Midwest Excavation Group LLC
Big Rapids, Michigan, 49307
Contact Information
Licensing
Status: Active
Services
UST Services in Michigan
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Michigan does not issue a state-specific license for underground storage tank work. That does not mean the work is unregulated. Every UST installation, removal, and closure in Michigan still falls under federal EPA regulations (40 CFR Part 280). The Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE) enforces state environmental standards on top of that. The absence of a dedicated UST license actually makes contractor vetting harder, not easier, because there is no state database to check.
Residential oil tank removal is the most common project. A straightforward heating oil tank pull with clean soil runs $1,500 to $3,500. Soil testing adds $500 to $1,500, and that step is not optional if you plan to sell the property or satisfy a lender. When soil samples come back with soil contamination above state action levels, the project stops being a removal and becomes an environmental remediation job. Cleanup costs above $20,000 are routine, not exceptional, once petroleum has moved beyond the tank cavity into surrounding soil. Tanks installed after 1990 with double-wall construction and functioning leak detection often come out clean, so contamination is not a given.
Commercial fuel tank removal and gas station tank decommissioning projects run considerably higher. Larger tanks hold more residual product, sit in the ground longer, and leak more often. A single leaking underground storage tank at a commercial site can require groundwater monitoring wells, quarterly sampling, and a corrective action plan that the EGLE oversees for years. A clean commercial closure might run $15,000. A contaminated one can exceed $150,000. Properties with newer tank systems and documented maintenance histories fall on the lower end far more often than operators expect.
Because Michigan has no UST contractor registry, the burden of vetting falls entirely on the property owner. Environmental liability insurance is the first thing to verify. Beyond that, ask for completed closure reports from projects in Michigan, not just references. A general contractor with heavy equipment can dig a hole and pull a tank. Interpreting soil lab results on site, deciding whether to extend the excavation, and filing the closure paperwork with the EGLE requires a different skill set. Managing a remediation plan when contamination shows up requires yet another level of experience. The excavation is the easy part. Everything that follows is where experience pays for itself. Confirm any contractor you are considering understands current UST compliance requirements before signing a contract.
Find contractors in Michigan through the directory for residential and commercial tank removal, site assessment, tank decommissioning, inspections, and remediation.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I verify a UST contractor in Michigan?
Michigan does not maintain a UST contractor licensing database, so there is no public registry to search. The best approach is to ask the contractor for proof of environmental liability insurance, request copies of completed closure reports from projects in Michigan, and check references from property owners or facility managers they have worked with. A general contractor license or excavation permit does not indicate experience with underground storage tank closure, soil sampling protocols, or EGLE reporting requirements. Ask specifically about UST compliance experience and how many tank closures they have filed in Michigan.
What happens if soil contamination is found during tank removal?
The project shifts from a removal to an environmental remediation job. The contractor collects additional soil samples to map how far petroleum has spread, and the EGLE may require a formal corrective action plan before cleanup begins. Remediation includes extended excavation of contaminated soil, off-site disposal at a licensed facility, and follow-up sampling to confirm the site meets state action levels. If contamination has reached groundwater, monitoring wells and quarterly sampling can extend the timeline by months. Some states maintain cleanup reimbursement funds that cover a significant share of these costs, which is worth asking the EGLE about before assuming the full expense falls on the property owner.
Does USTContractors.com verify the contractors listed in the directory?
Listings with a "UST Licensed" badge have been verified against a state licensing database where one exists. Listings with a "Licensed" badge hold a verified general contracting, excavation, or environmental credential. Listings without a badge are included based on confirmed involvement in residential or commercial tank removal, site assessment, or fuel tank services but have not been verified against a state database. Confirming insurance coverage and asking for project references before hiring any contractor is a good practice regardless of badge status.
