The authoritative resource for consulting engineers, utility managers, plant operators, and municipal decision-makers.
1. Introduction to Delaware’s Wastewater Infrastructure
Delaware’s water and wastewater infrastructure serves a unique geographic landscape, supporting just over 1 million residents across its three counties—New Castle, Kent, and Sussex. Despite its small size, the state manages a highly diverse treatment portfolio, ranging from high-capacity combined sewer overflow (CSO) systems in the industrialized north to rapid-expansion coastal facilities and advanced agricultural spray-irrigation systems in the south.
Currently, the state’s wastewater treatment capacity is anchored by one massive regional facility in Wilmington, supplemented by mid-sized county-operated regional plants and smaller municipal systems. A major challenge for Delaware’s utility managers is balancing stringent effluent requirements—driven by the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Implementation Plan (WIP) and the Delaware Inland Bays Pollution Control Strategies—with rapid population growth, particularly in Sussex County.
The regulatory environment is tightly managed by the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC), which enforces stringent water quality standards. With over 40 permitted municipal wastewater treatment facilities state-wide, total treatment capacity exceeds 200 Million Gallons per Day (MGD). Today, Delaware is aggressively modernizing its grid, focusing heavily on coastal resilience, Biological Nutrient Removal (BNR), and resource recovery to protect its vital waterways.
2. Recent Developments & Infrastructure Projects
The last three years have marked a period of historic capital investment in Delaware’s wastewater sector, driven largely by aging infrastructure in New Castle County and explosive residential growth in Sussex County. The infusion of capital from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), coupled with DNREC’s Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF), has catalyzed over $250 million in active water quality projects.
A critical focus of recent developments has been climate resilience. With Delaware having the lowest average elevation of any U.S. state, coastal and tidal treatment facilities are undergoing major flood-proofing upgrades. Facilities are elevating critical electrical gear, installing high-capacity submersible pump stations, and hardening sea walls. Furthermore, there is a pronounced shift toward sustainable operations; the City of Wilmington is currently deploying advanced anaerobic digestion upgrades to capture biogas for renewable energy generation.
In the southern part of the state, utilities are rapidly deploying innovative effluent disposal technologies. Due to strict Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) limits in the Inland Bays, facilities like the Inland Bays Regional Wastewater Facility are expanding their use of highly treated effluent for agricultural spray irrigation, entirely avoiding direct surface water discharge. Additionally, proactive public-private partnerships (P3s) are emerging as local municipalities collaborate with private developers to fund modular Membrane Bioreactor (MBR) facilities for new subdivisions, subsequently handing operation over to county authorities.
3. Top 20 Largest Treatment Plants in Delaware
Based on DNREC facility databases, EPA ECHO data, and municipal engineering reports, here are the 20 largest wastewater treatment plants in Delaware ranked by design capacity.
| Rank | Plant Name | City/Location | Design Capacity (MGD) | Population Served | Operating Authority |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wilmington WWTP | Wilmington | 134.0 MGD | 400,000 | City of Wilmington |
| 2 | Kent County Regional WWTF | Frederica | 16.3 MGD | 135,000 | Kent County Levy Court |
| 3 | South Coastal Regional WWTF | Ocean View | 9.0 MGD | 85,000* | Sussex County |
| 4 | Inland Bays Regional WWTF | Millsboro | 7.0 MGD | 60,000 | Sussex County |
| 5 | Rehoboth Beach WWTP | Rehoboth Beach | 3.4 MGD | 25,000* | City of Rehoboth Beach |
| 6 | Middletown WWTP | Middletown | 2.5 MGD | 23,000 | Town of Middletown |
| 7 | Seaford WWTP | Seaford | 2.0 MGD | 8,500 | City of Seaford |
| 8 | Lewes BPW WWTP | Lewes | 1.5 MGD | 7,500* | Lewes Board of Public Works |
| 9 | Georgetown WWTF | Georgetown | 1.3 MGD | 7,500 | Town of Georgetown |
| 10 | Selbyville WWTF | Selbyville | 1.2 MGD | 6,000 | Town of Selbyville |
| 11 | Millsboro WWTF | Millsboro | 1.0 MGD | 6,000 | Town of Millsboro |
| 12 | Milford WWTP | Milford | 1.0 MGD | 11,500 | City of Milford |
| 13 | Laurel WWTF | Laurel | 0.7 MGD | 4,000 | Town of Laurel |
| 14 | Harrington WWTP | Harrington | 0.75 MGD | 3,600 | City of Harrington |
| 15 | Delmar WWTP | Delmar | 0.65 MGD | 3,500 | Town of Delmar |
| 16 | Bridgeville WWTP | Bridgeville | 0.5 MGD | 2,500 | Town of Bridgeville |
| 17 | Milton WWTP | Milton | 0.35 MGD | 3,000 | Town of Milton |
| 18 | Greenwood WWTP | Greenwood | 0.25 MGD | 1,200 | Town of Greenwood |
| 19 | Blades WWTP | Blades | 0.2 MGD | 1,300 | Town of Blades |
| 20 | Felton WWTP | Felton | 0.2 MGD | 1,400 | Town of Felton |
*Population served fluctuates significantly due to heavy summer tourist populations.
