Red light flashing or buzzer going off in Tucker? A pump alarm means your system has already detected a problem. We respond fast across Tucker — and a real technician answers the phone.
We respond fast · No obligation · Licensed experts
A septic pump alarm in Tucker means your system has detected a problem. Here are the common causes — all need professional attention.
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
The float switch tripped because the chamber level is too high. The pump may be failing or already failed.
Urgent
A stuck or failed float won't start the pump — or won't stop it. Either way the alarm is real.
Needs Service
A tripped breaker, failed relay, or wiring fault in the control panel cuts power to the pump.
Needs Service
A blocked discharge line stops effluent from leaving the chamber, tripping the high-water alarm.
Needs Service
Lost circuit or GFCI trip leaves the pump dead while the alarm runs on backup — act fast.
Urgent
What starts as a pump alarm in Tucker can escalate into a full household emergency.
Once the chamber fills, effluent has one place to go — back through your drains and toilets. A health emergency and major property damage.
Raw sewage carries harmful bacteria and pathogens that put your household at risk the longer it sits.
Running a failing system can push solids into and clog the drain field — turning a repair into a full replacement.
Real pump and control-panel work from our crews across Tucker and Metro Atlanta.








No runaround, no voicemail. Here's exactly what happens when you call.
A real person answers — not a call center. Describe what's happening and we assess severity immediately.
A licensed technician is dispatched to your Tucker location. We tell you exactly when to expect us.
We inspect the pump, float switch, control panel, and chamber to find the root cause — no guessing.
You get a straight explanation and an upfront price before we do the repair.
“I can't say enough good things about SepticRooter. From the moment I called, the service was fast, professional, and honestly a relief after dealing with a stressful septic backup.”
“Excellent communication, everything went exactly as explained, no extra costs or surprises, did high quality work with permits, soil tests and inspections, made my job seem easy while everyone else I called wanted to make it so difficult!”
“SepticRooter is an honest operation, which is paramount when it comes to septic systems. The owner has integrity—he only does what's needed, no upselling or scare tactics. Honest, reliable, and professional. Highly recommend if you want someone who truly puts the customer first.”
“Honest and trustworthy! We had been told we had a septic tank, even had another company out once, turns out, we have been connected to sewer for 30 years! While we didn't need their services, they sent us all the documentation from the county and shared info from them.”

Regular pumping removes solids before they reach your drain field — most homes need service every 3 to 5 years.
“Flushable” wipes don't break down and grease coats your tank — both accelerate failure fast.
Back-to-back showers, laundry, and dishwasher cycles can overwhelm the system. Space them out.
Tree and shrub roots seek out moisture and invade tanks and lines — a leading cause of repairs.
Don't park or drive over the drain field — compaction crushes lines and ruins percolation.
Slow drains, odors, or lush green patches in the yard are early warnings — don't ignore them.
Save pumping and repair records — they help at resale and speed up any future diagnosis.
Catching problems early in Tucker almost always means a cheaper, simpler fix.
Tucker sits in DeKalb County, where local soil, mature tree roots, and aging drain fields are the usual culprits. Here's why neighbors trust us with it.
We work in Tucker and across DeKalb County every week — we know the local soil, lot layouts, and what the county health department requires for septic pump alarm service.
Septic problems don't wait. We offer same-day response to Tucker and answer the phone with a real technician, not a call center.
You get a clear price before we start — no surprise add-ons. For many Tucker homeowners, the problem is smaller than they feared.
A fully licensed and insured Georgia septic contractor, family-owned since 1989 and BBB A+ accredited — standing behind every job in Tucker.
Septic work in Tucker runs through DeKalb County's health department, and local soil decides what's possible. Here's what that means for your property — and how we handle it.
In Georgia, septic work is governed by the Department of Public Health under Rule 511-3-1, and DeKalb Public Health (Septic System Program) handles permitting and inspections locally. DeKalb's Septic System Program reviews plans, analyzes soil reports, conducts site evaluations, and issues permits for new and repaired systems.
Many DeKalb homes near Decatur, Dunwoody, and Stone Mountain are older, on in-town lots where the original system predates current standards — so siting and records often need extra attention. New systems require a Level 3 soil report from a state-certified soil classifier — the old “perc test” is no longer used.
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 Tucker job to pass county review.
We're a state-certified Georgia contractor and pull the permits, schedule the DeKalb County inspections, and stand behind the work — so you don't have to navigate the county process yourself.
Tucker, Georgia, located in DeKalb County east of Atlanta along I-285, is home to Kelley Cofer Park, the Tucker downtown, and the Stone Mountain Greenway. We serve homeowners throughout Stone Mountain, Lilburn, and Decatur and the surrounding communities.
Explore more in Tucker: Repairs in Tucker · Replacement in Tucker · Septic Service in Tucker