IA System Installation Suffolk County NY

Install Your IA System for $5,000 or Less

Most Suffolk County, NY homeowners pay under $5,000 out-of-pocket after grants. We handle your IA system installation from grant application to final approval—you get a nitrogen-reducing system that protects Long Island’s water without the sticker shock.

Family Owned 87 Years

Nearly nine decades serving Suffolk County means we've handled every septic scenario and know exactly how to navigate yours.

County Approved Installer

Official Suffolk County SIP vendor status means your grant funding gets paid directly to us—no reimbursement waiting games.

Maximum Grant Funding

We help you access every available dollar up to $30,000 so you're not leaving money on the table.

FujiClean Certified Installation

We're certified to install Suffolk County's top-performing nitrogen-reducing system with proven 11 mg/L removal rates—the best available.

Innovative Alternative Systems Suffolk County

What Makes IA Systems Different From Regular Septics

Innovative alternative systems aren’t just upgraded septics—they’re advanced wastewater treatment units that remove up to 90% of nitrogen before it reaches Long Island’s sole-source aquifer. Traditional cesspools and conventional septics release an average of 40 pounds of nitrogen per household annually directly into the groundwater that feeds our drinking water wells and bays. Suffolk County, NY now requires these nitrogen-reducing systems for new construction and major renovations because the environmental impact became impossible to ignore. Over 360,000 homes still rely on outdated cesspools that contribute to beach closures, toxic algae blooms, and fish kills across our bays. The technology uses aerobic and anaerobic biological processes to convert harmful nitrogen compounds into harmless nitrogen gas. Systems like FujiClean achieve nitrogen levels as low as 11 mg/L—well below the county’s 19 mg/L standard and light-years better than the 65 mg/L that conventional systems release.

Suffolk County Nitrogen Reducing Systems

What You Actually Get From This Investment

IA system installation protects your property value, unlocks up to $30,000 in grant funding, and directly reverses the nitrogen pollution that’s been degrading Long Island’s water quality for decades.

FujiClean Nitrogen Reducing Technology

Why FujiClean Outperforms Other Approved Systems

FujiClean holds nearly 48% of the Suffolk County, NY market share because it delivers results other systems can’t match. Field testing through the county’s provisional sampling program shows FujiClean achieves 11 mg/L nitrogen levels—the lowest of any approved innovative alternative system and 42% better than the county’s 19 mg/L requirement. Those aren’t marketing numbers. They’re verified performance data from actual installations. The engineering makes the difference. FujiClean uses no internal moving parts—no pumps, blowers, or agitators sitting in wastewater where they corrode and fail. Just an external FujiMac blower that costs pennies to run and takes minutes to replace if needed. Competing systems bury mechanical components inside the tank where repairs require excavation and cost thousands. The entire FujiClean unit weighs less and occupies less space than alternatives, which means easier installation, less property disruption, and lower costs. This isn’t new technology being tested on Suffolk County homeowners. FujiClean has operated for 60 years with millions of installations worldwide. Systems installed in the 1960s still function today. When you’re investing $25,000 before grants, that proven reliability matters. The system draws only 1.1 kWh daily—about 22 cents of electricity—making it the most energy-efficient clean water technology available for residential properties.

Suffolk County Grants IA System

The Real Story Behind $30,000 Grant Funding

Suffolk County’s Septic Improvement Program provides a $10,000 base grant, with an additional $10,000 available if you install a pressurized shallow drain field or qualify based on income. New York State adds up to $25,000 through their Septic System Replacement Program, reimbursing 75% of eligible costs. East End towns like Southampton and East Hampton offer an additional $20,000 in local rebates. Stack these programs correctly and you’re looking at $30,000 to $45,000 in available funding. Here’s what most homeowners don’t realize—the county pays approved installers directly on your behalf. This isn’t a reimbursement where you float $25,000 and wait months for checks. Your out-of-pocket expense is only what the grants don’t cover, typically $3,000 to $7,000 depending on your specific property conditions and which programs you qualify for. Eligibility requirements are straightforward but strictly enforced. Your property must have an existing septic or cesspool, not be connected to sewers or located in a proposed sewer district, have no tax liens, and be current on property taxes. New construction on vacant lots doesn’t qualify—the program targets existing homes with aging systems that are polluting groundwater. You must apply and receive grant approval before starting any work. You must use an installer from the county’s approved vendor list. The application process takes several months for non-emergency upgrades, which is why planning ahead matters. We handle the entire application process, coordinate with engineers, and manage all county communications so you’re not navigating bureaucracy alone.
IA System Installation FAQs