Detailed Profiles of the Top 5 Largest Plants
Wilmington Wastewater Treatment Plant – Rank #1
- Location: Wilmington, New Castle County, DE
- Design Capacity: 134.0 MGD
- Current Average Flow: 90.0 MGD
- Population Served: 400,000 residents
- Operating Authority: City of Wilmington Department of Public Works
- Receiving Water: Delaware River
- Service Area: City of Wilmington and portions of New Castle County
Treatment Process:
- Preliminary: Multi-channel bar screens, aerated grit chambers.
- Primary: High-capacity primary clarifiers with scum removal.
- Secondary: High-purity oxygen activated sludge process.
- Tertiary: Final clarification and chlorination/dechlorination disinfection.
- Advanced: High-rate wet weather treatment for CSO events.
Infrastructure:
- Biosolids handling: Gravity thickening, anaerobic digestion, and centrifuge dewatering.
- Energy use: Massive footprint; currently implementing a major Renewable Natural Gas (RNG) cogeneration system.
- Odor control: Biofiltration and chemical scrubbers at headworks.
Recent Upgrades/Notable Features: Phase II of a $300M+ Long Term Control Plan for CSO mitigation. Significant upgrades to the anaerobic digestion complex to capture and utilize methane gas.
Compliance & Performance: Regulated under a complex NPDES permit that includes limits for CSO discharges. Award-winning safety programs.
Link: View Full Plant Profile
Kent County Regional Wastewater Treatment Facility – Rank #2
- Location: Frederica, Kent County, DE
- Design Capacity: 16.3 MGD
- Current Average Flow: 12.5 MGD
- Population Served: 135,000 residents
- Operating Authority: Kent County Levy Court
- Receiving Water: Murderkill River
- Service Area: Dover, Smyrna, Milford (partial), and surrounding Kent County municipalities.
Treatment Process:
- Preliminary: Mechanical fine screening, vortex grit removal.
- Primary: Primary clarification.
- Secondary: Biological Nutrient Removal (BNR) via oxidation ditches.
- Tertiary: Deep bed sand filtration, UV disinfection.
- Advanced: Enhanced nutrient removal (ENR) for total nitrogen and phosphorus reduction.
Infrastructure:
- Biosolids handling: Biosolids are processed through a massive centralized drying facility to create a Class A EQ fertilizer product.
- Energy use: Large solar array providing ~30% of daytime electrical needs.
Recent Upgrades: Upgraded aeration systems with high-efficiency turbo blowers and a recent $15M capacity study/expansion planning phase.
Link: View Full Plant Profile
South Coastal Regional Wastewater Facility – Rank #3
- Location: Ocean View, Sussex County, DE
- Design Capacity: 9.0 MGD
- Current Average Flow: 4.5 MGD (winter) / 8.0 MGD (summer peak)
- Population Served: Up to 85,000 (seasonal)
- Operating Authority: Sussex County Engineering Department
- Receiving Water: Ocean Outfall (Atlantic Ocean) via partnership
- Service Area: Bethany Beach, South Bethany, Fenwick Island, Ocean View, Millville.
Treatment Process:
- Secondary: Modified Ludzack-Ettinger (MLE) process for biological treatment.
