Kansas City Region
Platte County septic permits start at the Health Department
Before installing an onsite wastewater system in unincorporated Platte County, homeowners should check the Health Department permit path.
A house outside sewer service needs more than a contractor and a backhoe. In unincorporated Platte County, an onsite wastewater treatment system needs a permit before installation.
The Health Department’s Environmental Health staff are the local permit path. They issue permits and permit exemptions, inspect new and repaired systems, inspect existing systems, and investigate sewage complaints. They also review proposed subdivisions with Platte County Planning and Zoning when onsite systems may be part of the plan.
That gives rural buyers and landowners a better checklist. Is the property inside unincorporated Platte County? Is public sewer available, or is onsite wastewater the likely route? Is there inspection history, soil information, or a prior exemption that should be read before money changes hands?
Treat the septic question as a public-health and land-use question, not just a contractor bid. The Health Department is the named local office before digging starts.
References
Where this fits: this note belongs to Platte County. See every local note for the county on its page.