Water Well Drilling & Service in Northwest, Corpus Christi TX
Northwest (ZIP 78410) sits within the Corpus Christi TX service area. Northwest quadrant of Corpus Christi. Mixed older subdivisions and 1990s-plus builds. Expansive clay soil with seasonal moisture swings.
Wider service area with longer drive times for providers based southside. Plan for additional travel time on emergency dispatch.
For water well drilling & service, the service area covers roughly 75 miles from central Corpus Christi. Emergency dispatch is available outside business hours for active-damage situations.
Common reasons to call
- New private water well for rural property
- Well pump not running or low pressure
- Pressure tank, switch, or control box problem
- Dirty, sandy, sulfur-smelling, or salty water
- Abandoned well plugging question
- Irrigation or livestock water supply
- Calallen or outlying property with mixed septic and well needs
- Pre-purchase rural property water system inspection
Typical work
- Water well drilling consultation and site review
- Submersible pump, pressure tank, and control repair
- Well yield, static level, and recovery check
- Water sample coordination and treatment referral
- Well casing, seal, and sanitary cap inspection
- Abandoned or deteriorated well plugging coordination
- Irrigation, livestock, or domestic well service
Typical turnaround
Pump service can often be scheduled quickly when parts and rig access are available. New wells depend on site access, geology, district rules, drilling schedule, and completion requirements.
Materials and equipment
- Well casing, screen, grout, and sanitary seal materials
- Submersible pump, drop pipe, wire, and check valve
- Pressure tank, pressure switch, gauge, and control box
- Well cap, pitless adapter, fittings, and valves
- Pump hoist, drilling rig, and water-level measuring tools
- Water sample bottles and treatment media where applicable
Job sizes
Minor
Pressure switch, control box, gauge, tank check, or basic pump diagnosis
Standard
Pressure tank replacement, pump service, water testing, or well inspection
Major
Pump pull, deep-well repair, casing issue, or abandoned well plugging
Replacement
New well drilling, full pump system replacement, or major water treatment package
Final pricing comes from the on-call provider after on-site assessment, with a written estimate before any work starts.
What to expect
- ✓TDLR licensed water well drillers and pump installers
- ✓Well location, septic setbacks, and district rules reviewed before drilling
- ✓Pump, tank, and control diagnostics completed before major replacement
- ✓Well completion and plugging documentation handled where required
TDLR licensed water well driller, TDLR licensed pump installer, Texas Ground Water Association membership, groundwater conservation district experience, general liability insurance.
Common questions
Are water well drillers licensed in Texas?
Yes. Texas licenses water well drillers and pump installers through TDLR. Ask for the license before drilling, pump work, or plugging.
Why did my water pressure suddenly drop?
It could be the pressure switch, tank, pump, control box, clogged filter, leak, or well yield. The tech checks the simple electrical and pressure items before pulling a pump.
Can a well be drilled anywhere on my land?
No. Setbacks, septic location, easements, access, groundwater district rules, and geology all matter. The driller should review the site before promising a location.
What if the water smells like sulfur?
That can be common in some groundwater, but testing comes first. Treatment depends on what the water actually contains.
Do abandoned wells have to be plugged?
Abandoned or deteriorated wells can be a safety and contamination risk. A licensed provider can evaluate plugging requirements and documentation.
Can you inspect a well before I buy rural property?
Yes. A well inspection can check pump operation, pressure system, visible condition, and water testing options before closing.
Coastal Bend seasons
Spring (March - May)
Rain and growing season bring irrigation and pressure-system calls.
Summer (June - August)
Heavy use exposes weak pumps, pressure tanks, and low-yield wells.
Fall (September - November)
Good time for rural property inspections and storm-prep water checks.
Winter (December - February)
Pump and pressure-system repairs are easier to schedule outside peak irrigation demand.