- Tertiary: Filtration and Ultraviolet (UV) disinfection.
Infrastructure:
- Biosolids handling: Centrifuge dewatering, drying to Class A standards.
- Recent Upgrades: Completed a major $30M+ biosolids and treatment upgrade to accommodate rapid residential growth in the coastal region.
Link: View Full Plant Profile
Inland Bays Regional Wastewater Facility – Rank #4
- Location: Millsboro, Sussex County, DE
- Design Capacity: 7.0 MGD
- Current Average Flow: 3.5 MGD
- Population Served: 60,000 residents
- Operating Authority: Sussex County
- Receiving Water: Zero discharge to surface water (Spray Irrigation)
- Service Area: Long Neck, Oak Orchard, Angola, and expanding westward.
Treatment Process:
- Secondary: Biological nutrient removal via activated sludge.
- Tertiary: Storage lagoons and center-pivot spray irrigation systems.
- Advanced: Winter storage lagoons (hundreds of millions of gallons capacity).
Infrastructure: Uses vast tracts of agricultural land for effluent disposal to protect the sensitive Inland Bays from nutrient pollution.
Recent Upgrades: Multimillion-dollar expansion of spray irrigation fields and high-efficiency pumping infrastructure to meet subdivision growth.
Link: View Full Plant Profile
Rehoboth Beach WWTP – Rank #5
- Location: Rehoboth Beach, Sussex County, DE
- Design Capacity: 3.4 MGD
- Current Average Flow: 1.5 MGD (winter) / 3.0 MGD (summer)
- Population Served: Up to 25,000 (seasonal)
- Operating Authority: City of Rehoboth Beach
- Receiving Water: Atlantic Ocean (via deep ocean outfall)
Treatment Process:
- Secondary: Biological Nutrient Removal.
- Tertiary: Filtration, effluent pumping station.
Recent Upgrades: A landmark $52.5 million ocean outfall project was completed in 2018, ending decades of discharge into the Lewes-Rehoboth Canal. Includes a 6,000-foot underwater pipeline.
Link: View Full Plant Profile
Plants Ranked 6-20 (Condensed)
Major Municipal Plants (Rank 6-10):
- Middletown WWTP – Middletown: 2.5 MGD capacity, serves 23,000 people. Operated by Town of Middletown. Notably utilizes rapid-infiltration basins and spray irrigation.
- Seaford WWTP – Seaford: 2.0 MGD capacity, serves 8,500 people. Operated by City of Seaford. Discharges to the Nanticoke River with strict phosphorus limits.
- Lewes BPW WWTP – Lewes: 1.5 MGD capacity, serves 7,500 people. Operated by Lewes Board of Public Works. Highly advanced MBR (Membrane Bioreactor) facility providing superior effluent clarity.
- Georgetown WWTF – Georgetown: 1.3 MGD capacity, serves 7,500 people. Operated by Town of Georgetown. Utilizes large-scale spray irrigation.
- Selbyville WWTF – Selbyville: 1.2 MGD capacity, serves 6,000 people. Operated by Town of Selbyville. Features recent upgrades to UV disinfection channels.
Significant Facilities (Rank 11-20):
- Millsboro WWTF – Millsboro: 1.0 MGD. Upgraded to handle tremendous housing boom in the area.
- Milford WWTP – Milford: 1.0 MGD. Currently undergoing studies for potential consolidation or major upgrades.
- Laurel WWTF – Laurel: 0.7 MGD. Operates stringent BNR to protect Broad Creek.
- Harrington WWTP – Harrington: 0.75 MGD. Recent pump station overhauls completed.
- Delmar WWTP – Delmar: 0.65 MGD. Serves a bi-state (DE/MD) community.
- Bridgeville WWTP – Bridgeville: 0.5 MGD. Operates spray irrigation.
- Milton WWTP – Milton: 0.35 MGD. Planning for future capacity expansion.
- Greenwood WWTP – Greenwood: 0.25 MGD. Small footprint biological plant.
- Blades WWTP – Blades: 0.2 MGD. Serves the localized community on the Nanticoke.
- Felton WWTP – Felton: 0.2 MGD. Biological treatment with rapid infiltration.
