Greywater in Maine: What Homeowners Need to Know
Maine has no specific statewide greywater law. The Maine DEP and DHHS consider simple laundry-to-landscape systems generally allowable. Confirm with your local code office. This guide summarizes the current regulatory situation and practical considerations for Maine homeowners considering a residential greywater system.
For most homeowners, the most practical starting point is a laundry-to-landscape (L2L) system — redirecting washing machine water to mulched landscape basins. This type of system avoids any modification to existing plumbing and is the most likely to qualify for simplified treatment under any state's rules.
Before contacting any permit office, use the Greywater System Sizing Calculator to determine your daily greywater volume and whether your planned system falls within common permit thresholds. This also gives you the basin dimensions and materials list you'll need for any permit application.
What Systems Are Generally Allowed
Regardless of permit status, virtually all states that allow greywater reuse restrict it to these uses:
- Subsurface irrigation of ornamental plants, lawn, and trees (not vegetables)
- Application under mulch or via drip/bubbler methods (not sprinklers)
- Water that stays on the homeowner's property
- Systems with a sewer or septic overflow connection
If Maine's rules require a permit, that permit covers the siting and installation of a system that meets these standards — not permission to do something unusual. The permit is the paperwork step; the system itself is the same as in no-permit states.
Next Steps for Maine Homeowners
To move forward with a greywater system in Maine:
- Use the sizing calculator to estimate your system specifications
- Contact your local building or health department to confirm current Maine requirements
- Read the complete L2L installation guide for step-by-step instructions
- Check the rebate finder for any programs in your water district