Residential Wells in the Texas Hill Country.
Residential wells are about reliability — water that just works for a family of 2 to 8 across morning showers, dishwashers, and irrigation. We size for your real life, not a brochure.
Sound familiar?
- New construction on a residential lot
- Replacing an aging 20+ year old system
- Adding a second bathroom or kitchen
- Persistent pressure problems on an existing well
- Subdivision well that no longer keeps up
Our residential wells process.
- 01
Fixture count
Bedrooms, baths, dishwasher, washing machine, hose bibs, and any irrigation. We add up real peak GPM, not a marketing-flyer estimate.
- 02
Drilling or assessment
New construction: full drill with yield test. Replacement: assess existing well casing and yield before designing the new system.
- 03
Pump system install
Right-sized 7–20 GPM submersible, properly sized pressure tank, quality switch, and constant-pressure VFD if your home benefits from it.
- 04
Walkthrough
You leave knowing how your system works, where the breaker is, what the gauge should read, and how to spot trouble early.
What sets our residential wells apart.
The Hill Country is full of crews who can pull a pump or drill a hole. The difference is in the diagnosis, the documentation, and the materials. We do all three to a different standard.
Request a Free Estimate- Sized for your real fixture count
- Quality Franklin / Grundfos / Goulds equipment
- Workmanship guaranteed
- Plain-English walkthrough so you actually know your system
Hill Country homeowners on the work.
“We built on raw acreage outside Stonewall and the first crew we called gave us a quote that didn’t include casing. Hill Country Well & Pump walked the property, pulled regional reports, and gave us a real number. The job came in on time and on quote — no surprises.”
“Pump quit on a Friday afternoon. They responded fast, were on site the next morning, and had us back up by lunch. Honest — they told us the real problem and didn’t try to sell us anything we didn’t need.”
“I run cattle on our property and the well had been getting weaker for years. They drilled a proper replacement, sized the system for the herd, and threw in a buffer tank I didn’t know I needed. Couldn’t be happier with the result.”
Let’s talk about your residential wells.
Tell us what’s going on. We’ll respond in under a business hour. Emergencies are flagged and routed first.
Financing available
Most homeowners qualify for monthly payments instead of a lump sum. Ask in the form notes.
Residential Wells across the Texas Hill Country.
Residential Wells questions, answered.
Most Hill Country homes need a 7–15 GPM pump. Houses with 3+ baths or large irrigation often go to 20+ GPM with constant-pressure controls.