30-50 psi is more typical for homes.
I doubt that you can pressurize a plastic tank as large as you are considering*. If there is a hill nearby, you can get about 1 psi for each 2' of elevation.
How are you going to fill this tank?
If you have a well, the usual setup is a much smaller pressure tank with air over the water. This tank is pressurized by your well pump. There is either a rubber bladder or a diaphram to prevent the air from dissolving in the water.
Even with a spring & spring box, the pressure tank is the way to go, you just need the right pump.
All this presumes you have electricity. If you are off the grid, then the solutions are different.
*Even if you could presurize it, a tank that large under pressure would be very dangerous. Think about what happens when the tank is nearly empty. There is a huge volume of air under pressure. The stored energy is much higher than many people think, and any rupture would be very destructive.