Instant USDA SSURGO soil analysis for any property in Routt County, Colorado. Soil profiles, septic system sizing, foundation recommendations, drainage classification, and percolation estimates — from real federal soil survey data.
$9.99 — Instant DeliveryMany Routt County real estate agents and lenders require a soil assessment before closing on vacant land or rural properties. Soil conditions determine whether a septic system will work, what foundation type is needed, and whether there are drainage or expansive soil issues that could cost tens of thousands of dollars after closing. Our $9.99 report gives you the same USDA data that professional engineers use as a starting point — instantly.
Every soil layer under your Routt County property — type, depth, texture class (sandy loam, clay, gravel), and Unified Soil Classification code from USDA SSURGO data.
Preliminary septic system sizing based on soil percolation rate and bedroom count. Identifies system type — conventional gravity, pressure distribution, or ATU — and required soil treatment area.
Based on clay content, shrink-swell potential, depth to bedrock, and bearing capacity. Recommends spread footing, pier and grade beam, or engineered slab with estimated depth.
Hydrologic soil group, drainage class, and depth to seasonal high water table. Critical for basement suitability and Routt County stormwater requirements.
Estimated perc rate (minutes per inch) from soil texture and hydraulic conductivity. Tells you whether a conventional septic will work on your Routt County parcel.
Overall construction suitability assessment. Flags expansive clay, shallow bedrock, high water table, frost depth, and corrosion potential for concrete and steel.
A traditional geotechnical investigation for a Routt County property costs thousands and takes weeks. Our report uses the same federal soil data as a starting point — delivered in seconds.
Most rural Routt County properties are not connected to municipal sewer and require an On-site Wastewater Treatment System (OWTS) — commonly called a septic system. Routt County, including areas around Steamboat Springs, requires an OWTS permit that includes a site evaluation and soil assessment.
Whether a property can support a conventional gravity septic system ($8,000–$15,000) or requires an engineered system or ATU ($20,000–$40,000) depends almost entirely on soil conditions — percolation rate, depth to bedrock, and depth to water table. Our report gives you this information before you schedule a $500+ perc test.
Foundation costs are one of the biggest variables in building a home. In Routt County, soil conditions can add $5,000–$30,000 to foundation costs if not identified early. Expansive clay soils require overexcavation and moisture barriers. Shallow bedrock may require rock drilling for footings. High water table areas need waterproofing and sump systems.
Our soil report identifies these conditions using the same USDA data that geotechnical engineers check first — so you know what you're dealing with before you pour a single yard of concrete.
Land buyers check soil before closing to avoid septic and foundation surprises. Home builders use it to estimate excavation and foundation costs. Real estate agents include it with Routt County rural listings to demonstrate due diligence. Septic designers use it as a preliminary screen before scheduling perc tests. Lenders occasionally require a soil assessment for land loans in Routt County.
Need more than a soil report? Our Property Feasibility Report ($49) adds well depths, flood zones, wildfire risk, terrain analysis, and development cost estimates. Our Complete Bundle ($99) includes everything plus an ARCH D site plan with DXF/CAD export.
View Routt County Site Plans