What size septic tank do I need? Bedrooms give you the people, the regulation gives you the litres
- It takes two documents, and almost nobody says so. British Water converts bedrooms into people; Approved Document H converts people into litres.
- British Water: a house with “up to and including 3 bedrooms shall be designed for a minimum population (P) of 5 people”, then “adding 1 P for each additional bedroom”.
- Approved Document H §1.18: 2,700 litres for up to 4 users, plus 180 litres per additional user.
- So a 4-bed house is 6 people is 3,060 litres. A 3-bed is 2,880. Nobody publishes that chain — they publish one half or the other.
- The “three rival formulas” are largely one rule in different clothes. What actually differs is which document your Building Control opens.
Every sizing method in Britain begins with the same quantity: the litres one person sends down the drain in a day. It is the least-discussed figure in the calculation, and the only one that has actually changed.
British Water moved it itself. The edition of its code known as Flows and Loads – 2 put a standard residential occupant at "Standard residential 200" litres. Flows and Loads – 4, the current one, supported by the Environment Agency, SEPA and the Northern Ireland Environment Agency, puts the identical person at "Standard residential 150". Same body, same table heading, a quarter less water. Neither figure is a mistake — an edition of a code is a snapshot, and this one was retaken. But a merchant still working from 200 litres a head is selling you volume you stopped producing years ago.
Then there is 180, which is neither. It is what Harlequin Manufacturing sizes on — "180 litres/person/day" — and, quite separately, the increment Approved Document H adds for each user beyond four. The two 180s have nothing to do with one another; they merely look alike, which is how the rival formulas got tangled.
Use 150 if you are following British Water. If you are following Building Control, do not reach for litres-a-day at all: Approved Document H never asks for it. It counts users.
Ask what size septic tank you need and you will get two kinds of answer, both incomplete. The tank sellers tell you your bedrooms give you a population. The technical pages tell you the population gives you litres. Almost nobody joins the two halves, which is why the question feels harder than it is.
It is two documents, used in order.
Step 1: how many people does your house hold?
Not how many live there. How many it could hold. British Water’s Code of Practice Flows and Loads – 4 — which is supported by the Environment Agency in England, SEPA in Scotland and the Northern Ireland Environment Agency — puts it like this:
“A treatment system for a single house with up to and including 3 bedrooms shall be designed for a minimum population (P) of 5 people.”
“The size of a treatment system for a single house with more than 3 bedrooms shall be designed by adding 1 P for each additional bedroom to the minimum single house value of 5 P”
| Bedrooms | Population (P) |
|---|---|
| 1, 2 or 3 | 5 |
| 4 | 6 |
| 5 | 7 |
| 6 | 8 |
The system is sized for the property, not the household, because the property outlives the household. The couple sells to a family of six; the tank does not get bigger on completion day. Building Control is approving a house, not a marriage.
It also explains why “we’re only two people” is never a defence when a system is undersized. Nobody asked how many of you there are.
Step 2: how many litres is that?
Approved Document H, §1.18, word for word:
“Septic tanks should have a capacity below the level of the inlet of at least 2,700 litres (2.7m³) for up to 4 users. The size should be increased by 180 litres for each additional user.”
Put the two documents together and you get the table that nobody publishes:
| Bedrooms | People (British Water) | Minimum litres (AD H) |
|---|---|---|
| Up to 3 | 5 | 2,880 |
| 4 | 6 | 3,060 |
| 5 | 7 | 3,240 |
| 6 | 8 | 3,420 |
That is the whole calculation. Our septic tank size calculator does the second step for you if you would rather type a number than do arithmetic.
The “three rival formulas” are mostly one rule
You will meet three formulas and be told they conflict. They barely do.
At six people they produce 3,060, 3,080 and 2,900 litres. The spread is 180 litres — on a product sold in fixed sizes of 2,700, 2,800, 3,750, 3,800. All three land you on the same tank in the shop.
So the formula argument is theatre. What is not theatre is which document decides:
“Approved Document H (Building Regulations) [England and Wales]: This is the formula above: Capacity (litres) = 2,700 + 180 × (P – 4). This is what Building Control will reference when approving a new installation. It sets the regulatory minimum.”
British Water’s Flows and Loads is described in the same source as “This older calculation” that “multiplies the population equivalent by 150 litres (the estimated daily wastewater output per person) and adds 2,000 litres for sludge retention”.
British Water’s is transparent: 150 litres a day per person of wastewater, plus 2,000 litres of room for sludge to accumulate between empties. Both halves are physical quantities you could measure.
Approved Document H’s 2,700-plus-180 is the same idea, rounded into a regulation: a fixed floor that covers a normal small household, then a marginal allowance per extra body. It is the engineering estimate with the arguments taken out.
They agree because they are describing the same tank. They differ by 180 litres because one is a calculation and the other is a rule, and rules round up. Which is why arguing about the third decimal of your household’s water use is a waste of an afternoon: buy the next size up and stop.