4. Plants with Approved Budgets & Expansion Projects
The state of Delaware currently has an unprecedented volume of wastewater infrastructure projects moving through the design and construction phases. Fueled by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law (IIJA) and CWSRF loans, state authorities are addressing aging infrastructure in New Castle County and explosive housing demand in Sussex County.
A. MAJOR PROJECTS UNDER CONSTRUCTION (2024-2026)
Wilmington WWTP – $45 Million Anaerobic Digestion & Biogas Project
- Location: Wilmington, New Castle County
- Project Scope: Complete overhaul of the anaerobic digestion complex to generate Renewable Natural Gas (RNG) for grid injection. Includes new covers, mixing systems, and gas upgrading equipment.
- Total Budget: $45.2 million
- Funding Breakdown:
- 60% CWSRF loan ($27.1 million)
- 25% Private Partner Investment / Energy Grants ($11.3 million)
- 15% Local Funds/Revenue Bonds ($6.8 million)
- Timeline: Design completed Nov 2022; Construction started Q2 2023; Projected in-service date: Late 2025.
- Technology Upgrades: Membrane gas holders, biological desulfurization, pressure swing adsorption (PSA) gas upgrading.
- Project Drivers: Energy efficiency mandates, carbon footprint reduction, and aging asset replacement.
- Expected Benefits: Transformation from an energy consumer to a net-energy producer, significantly reducing operational OPEX.
Sussex County South Coastal WWTF – $32 Million Treatment & Biosolids Upgrade
- Location: Ocean View, Sussex County
- Project Scope: Expansion of biosolids handling capacity and secondary clarifier upgrades to meet peak summer flows.
- Total Budget: $32.0 million
- Funding Breakdown:
- 80% SRF loan ($25.6 million)
- 20% County Capital/Impact Fees ($6.4 million)
- Timeline: Construction start Q1 2024; Expected completion Q4 2025.
- Technology Upgrades: High-solids centrifuges, advanced SCADA integration, new biological selectors.
- Project Drivers: Population growth and capacity needs (handling seasonal tourist spikes exceeding 100%).
- Expected Benefits: Improved sludge dewaterability, reduced hauling costs, enhanced effluent stability during peak flow events.
B. PROJECTS IN DESIGN/PLANNING PHASE (2025-2027)
- Inland Bays Regional WWTF – Phase 3 Capacity Expansion
- Estimated budget: $42 million
- Funding: Pending SRF and County Revenue Bonds
- Scope: Expansion from 7.0 MGD to 9.0 MGD, addition of new winter storage lagoons, and expansion of spray irrigation transmission mains.
- Anticipated construction start: 2026
- Kent County Regional WWTF – Nutrient Removal Optimization
- Estimated budget: $18 million
- Funding: Secured IIJA grants and SRF loans
- Scope: Upgrades to secondary aeration zones, implementation of advanced ammonia-based aeration control (ABAC).
- Anticipated completion: 2027
- Lewes BPW – Collection System and Pump Station Resiliency
- Estimated budget: $12 million
- Funding: FEMA Hazard Mitigation and SRF
- Scope: Flood-proofing 5 major coastal pump stations, upgrading electrical systems to withstand Category 3 storm surges.
C. RECENTLY COMPLETED MAJOR PROJECTS (2022-2024)
- City of Seaford WWTP – Secondary Clarifier Upgrade (Completed May 2023)
- Investment: $8.5 million
- Key improvements: Replaced 40-year-old clarifier mechanisms, installed new RAS/WAS pumps, upgraded UV channels.
- Results achieved: Guaranteed compliance with stringent Nanticoke River phosphorus limits.
- Town of Millsboro WWTF – Plant Expansion (Completed 2022)
- Investment: $15 million
- Key improvements: Added new biological trains and expanded rapid infiltration basins.
- Results achieved: Successfully doubled capacity to support 3,000 new planned residential units.
SUMMARY STATISTICS
- Total Active Capital Investment: $165+ million currently under construction or in final design.
