob on a tough repairRob at the controlsCrew digging inRob at the tank lidRob inside the tankRob at a job siteRob Simmons on Fox 5 AtlantaRob on the excavatorRob and his son by the vanTeam on the jobRob and son after the jobTwo happy techniciansFull crew on siteRob selfie in the trenchTeam by the truckRob waving from the trenchTeam photo indoorsRob with the pipesRob in the pitRob selfie with equipmentRob after the job