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Florida HB 1379 BMAP Compliance for Septic: The Complete Guide

Complos · May 14, 2026

End-to-end guide to FL HB 1379 (the 2023 BMAP statute), HB 1417 (annual operating-permit inspections), the July 2030 upgrade cliff, FDEP audits, BMAP zones, Save Our Lagoon-style grants, and nitrogen-reducing approved systems.

Florida HB 1379 BMAP Compliance for Septic: The Complete Guide

By The Complos Team. Last reviewed 2026-05-14.

TL;DR. Florida HB 1379 (2023) sets a July 1, 2030 cliff for septic upgrades on ~2.6 million properties inside designated Basin Management Action Plan (BMAP) zones. Conventional septic must be replaced with FDEP-approved nitrogen-reducing systems. HB 1417 (effective 2026) layers annual operating-permit renewals on top. FDEP audits 25% of inspection reports. The cost runs $7K–$25K per property; multiple grant programs exist for impaired-watershed parcels.

This pillar guide indexes every FL-focused article. The MA-side guide is at the MA Title 5 inspection complete guide; FL operates under a parallel but distinct statutory framework rooted in F.S. 381.0065 and 62-6 F.A.C..

The regulatory layers

Layer Statute / rule What it controls
F.S. 381.0065 Statute Onsite sewage treatment + disposal systems (the FL Title 5 equivalent)
62-6 F.A.C. Rule FDEP implementation: setbacks, sizing, materials, inspector cert
HB 1379 (2023) Statute BMAP-zone upgrade cliff, nitrogen-reducing system requirement
HB 1417 (2026) Statute Annual operating-permit inspections for BMAP-zone systems

HB 1379 is the cliff. HB 1417 is the recurring obligation that keeps the cliff effective.

The 2030 cliff: who's affected

The 2030 roadmap article breaks down the upgrade timeline. The 30-second version:

  • Inside a BMAP zone + conventional septic system = must upgrade to nitrogen-reducing system by July 1, 2030
  • Outside a BMAP zone = state floor under 62-6 F.A.C. applies; no HB 1379 cliff
  • Inside a BMAP zone + already on nitrogen-reducing system = HB 1417 annual inspection cycle starts 2026

Use the FL BMAP zone checker to confirm any property's status. The major BMAP regions:

What an HB 1379 upgrade looks like

Nitrogen-reducing approved systems guide covers the FDEP-approved system list. The common types:

  1. Aerobic Treatment Units (ATU) with nitrogen reduction
  2. In-ground performance-based treatment systems (PBTS)
  3. Drip-irrigation distribution upgrades to existing AB systems
  4. Sewer connection where municipal service is available within 200 ft

Cost range:

Upgrade type Typical cost (2026 FL)
ATU replacement $9,000–$15,000
PBTS retrofit $12,000–$22,000
Drip-irrigation upgrade $7,000–$11,000
Sewer connection (if available) $5,000–$25,000 (depends on lateral run)

HB 1417: the annual inspection cycle

FL FDEP BMAP inspection cycle covers the recurring obligation. Each BMAP-zone system needs:

Grants + assistance programs

FL septic-to-sewer conversion grant covers the major programs:

  • DEP Wastewater Grant Program (matches 50% of upgrade cost for low-income owners)
  • Save Our Lagoon-style local programs in Indian River Lagoon counties
  • USDA Rural Development loans for rural parcels

Property buyer / seller diligence

FL BMAP property buyer due diligence explains what to check before closing on a FL parcel with septic — disclosure obligations, BMAP-zone verification, projected upgrade cost as a price-negotiation lever.

How Complos helps

Complos is in the FL rolling-out tier — the inspection wizard and FDEP audit-readiness pill are built and waiting for the operator to flip the state to GA. Tap "Notify me" on the FL card on the home page or run the FL BMAP zone checker to confirm your parcels today.

Join our list for FL HB 1379 updates.

Frequently asked questions

What happens if I don't upgrade by July 1, 2030?

Under HB 1379, properties inside a BMAP zone that haven't upgraded by the cliff date become non-compliant. FDEP can issue notices of violation; counties can deny building permits or change-of-use applications until the upgrade is complete. Practical buyer's reaction: cliff-adjacent listings already see 8–15% price haircuts.

Does HB 1379 apply to properties on sewer?

No — only to properties on onsite (septic) systems. If sewer is available within 200 ft, HB 1379 prefers connection over upgrade.

Who inspects HB 1417 annual renewals?

Florida master septic contractors with current FDEP certification. The contractor files the inspection and renewal package; the owner is responsible for scheduling and paying.

Is Complos approved by FDEP?

Complos is independent compliance software — it generates inspection reports that meet FDEP audit format. There is no "FDEP approval" of compliance software; the FDEP-certified contractor remains the licensed party.