- Number of Plants with Major Active Projects: 12 facilities
- Total New Capacity Being Added: ~10 MGD across DE (mostly in Sussex County)
- Average Project Size: $14 million
- Largest Single Project: Wilmington Digester Upgrades – $45.2 million
- Primary Project Drivers:
- Capacity expansion (Growth in Sussex): 5 projects ($85 million)
- Aging infrastructure/Energy: 4 projects ($60 million)
- Climate Resilience: 3 projects ($20 million)
- Funding Source Breakdown (Estimated):
- State Revolving Fund (CWSRF): 65%
- Local Revenue Bonds/Impact Fees: 20%
- IIJA Federal Grants: 10%
- Other State Grants: 5%
INDUSTRY IMPLICATIONS: For consulting engineers and equipment vendors, Delaware represents a hyper-focused market. Southern Delaware is a hotbed for rapid-deployment capacity expansions, modular treatment tech, and agricultural irrigation equipment. Northern Delaware (Wilmington/New Castle) offers prime opportunities for large-scale rehabilitation, CSO mitigation, and heavy mechanical equipment replacement.
5. Regulatory & Compliance Landscape
Wastewater treatment in Delaware is primarily overseen by the Delaware Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control (DNREC), which administers the National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) program on behalf of the EPA. Because all of Delaware’s waterways drain into critical estuaries—the Delaware Bay, the Chesapeake Bay, and the Inland Bays—the state enforces some of the strictest nutrient discharge limits in the country.
Under the Chesapeake Bay Watershed Implementation Plan (WIP), facilities in the western part of the state (like Seaford and Laurel) face extraordinarily tight Total Nitrogen (TN) and Total Phosphorus (TP) limits. Meanwhile, the Delaware Inland Bays suffer from historical eutrophication, leading to a de facto ban on new surface water discharges in that watershed. This regulatory wall has driven the massive adoption of land-application techniques, specifically highly treated effluent spray irrigation over agricultural lands and forests.
Looking forward, Delaware regulators are closely monitoring emerging contaminants, specifically Per- and Polyfluoroalkyl Substances (PFAS). While final federal MCLs for drinking water are rolling out, DNREC is beginning to incorporate PFAS monitoring requirements into new NPDES permit renewals and biosolids land-application permits, forcing utility managers to evaluate advanced filtration or destruction technologies.
6. Infrastructure Challenges & Opportunities
Delaware’s wastewater engineers face two diametrically opposed challenges based on geography. In the industrial north (New Castle County), the challenge is aging infrastructure and wet weather management. The City of Wilmington operates a combined sewer system dating back over a century, which requires intensive, ongoing capital investment to minimize Combined Sewer Overflows (CSOs) into the Christina and Delaware Rivers during heavy rain events. This provides massive opportunities for engineering firms specializing in hydraulic modeling, green infrastructure, and deep tunnel storage.
Conversely, in southern Delaware (Sussex County), the challenge is explosive population growth. The “Slower Lower” Delaware region has become a premier retirement and remote-work destination. Municipalities are scrambling to add capacity, layout miles of new force mains, and acquire vast tracts of land for effluent spray irrigation before development overtakes available parcels.
Furthermore, climate change poses a universal threat. With an average elevation of just 60 feet above sea level, and many coastal facilities operating at or near sea level, rising tides and severe coastal storms are forcing utilities to implement rigorous asset management and coastal resiliency plans. Opportunities abound for contractors specializing in floodwall construction, elevated motor control centers (MCCs), and submersible infrastructure.
7. Technology Trends in Delaware
To navigate the state’s unique regulatory and geographic landscape, Delaware’s wastewater sector is rapidly adopting advanced technologies:
- Land Application & Resource Recovery: Delaware is arguably a national leader in effluent spray irrigation. Because surface discharge into the Inland Bays is prohibited, facilities are utilizing advanced automated center-pivot irrigation systems integrated with SCADA to distribute nutrient-rich effluent onto corn and soybean fields, effectively reusing the water and the nutrients.
- Membrane Bioreactors (MBR): Space-constrained coastal communities, such as Lewes, have adopted MBR technology to achieve extremely high effluent quality within a small physical footprint. MBR is also becoming the standard for private, developer-built “package plants” supporting new isolated subdivisions.
- Biogas Utilization: As seen in Wilmington’s current $45M upgrade, the transition from flaring digester gas to generating pipeline-quality Renewable Natural Gas (RNG) is a major trend, transforming WWTPs into resource recovery facilities.
