Septic, Well & Oil Heat 101 (For Hudson Valley Buyers)
A lot of the most beautiful properties upstate run on private well water, septic systems, and oil heat. Here’s what that really means and how to buy confidently.
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Private wells: clean water, clear protocol
•Construction & placement: In NY, individual residential wells must meet Department of Health standards (Appendix 5-B).
•Testing cadence: NYSDOH recommends regular testing (at least annually for bacteria; additional contaminants periodically) and after flooding.
•Buyer move: Order a certified lab panel during inspections; keep records for future resale. (Your lender may require this.)
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Septic systems: how they’re evaluated
•Basics: Most rural homes use a tank + leach field.
•Inspections: A typical buyer inspection includes a dye test and/or hydraulic load test by a septic pro. Budget for pumping/maintenance at ownership start; frequency varies with household size and usage.
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Oil heat: what to know about tanks
•Above-ground vs underground: Federal UST rules exempt heating-oil tanks used on premises; NYS and some counties still have rules and best-practice guidance.
•Size & regulation thresholds: Many home tanks (<1,100 gallons) aren’t covered by NY’s PBS registration, but locals can add requirements—always verify.
•Buyer move: Ask for age, location, and service records; consider a tank scan for unknown/buried tanks; confirm insurability.
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How I de-risk these systems for clients
1.Specialist inspections (well + septic + tank scan) scheduled alongside general home inspection.
2.Water testing timed to your contingency; retest after any shock/chlorination.
3.Negotiation leverage: Use findings to calibrate credits, repairs, or a service contract from the seller.
This article is educational, not legal/environmental advice. Consult licensed inspectors and your attorney.
Get my Upstate Systems Checklist (vendor list + test panels + timelines).