Site Work Guide

Skid Steer for Septic Installation — Workflow, Attachments & Canadian Regulations

Septic installation is one of the most common skid steer applications in rural and semi-rural Canada. Here's how the machine fits into the workflow, what attachments you need, and what you need to know about regulations before you break ground.

On This Page

  1. The Septic Installation Workflow
  2. Leach Field Preparation
  3. Tank Placement and Lifting
  4. Soil Conditions and Perc Tests
  5. Ontario and BC Regulations
  6. Track Loader vs Wheeled — Wet Site Considerations

A residential septic installation is a multi-stage project, and the skid steer is involved at nearly every stage. That said, it doesn't work alone. Most residential septic installs — especially tanks that require a pit 6–8 feet deep — need a mini excavator for the actual digging. The skid steer handles everything around that hole.

The Septic Installation Workflow

1

Site Clearing

The skid steer with a bucket or grapple handles clearing the system area of brush, stumps, and topsoil. Compact track loaders do this without tearing up the yard. The topsoil stripped from the leach field area needs to be stockpiled — that's skid steer work. This stage is nearly entirely skid steer territory.

2

Tank Excavation

This is where most installs bring in the mini excavator. A residential concrete or plastic tank sits in a pit that's typically 6–8 feet deep and 8–10 feet wide. Skid steer excavator bucket attachments can dig this, but it's slow and imprecise. A mini excavator opens the pit faster, with better wall control. The skid steer moves the spoil as the excavator produces it.

3

Bed Preparation — Where the Skid Steer Shines

Leach field prep is almost entirely skid steer work. Spreading and grading the drainage bed — whether it's crushed stone, sand, or manufactured media — requires the kind of controlled bucket work a skid steer does best. Spreading 6–8 inches of gravel over a 1,500–2,000 sq ft leach field in a consistent layer takes a good operator maybe 90 minutes. It's satisfying, efficient work.

4

Tank Placement

Once the pit is ready, the tank goes in. Concrete tanks weigh 7,000–12,000 lbs. Plastic tanks are lighter — a 1,500-gallon poly tank might be 600–800 lbs empty — and can be positioned with skid steer forks. For concrete tanks, you're looking at a crane or an excavator with lifting capacity. Know your machine's rated operating capacity before attempting any tank lift.

5

Backfill and Finish Grade

Backfilling around the tank and over the distribution pipes is skid steer bucket work. The trick here is lift control — you don't want to dump heavy loads directly onto distribution pipes. Compact the backfill in lifts. The skid steer with a plate compactor attachment can handle this, or a hand tamper for tight spots around pipe connections. Finish grading the surface is the last task, and the skid steer's bucket angle control makes it precise enough for the job.

Leach Field Preparation in Detail

The leach field (also called a tile field, drain field, or absorption field depending on where in Canada you are) is where a skid steer earns its keep on a septic job. The work is systematic and well-suited to the machine's strengths.

After excavating the bed area to the required depth — typically 24–36 inches below finished grade — you're building up a gravel layer, laying distribution pipe, adding more gravel or manufactured aggregate around and over the pipe, then capping with filter fabric and topsoil. Every stage of that layering involves moving and spreading material.

Spreading Gravel

Granular bedding material for a leach field gets delivered by aggregate truck. The skid steer moves it from the pile to the field and spreads it. A 14-inch or 16-inch bucket does this fine. Some operators use a grading attachment or land plane for the final level pass, but a skilled operator can grade accurately with a standard bucket in good conditions.

Grade Control Matters

Distribution pipes need level or controlled-slope grade — typically flat or 1/8 inch per foot fall depending on system design. Your installation permit will specify. The skid steer operator needs to maintain that grade through the bed material. Grade stakes, a laser level, or a grade stick are essential here. Don't eyeball it.

Never drive over the leach field area without adequate cover: Even a compact track loader can damage distribution pipes if the trench isn't properly backfilled. Wait for adequate cover depth — usually a minimum of 12–18 inches — before driving over completed sections of the field. Running machinery over chambered leach systems (plastic arches) without sufficient cover will crush them.

Tank Placement — Know Your Machine's Limits

Plastic septic tanks can be skid steer work. A 1,000-gallon poly tank weighs roughly 300–400 lbs empty and can be moved with pallet forks. A 1,500-gallon unit is heavier — 500–600 lbs — but still within the rated operating capacity of most mid-size skid steers with a fork frame. The challenge is the geometry: you're lowering a large tank into a pit that's barely wider than the tank, and the machine has to manoeuvre at the edge of the excavation.