- Advanced Process Automation: Utilities across the state are upgrading to smart SCADA systems with predictive analytics and ammonia-based aeration control (ABAC) to optimize blower energy usage while strictly maintaining BNR compliance.
8. Complete Directory of Delaware Facilities
Browse our comprehensive directory of water and wastewater treatment plants in Delaware, categorized by system size and type:
Major Regional Facilities (>100 MGD)
- Wilmington Wastewater Treatment Plant – Wilmington
Large Municipal & County Plants (5-20 MGD)
- Kent County Regional WWTF – Frederica
- South Coastal Regional WWTF – Ocean View
- Inland Bays Regional WWTF – Millsboro
Medium-Sized Plants (1-5 MGD)
- Rehoboth Beach WWTP
- Middletown WWTP
- Seaford WWTP
- Lewes BPW WWTP
- Georgetown WWTF
- Selbyville WWTF
- Millsboro WWTF
- Milford WWTP
Smaller Community Plants (<1 MGD)
- Laurel WWTF
- Harrington WWTP
- Delmar WWTP
- Bridgeville WWTP
- Milton WWTP
- Greenwood WWTP
- Blades WWTP
- Felton WWTP
Looking for facilities outside of Delaware? Return to the US Treatment Plant Directory.
9. Resources for Engineers & Operators
For engineering firms pursuing projects, equipment vendors, and operators seeking certification in Delaware, the following resources are essential:
- Regulatory Agency: DNREC Division of Water – Oversees NPDES permitting, the CWSRF program, and surface water discharges.
- Funding Information: Review DNREC’s Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF) Intended Use Plans to track upcoming funded projects.
- Professional Associations: The Chesapeake Water Environment Association (CWEA) and the Delaware Rural Water Association (DRWA) provide critical networking, continuing education, and technical conferences.
- Operator Certification: Managed by the Delaware Board of Certification for Wastewater Operators, ensuring all plants are staffed by credentialed professionals.
10. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
How many wastewater treatment plants are in Delaware?
Delaware has approximately 40 permitted municipal wastewater treatment facilities, alongside numerous smaller private and industrial systems, regulated by DNREC.
What are the 5 largest treatment facilities in Delaware?
The five largest by design capacity are the Wilmington WWTP (134 MGD), Kent County Regional WWTF (16.3 MGD), South Coastal Regional WWTF (9.0 MGD), Inland Bays Regional WWTF (7.0 MGD), and Rehoboth Beach WWTP (3.4 MGD).
Which plants in Delaware have major expansion projects underway?
Wilmington WWTP is undergoing a $45M anaerobic digester and biogas upgrade. Sussex County’s South Coastal facility is completing a $32M biosolids expansion, and Inland Bays Regional is in the design phase for a capacity expansion to 9.0 MGD.
What funding is available for treatment plant upgrades in Delaware?
Funding is primarily distributed through DNREC’s Clean Water State Revolving Fund (CWSRF), which currently includes significant federal infusions from the Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act (IIJA), alongside municipal revenue bonds and FEMA Hazard Mitigation grants.
What treatment technologies are most common in Delaware?
Due to stringent nutrient limits, Biological Nutrient Removal (BNR) is standard. Additionally, land-application via center-pivot spray irrigation is highly common in Sussex and Kent counties to prevent surface water discharge into sensitive bays.
How is Delaware addressing PFAS contamination in wastewater?
DNREC is beginning to mandate PFAS sampling for WWTP effluents and biosolids. While heavy destruction technology is not yet uniformly mandated for municipal plants, the state is closely monitoring EPA guidelines to enforce future limits.
What are the operator certification requirements in Delaware?
Operators must be certified through the Delaware Board of Certification for Wastewater Operators. Certification involves documented operating experience, passing standardized exams based on plant classification (Levels I through IV), and maintaining Continuing Education Units (CEUs).
Which Delaware treatment plants are dealing with CSOs?
The City of Wilmington is the primary municipality in Delaware managing Combined Sewer Overflows (CSOs) and operates under a comprehensive Long-Term Control Plan to mitigate discharges into the Delaware River.
source https://www.waterandwastewater.com/delaware-wastewater-treatment-plants/