of rural commercial projects require a well permit
before breaking ground.
Most developers find out too late.
Maximum commercial depth — standard mobilization
Formation depth determines your project viability before a single permit is filed.
Every parcel sits above a different geology. A subdivision at 240 ft in Ogallala sandstone costs $38/ft. The same project in fractured crystalline at 480 ft runs $72/ft — and yields 60% less water. Knowing which formation you're punching through before your civil engineer draws the utility sheet saves 4–8 weeks of redesign.
Commercial threshold: Most subdivision water systems require a minimum 25 GPM sustained yield per 50 lots. Agricultural irrigation for center-pivot systems demands 400–1,200 GPM. Industrial process water starts at 200 GPM. Yield testing is performed at 72-hour intervals before any infrastructure commitment.
Critical path: Developers who submit hydrogeological assessment with permit application reduce agency review time by 35% on average. Aquifer pre-files on your behalf in 22 Texas groundwater conservation districts.
Maximum permit approval window — California SGMA basins
Permit timelines are the invisible delay in every rural development schedule.
A general contractor who discovers the county requires a 60-day public notice period after breaking ground loses 8–12 weeks of schedule and faces a stop-work order. We file pre-permit hydrogeological assessments with 22 Texas groundwater conservation districts and 14 western state agencies — before you need them.
Pre-permit service: Aquifer provides binding hydrogeological letters of opinion accepted by TCEQ, ADWR, and Colorado DWR for subdivision plat approval before any drilling commitment. Letter turnaround: 5 business days.
Per-foot drilling cost range — all commercial formations
The number on the utility sheet rarely matches the number on the invoice.
Civil engineers budget wells at $35/ft because that's the residential average. Commercial production wells in fractured crystalline formations run $65–$95/ft, require dual-casing to 200 ft, and need a 72-hour pump test before any infrastructure can be designed around them. The formation under your parcel determines your actual budget — not the regional average.
Know your formation before your bid goes out.
Aquifer provides a no-obligation parcel hydrogeological assessment — formation identification, estimated depth range, and projected cost-per-foot for your specific APN within 5 business days.
Excludes: State permit fees ($450–$3,200), easement costs, water quality treatment, and electrical service to wellhead. Aquifer provides itemized budgets with permit fee schedules at no charge during assessment.
*Hydrogeological assessment waived for projects exceeding $40,000 drilling scope. Dry-hole risk reduced to 2.3% with pre-drill assessment vs. 18.7% industry average without site-specific geological review.
Average total cost — failed commercial well with schedule delay
A dry hole doesn't just cost drilling — it costs your schedule, your subcontractors, and your certificate of occupancy.
The average commercial dry hole adds 12 weeks to a project schedule. For a 50-lot subdivision, that's $47,000 in carrying costs, $18,500 in engineering redesign, and a permit that must be re-filed with the county. Aquifer's pre-drill assessment reduces dry-hole risk from 18.7% (industry average without site review) to 2.3%.
Building your bid team? Get our Contractor Rate Sheet.
Itemized per-foot drilling rates by formation, mobilization fees, pump test pricing, and permit service schedules — formatted for inclusion in your bid package.
Request a Site Assessment
Provide your project details and we'll return a formation assessment, estimated depth-to-water, projected cost range, and permit timeline within 5 business days — at no charge for projects over $40,000 scope.