Texas is a big state sitting on top of several very different geologic formations, and well depth varies more dramatically here than in almost any other state. A well drilled in Nacogdoches County in the Piney Woods might hit reliable water at 120 feet. The same well sited in Reeves County near Pecos might need to go 900 feet to find anything worth pumping. The difference isn't luck — it's geology, and understanding it before you drill can save you a significant amount of money and frustration.
Texas has nine major aquifers, each with different depths, yield characteristics, and water quality. The aquifer under your property is determined primarily by where you are in the state — the geology changes region by region in ways that are well-understood and well-documented. The Texas Water Development Board has collected well completion records for decades, and patterns are clear enough that an experienced local driller can give you a reasonable depth estimate before the rig is mobilized.
Three factors drive depth more than anything else:
| Region | Primary Aquifer | Typical Depth | Representative Counties |
|---|---|---|---|
| East Texas Piney Woods | Carrizo-Wilcox, Queen City | 80–300 ft | Nacogdoches, Angelina, Jasper, Newton |
| Gulf Coast | Gulf Coast Aquifer System | 100–400 ft | Harris, Brazoria, Galveston, Victoria |
| Central Texas / Blackland Prairie | Edwards, Trinity, Carrizo-Wilcox | 200–500 ft | McLennan, Bell, Williamson, Travis |
| Hill Country | Edwards, Trinity | 300–700 ft | Kerr, Gillespie, Blanco, Hays, Bandera |
| South Texas Plains | Carrizo-Wilcox, Gulf Coast | 200–600 ft | Webb, Duval, Jim Wells, Zavala |
| Panhandle / Llano Estacado | Ogallala | 100–400 ft | Lubbock, Hale, Castro, Lamb |
| Rolling Plains | Seymour, Ogallala | 150–500 ft | Taylor, Jones, Knox, Haskell |
| Trans-Pecos / West Texas | Pecos Valley, local alluvial | 500–1,200 ft | Reeves, Pecos, Culberson, Jeff Davis |
The Carrizo-Wilcox aquifer underlies most of East Texas and is one of the most productive in the state. It's relatively shallow, the formations are softer sand and clay rather than rock, and water quality — while sometimes requiring treatment for iron or tannins — is generally adequate for residential use. A driller working in Sabine, Shelby, or San Augustine County can often complete a residential well in a single day. Costs are correspondingly lower than the rest of the state.
The Hill Country is where depth estimates are least reliable and where the gap between a good local driller and a mediocre one matters most. The Edwards and Trinity aquifers occur in fractured limestone — they don't behave like uniform sandy aquifers. A well 300 feet deep on one side of a property line can be dry while a neighbor's 450-foot well produces strong flow. Fracture zones are the key, and finding them requires experience and local knowledge that you can't replicate by reading a report.
In Kerr, Gillespie, and Blanco counties, expect 300–500 feet for a reliable water-bearing zone. Hays County — which has seen accelerating aquifer decline — often requires 450–700 feet to reach the more stable Lower Trinity. Budget accordingly.
The Ogallala Aquifer underlies the Texas Panhandle and South Plains and has historically been one of the most productive agricultural aquifers in the world. The problem is that it doesn't recharge meaningfully on human timescales — it's essentially a fossil water resource accumulated over tens of thousands of years. Depths are moderate (100–400 feet in most of the Panhandle), but water levels have declined significantly in heavily irrigated areas. In Lubbock, Hale, and Lynn counties, some wells that were drilled to 150 feet in the 1970s now need to be 300 feet or deeper to find water.
The Trans-Pecos region is some of the most challenging drilling terrain in the state. Water is deep, formations are hard, and in many areas the water quality requires treatment for high dissolved solids and salinity. Well depths of 600 to 1,200 feet are common, drilling through alternating rock layers is slow and hard on equipment, and the per-foot cost is higher than anywhere else in Texas. Landowners in Reeves, Pecos, or Culberson counties should budget $40,000 to $75,000 for a complete installation and should get a very specific assessment from a driller who works that area regularly.
Check neighbor wells first: The Texas Water Development Board's Groundwater Database (twdb.texas.gov) contains completion records for hundreds of thousands of Texas wells. Search within a few miles of your property and you'll have a realistic depth range before you pick up the phone.
Drillers charge by the foot — typically $25 to $60 per foot depending on the hardness of the formation and the region of the state. Every additional 100 feet adds $2,500 to $6,000 to the drilling cost alone, before pump, casing, and equipment. A well that needs to go 600 feet costs roughly three times as much to drill as one that hits water at 200 feet.
Deeper wells also need more powerful pumps — a pump set at 500 feet requires a higher-horsepower motor and heavier-gauge electrical wire than one at 200 feet — and those costs add up. The pressure tank and surface equipment costs are similar regardless of depth, but the down-hole component of the installation scales with how far underground you're reaching.
Depth gets water wells into the ground. It doesn't guarantee what comes out. Water quality varies by aquifer and by specific location within an aquifer. High iron, excessive hardness, elevated nitrates, and in some regions naturally occurring arsenic are all possible. Always test before you drink, and always test for more than just bacteria on a new well. A comprehensive water quality panel costs $200 to $500 and is the cheapest insurance you'll buy on a $15,000 investment.
Texas Well Finder lists TDLR-licensed water well drillers across all 195 Texas counties. Search by county to find local drillers who know your aquifer and your formation.
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