Common Questions About Our Service

It depends entirely on your situation, and this is where most homeowners get confused by conflicting information. Since July 1, 2021, Suffolk County, NY requires innovative alternative systems for all new single-family construction, any major reconstruction project where costs exceed 50% of your home’s market value, and when adding bedrooms beyond what was previously approved by the health department. If your existing cesspool fails and you’re in a designated priority area near water bodies or within certain groundwater travel times to surface water, you’ll also need an IA system rather than a conventional septic. You cannot replace a cesspool with another cesspool anymore under any circumstances—at minimum you need a conventional septic tank with proper leaching, but many situations now trigger the nitrogen-reducing IA requirement. The good news is that grant funding up to $30,000 makes IA systems affordable, often bringing your actual out-of-pocket cost close to what old cesspool replacements used to run. We evaluate your specific property and situation to tell you exactly what’s required, not what might be required.
For non-emergency situations, expect four to six months from initial application to completed installation. That timeline includes submitting your grant application, waiting for Suffolk County review and approval (which can take several months), getting engineering plans designed by a licensed professional, securing health department permits, and scheduling installation with our crews. If you have a failing system creating an immediate health hazard with sewage surfacing or backing up into your home, the county can expedite processing and move you to priority status. Once grants are approved and permits secured, actual installation typically takes three to five days depending on site conditions, soil type, and whether we need to install new leaching structures. We handle all paperwork, coordinate with engineers, manage county communications, and keep you updated throughout the process so you’re not navigating the bureaucracy alone. The key is starting before you’re in an emergency situation, which gives you time to maximize grant funding and avoid premium emergency replacement costs that can run 30-50% higher.
FujiClean achieves the lowest nitrogen levels of any system approved in Suffolk County, NY—averaging 11 mg/L compared to the county’s 19 mg/L requirement and significantly better than competing technologies. That’s not marketing language, it’s verified data from the county’s provisional sampling program. The system has no internal moving parts that sit in wastewater and fail over time, which means dramatically lower long-term maintenance costs and fewer expensive repairs down the road. It’s powered entirely by an external FujiMac blower that’s simple to service or replace when needed. Competing systems bury pumps, aerators, and mechanical components inside the tank where they corrode and require excavation to repair. FujiClean is also the lightest and most compact system available, making installation easier and less disruptive to your property—particularly important if you have limited space, high groundwater, or landscaping you want to preserve. The technology has a 60-year track record with millions of installations worldwide, including systems from the 1960s still operating today. Other approved systems like HydroAction also perform well and meet county standards, but FujiClean’s combination of superior nitrogen removal, mechanical reliability, and lower operating costs is why it holds nearly 48% market share in Suffolk County.
Yes, but the increase is manageable and the benefits far outweigh the minor inconvenience. IA systems require semi-annual service visits where a licensed technician checks system components, cleans filters, verifies proper operation, and documents performance. You’ll also need to register your system with Suffolk County and update that registration every three years or upon property transfer—there’s no cost to register but it’s mandatory. The external blower diaphragms need replacement roughly every five years at a cost of a few hundred dollars. Most systems also have service contracts that run $300 to $500 annually. Here’s what homeowners don’t expect—IA systems actually reduce pumping frequency compared to traditional cesspools because they treat waste more efficiently. The biological processes break down solids more completely, meaning less accumulation in the tank and longer intervals between pump-outs. You’re trading occasional pumping emergencies for predictable, scheduled maintenance. Most homeowners find this manageable, especially knowing their system is protecting Long Island’s drinking water aquifer and preventing the nitrogen pollution that causes toxic algae blooms, beach closures, and fish kills in our bays. Plus, proper maintenance is required to keep your grant funding valid and your system warranty active.
It depends on your location within Suffolk County, NY and your current system’s condition. The county doesn’t have a blanket requirement to upgrade when selling property, but certain high-priority areas near shorelines, sensitive water bodies, or within specific groundwater travel times may have local requirements for upgrades during property transfers. Article 6 of the Suffolk County Sanitary Code allows for mandatory upgrades in environmentally sensitive areas. If your current system is functioning properly and you’re not in a designated priority zone, you can typically sell without upgrading. However, buyers are increasingly aware of these requirements and often negotiate for upgrades, request credits at closing, or factor replacement costs into their offers. Home inspectors routinely flag aging cesspools and conventional septics as items requiring future attention. Having an IA system already installed actually becomes a significant selling point—it shows the property is fully compliant with current regulations, protects the buyer from mandatory upgrades within a few years, and demonstrates environmental responsibility that appeals to younger buyers. If you’re planning to sell within two to three years and your system is aging or you’re in a priority area, installing an IA system now with grant funding can increase your property value and marketability by more than your out-of-pocket cost.
You must use an installer from Suffolk County’s approved vendor list to be eligible for any grant funding through the Septic Improvement Program or New York State Septic System Replacement Program. The county maintains this list to ensure installers meet specific qualifications, carry proper licensing and insurance, maintain required endorsements, and follow county standards for IA system installation. Approved installers also receive grant payments directly from the county on your behalf, which eliminates the reimbursement process and reduces your upfront costs. Using a non-approved installer means you forfeit all grant funding—every dollar of it—and pay the full $25,000 to $35,000 cost yourself out of pocket. We’re on the approved vendor list and have been for years, which means we handle your entire project from initial grant application through final county approval while ensuring you receive maximum available funding from all programs you qualify for. We’ve been working with the Suffolk County Department of Health Services since 1937 and understand exactly what they require for smooth, fast approvals without delays or rejections that push your timeline back months.
1

Property Assessment and Grant Submission

We evaluate your current system, confirm all eligibility requirements, and submit your complete grant application package to Suffolk County on your behalf.

2

Engineering Design and Permit Approval

Licensed engineers design your nitrogen-reducing system based on property conditions and bedroom count, then we secure all required permits from SCDHS.

3

Professional Installation and Final Inspection

Our certified technicians install your FujiClean IA system, complete mandatory testing, and handle final county inspections to close your grant funding.