Concrete tanks are a different story. A standard 1,000-gallon concrete septic tank weighs around 8,500 lbs. A 1,500-gallon unit hits 10,000–12,000 lbs. That's beyond the capacity of any skid steer. Concrete tank installation needs a crane, a backhoe loader with sufficient lift capacity, or a mini excavator large enough to set the tank. The skid steer assists but doesn't lift.

Tank Type Approx. Weight (Empty) Skid Steer Capable? Notes
1,000 gal Plastic 300–400 lbs Yes, with pallet forks Manageable for most mid-size skid steers
1,500 gal Plastic 500–650 lbs Yes, confirm ROC Verify machine's rated operating capacity at full reach
1,000 gal Concrete ~8,500 lbs No Requires crane, backhoe, or large excavator
1,500 gal Concrete ~10,000–12,000 lbs No Crane or excavator lift required

Soil Conditions, Perc Tests, and What They Mean for Equipment

A percolation test (perc test) tells you how fast water moves through the soil. That result directly determines the leach field design — how large it needs to be, what type of system is required, and how deep the bed goes.

Fast-perc soils (sandy or gravelly ground) produce compact, deep fields. Slow-perc soils (clay-heavy ground) require larger, shallower systems — sometimes mound systems that sit above grade. Mound systems change the skid steer's role entirely: instead of excavating and grading a subsurface bed, you're building up. The skid steer hauls fill material and grades a raised berm, which it handles well.

Very slow or failing perc conditions may trigger engineered system requirements — pressure distribution, aerobic treatment units, or constructed wetlands. These systems have tighter grade tolerances, and the skid steer needs to be operated with more precision or supplemented with laser-guided attachments.

Hard clay sites: If you're working on a clay-dominant site, expect wet conditions around the leach field area even in dry weather. A compact track loader is strongly preferred over a wheeled skid steer. Clay retains moisture, and wheeled machines will tear up the site and potentially damage the installation area.

Ontario and BC Regulations — What You Need to Know Before You Start

Ontario — Ontario Building Code (Part 8)

Septic systems in Ontario are regulated under Part 8 of the Ontario Building Code. The key points for operators doing site work:

British Columbia — BC Sewerage System Regulation

In BC, septic systems fall under the Sewerage System Regulation (SSR) administered by the Ministry of Health. The system differs from Ontario:

Other provinces have their own regulatory frameworks. Alberta operates under the Private Sewage Disposal Systems Regulation; Manitoba under the Onsite Wastewater Management Systems Regulation. Always check your provincial and municipal requirements before starting work. The regulatory landscape for septic varies more than most tradespeople expect.

Compact Track Loader vs Wheeled — Wet Site Considerations

Septic sites are often wet. Leach fields go into areas with ground moisture; the excavation creates exposed subsoil that doesn't dry quickly; and spring installs happen on ground that's still thawing. A wheeled skid steer on saturated ground is a bad combination.

✅ Compact Track Loader (CTL)

  • Low ground pressure — typically 4–7 PSI
  • Floats on soft ground where wheeled machines sink
  • Won't rut the lawn around the work area
  • Better traction on wet clay slopes
  • Preferred for most septic work in Ontario and BC
  • Higher initial cost, more track maintenance

⚠️ Wheeled Skid Steer

  • Ground pressure 20–30 PSI — compacts and ruts wet soil
  • Can sink into saturated ground and damage site
  • Faster on hard, dry ground
  • Lower cost and simpler maintenance
  • Fine for dry season work on firm ground
  • Risk of turf and soil damage near installation area

If you own a wheeled machine and need to work a wet septic site, bring plywood or ground protection mats for the most sensitive areas. It's not a perfect solution, but it reduces the ground disturbance around the leach field significantly.

For contractors who do significant septic work, a compact track loader is the right machine. The reduced ground disturbance alone justifies the cost difference — clients don't want their yard destroyed in the process of installing a $20,000 septic system.

Browse Trencher & Bucket Attachments in the Catalog

Looking for specific models available in Canada? Browse the skid steer trencher attachment catalog and bucket catalog for verified product pages on real models sold through Canadian dealers.