#1: How Long Does It Take to Drill a Water Well in North Texas?
- John Gandy
- Apr 28
- 4 min read
If you're planning a new home, a ranch property, or a builder development in North Texas, one of the first questions you'll ask is: how long is this going to take?
The honest answer: drilling a water well in North Texas usually takes 2 to 9 days of on-site work, depending on which drilling method your formation calls for, the depth of your well, and the weather. From your first call to clean water flowing through your tap, the full project including permitting and pump installation typically takes 2 to 5 weeks.
Here's exactly how that timeline breaks down.
The Short Answer
Drilling Method | Days to Drill | Days for Pump Install | Total On-Site Time |
Air Rotary | 1–2 days | 1–2 days | 2–4 days |
Mud Rotary | 2–7 days | 1–2 days | 3–9 days |
Add 1–3 weeks before drilling begins for permitting, scheduling, and equipment mobilization. After the well is drilled, you'll typically have water online within another 1–2 days.
Air Rotary Drilling Timeline: 1–2 Days
Air rotary drilling uses high-pressure compressed air to break up rock and lift cuttings out of the borehole. It's fast, clean, and ideal for the harder rock formations common across much of North Texas.
In typical North Texas conditions, an air rotary well takes 1 to 2 days to drill, depending on:
Total well depth (most North Texas residential wells run 200–600 feet)
Hardness of the formation
Weather conditions (heavy rain or lightning can push rigs off-site for safety)
Once drilling is complete, our pump install crew can typically have your pump, pressure tank, and pressure system online in another 1 to 2 days.
Mud Rotary Drilling Timeline: 2–7 Days
Mud rotary drilling uses a fluid (a mix of water and bentonite clay) circulated down the drill stem to lift cuttings to the surface and stabilize the borehole as it deepens. It's the right choice for softer, sandier, or unconsolidated formations where the borehole walls would otherwise collapse.
Mud rotary drilling typically takes 2 to 7 days, depending on:
Total depth required to reach a strong water-bearing formation
The number of formations the bit has to work through
Weather conditions
Site access for support equipment and mud handling
Pump installation follows on the same 1 to 2 day timeline as air rotary.
If you're not sure which method your property needs, that's normal — site geology decides, and a good driller will tell you up front which method is right and why.
Pump Installation: The Step That Actually Gets You Water
Drilling the well is only half the job. The pump install is what brings water out of the ground and into your home.
A typical Triangle J pump install includes:
Sizing and setting the submersible (or in some cases, jet) pump
Installing the drop pipe and electrical wiring down the borehole
Setting the pressure tank
Installing the storage tank if your system calls for one
Hooking up power and pressure controls
Testing flow rate and pressure
This usually takes 1 to 2 days once the well is drilled, cased, and ready.
What's Happening Before Drilling Even Starts
A big part of the project timeline happens before our rig rolls onto your property:
Site evaluation and quote — typically 1 to 5 business days from your first call.
Permitting — depending on your county and your local groundwater conservation district, permits typically take 1 to 3 weeks. (Triangle J handles this for you as part of our turnkey service.)
Scheduling — drilling rigs are scheduled weeks in advance, especially in spring and summer when builders and homeowners are most active.
Set the right expectations up front: if you call us in March, you're more likely to be drilling in April. Plan accordingly — especially if you're a builder hitting a closing date.
What Can Speed Up or Slow Down Your Project
Things that work in your favor:
Easy site access for the rig
Dry weather in the days leading up to drilling
Standard residential depth and pump sizing
Permits filed early in the process
A clear plan for power and tank placement before we arrive
Things that can stretch the timeline:
Heavy rain or saturated ground that prevents safe rig setup
Unusually deep or unpredictable formations
Permit delays from the local groundwater conservation district
Rural sites with difficult access for tank or equipment delivery
Pump or equipment supply chain delays for non-standard sizes
The good news: most of these are predictable, and a turnkey company builds them into the schedule we give you on day one.
Why Turnkey Shortens Your Whole Timeline
If you hire a drilling-only company and try to coordinate the rest of the project yourself, you'll be lucky to finish in 6–8 weeks. You'll be calling separate pump installers, electricians, tank suppliers, and the permit office, and waiting on each of them in sequence often with each one waiting on the one before.
Triangle J Water Wells handles every step in one continuous workflow:
Site evaluation
Permitting
Drilling
Pump and tank installation
Electrical hookup
Final flow and pressure testing
State well report filing with Texas
Because we own every step, your well goes from first call to clean water faster often in 2 to 5 weeks total — and you have one phone number to call if anything ever needs attention.
Ready to Schedule Your Water Well?
Triangle J Water Wells is a family-owned, fully turnkey water well drilling company serving Denton, Collin, Tarrant, Wise, Cooke, Grayson, and Parker counties. We're licensed by the State of Texas (License #61646) and we drill both air rotary and mud rotary wells, depending on what your specific property calls for.
Call us for a free, written, fixed-price quote we'll tell you exactly how long your project will take before we ever break ground.
.png)
Comments