North Texas
North Texas needs a split between the big metro clusters and the rural counties that behave nothing like them. Septic trouble here usually swings between high-usage suburban strain and clay-heavy rural saturation.
County discovery
Every Texas county now links directly to its county page. The index stays simple and alphabetical so homeowners can get to the county first and then move into services, support pages, or the broader region context.
Across Texas
County pages, regional overviews, and service guides work together so homeowners can start with the property location and narrow the next step faster.
County list
This index stays light on purpose. The fastest path is to open the county directly and then use the local service and region links from there.
Not sure of your county?
North Texas needs a split between the big metro clusters and the rural counties that behave nothing like them. Septic trouble here usually swings between high-usage suburban strain and clay-heavy rural saturation.
East Texas is not one uniform forest block. The Tyler-Longview corridor behaves differently from the deeper timber belt and the Sabine-side counties, so the public model needs sub-regions before homeowners can find the right county context.
Central Texas needs its own middle layer because Austin growth and Hill Country constraints do not behave like Brazos Valley or Heart of Texas counties. This is the main Texas corridor where rocky soil and suburban expansion collide.
West Texas needs more than one public bucket. The Panhandle, South Plains, Permian Basin, and Big Bend each create different septic decisions, even though they all share distance, dryness, and a smaller margin for sloppy planning.
South Texas is where metro pressure, border influence, and huge rural stretches all overlap. The public model needs sub-regions here because a San Antonio-area septic call has almost nothing in common with a Webb or Maverick County property.
Gulf Coast Texas needs a clean split between the Houston machine and the actual coast. High water table pressure, storm runoff, and flat coastal sites all belong here, but the county path should still narrow homeowners into recognizable sub-regions first.
Linked county names open the county septic guide. A county name with a sub-region label opens the sub-region guide — the county page is being added.