Pick the same day each month
Tie septic treatment to rent, mortgage, utility bills, or another date you already remember.
Monthly septic treatment
This page is about cadence: when to treat, how much to use, and how to make septic maintenance visible every month.
Takes less than 10 seconds a month.
Clear answer
For Maintane, the routine is monthly: one level scoop per toilet, once a month. Pumping and inspections still stay on their own schedule.
Schedule
Septic systems process waste every day. A once-in-a-while panic routine is not the same as a repeatable maintenance schedule.
Tie septic treatment to rent, mortgage, utility bills, or another date you already remember.
The monthly habit is simple: one level scoop per toilet, then flush.
Monthly treatment supports the routine between service intervals; it does not replace pumping.
A calendar alert keeps septic care visible before smell, slow drains, or other warning signs appear.
Maintane fit
Maintane is built for simple monthly use with no measuring, mixing, or complicated prep.
Not ready to buy yet?
If you are still researching, start with the habits that keep septic systems out of trouble. We will send the checklist and practical notes on smells, slow drains, and monthly maintenance.
Built for homeowners who want a calmer, cleaner maintenance routine.
How to use it
Pick a day, dose each toilet, and check the habit off until next month.
Put septic treatment on the calendar so it does not depend on memory.
Dose the toilets in your home according to the directions.
The goal is boring consistency, not emergency decision-making.
Ready when you are
Maintane is built for homeowners who want clear dosing and a routine they can actually repeat.
FAQ
Maintane is designed for monthly use: one level scoop per toilet, once a month.
It can be part of a responsible routine, especially alongside pumping, inspections, and septic-safe habits.
Follow the dosing guide. When in doubt, use the household guidance on the dosing page.
No. Treatment supports maintenance between pump-outs; it does not replace pumping.