The bit that matters for shared tanks
| Figure | Source | Standing |
|---|---|---|
| 200 L | Code of Practice Flows and Loads – 2 | superseded edition |
| 150 L | Code of Practice Flows and Loads – 4 | current — EA, SEPA and NIEA support it |
| 180 L | Harlequin Manufacturing | a manufacturer's own figure |
If several houses share one system, do not simply add the populations. British Water allows for the fact that twenty households never all run a bath at once:
“If the calculated total P for a group of houses exceeds 12 P then some reduction may be made to allow for the balancing effects”
“Where the total is 13-25 P multiply the total by 0.9”
“Where the total is 26-50 P multiply the total by 0.8”
So ten four-bedroom houses is 60 P on paper, and 48 P after the 0.8 factor — a genuine difference in the size of tank being specified and paid for. If you are in a shared arrangement and someone is quoting you for a system, that factor is worth asking about, because it is your money.
Where the size stops mattering
One honest caveat, and it is the most important sentence here: a bigger tank does not rescue bad ground.
The tank settles solids. The drainage field does the treatment, and its size comes from your percolation value, not your bedrooms — At = p × Vp × 0.25. If your Vp is outside the band of 12 to 100, no tank capacity makes a drainage field legal or functional.
So the order of operations is: test the ground first, size the tank second. People do it the other way round, buy the tank, and then discover the expensive half.
What to do
- Count bedrooms, get P. Up to 3 beds is 5; add one per extra bedroom.
- Convert P to litres: 2,700 for up to 4, plus 180 each after.
- Round up to the next tank on the market. The 180-litre argument between formulas disappears the moment you look at what is actually for sale.
- Check what you are being sold is measured “below the level of the inlet”, not total volume — it is not the same as the capacity on the label, and the difference is the chamber you paid for and cannot use.
- Test the ground before you buy anything. The tank is the cheap, easy half of this decision.
150 litres, by British Water's current code. The previous edition said 200.
Two unrelated places: Harlequin's own figure, and Approved Document H's increment per user beyond four.
Only if your installer is still on the old number. Building Control never asks for litres a day.
Frequently asked questions
What size septic tank for a 4-bedroom house?
3,060 litres, following the two documents in order. British Water's Code of Practice sets the population: up to 3 bedrooms is 5 people, then “adding 1 P for each additional bedroom” — so a 4-bed is 6 people. Approved Document H §1.18 then sets the litres: “at least 2,700 litres (2.7m³) for up to 4 users. The size should be increased by 180 litres for each additional user.” Six users means 2,700 + 180 × 2 = 3,060 litres.
How do I work out the population equivalent from bedrooms?
British Water's Code of Practice Flows and Loads – 4, which is supported by the Environment Agency, SEPA and the Northern Ireland Environment Agency: “A treatment system for a single house with up to and including 3 bedrooms shall be designed for a minimum population (P) of 5 people” and “The size of a treatment system for a single house with more than 3 bedrooms shall be designed by adding 1 P for each additional bedroom to the minimum single house value of 5 P.” So 3 beds = 5, 4 beds = 6, 5 beds = 7, 6 beds = 8.
Why do I see different sizing formulas?
Because two documents answer two different questions and people quote them as rivals. Approved Document H (2,700 + 180 × (P−4)) is the one “Building Control will reference when approving a new installation”, and it applies in England and Wales. British Water's older Flows and Loads calculation (P × 150 + 2,000) “multiplies the population equivalent by 150 litres … and adds 2,000 litres for sludge retention”. For six people they give 3,060 and 2,900 — a difference of 160 litres, which is a rounding error on a tank you buy in fixed sizes.
Does the tank size depend on bedrooms or on people?
On people — but bedrooms are how you count them. Approved Document H talks only about “users”. Bedrooms enter through British Water, as a proxy for how many people the house could hold. That is deliberate: you size for the house's capacity, not for who happens to live there now. A couple in a five-bedroom house still needs a system for seven, because the next owners might be seven.
Is there a minimum regardless of house size?
Yes. 2,700 litres. As one source puts it, “The Approved Document H minimum is 2,700 litres for any domestic property, regardless of how small the house” is. There is no such thing as a compliant 1,500-litre domestic septic tank.
We share a tank with neighbours — do we just add everyone up?
Not quite, and British Water gives a discount for it: “If the calculated total P for a group of houses exceeds 12 P then some reduction may be made to allow for the balancing effects” — “Where the total is 13-25 P multiply the total by 0.9” and “Where the total is 26-50 P multiply the total by 0.8”. The logic is that twenty households never all run a bath at the same moment.
Researcher & editor, off-mains drainage
Writes independent guides on septic tanks, cesspits and sewage treatment plants for homes off the mains. Cross-checks the general binding rules and the Environment Agency, SEPA, NRW and NIEA against real prices, British Standards and what owners actually report on the forums.