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Everything you need to know before drilling a well in Texas.
Realistic price ranges from $9,000 to $75,000+, what drives the cost, and how Hill Country drilling compares to East and West Texas.
Why TDLR licensing matters, how to verify a driller's credentials, red flags to watch for, and the questions to ask before you sign anything.
Aquifer levels have hit historic lows in Wimberley and Dripping Springs — what's happening, which areas are most affected, and what homeowners can do.
Permits, groundwater districts, site selection, typical timelines, and the common mistakes that cost landowners money before the rig ever arrives.
Depth varies from under 100 feet in East Texas to over 1,000 feet in the Trans-Pecos — here's what drives the difference and how it affects your cost.
Trinity Aquifer wells typically run 350–600 feet in Gillespie County — here's what landowners, vineyard operators, and ranch buyers need to know.
Kendall County straddles the Trinity and Edwards aquifers — which one applies to your property shapes everything about your well depth and cost.
The Llano Uplift's ancient granite makes for some of the most demanding well drilling in Texas — and a very different experience than the surrounding limestone counties.
Wells in the Kerrville area typically reach 350–650 feet into the Trinity Aquifer — what you need to know about depth, cost, and the county's growing demand.
Blanco County sits where the Trinity and Edwards aquifers meet the Llano Uplift — local geology varies more here than in most Hill Country counties.