Well Pump Repair in Houston, TX
Harris County County · 0 providers · Avg. $300 - $3,000
About Well Pump Repair in Houston
Well pump repair services address the mechanical and electrical components that bring water from your well into your home. The submersible pump — located deep inside your well — is the hardest-working component of your water system, running thousands of cycles per year to maintain household water pressure. Common pump problems include motor failure (often caused by electrical surges or sediment wear), check valve failures (causing the pump to short-cycle), waterlogged pressure tanks (losing the air charge that maintains consistent pressure), and control switch malfunctions. When your well pump fails, the symptoms are unmistakable: no water at any faucet, sputtering or air in the water lines, rapidly cycling pressure (the pump turns on and off every few seconds), or a sudden drop in water pressure. Emergency pump failures are stressful because your entire household loses water. Many well service companies offer 24/7 emergency service for complete pump failures. Standard repairs include replacing the pressure switch ($150-$300), replacing the pressure tank ($500-$1,500), pulling and replacing the submersible pump ($1,000-$3,000), and electrical troubleshooting. Submersible pumps typically last 8-15 years depending on water quality, usage volume, and installation quality.
What Houston Homeowners Should Know
Local Soil Conditions: Houston Black and Beaumont series dominate Harris County — deep, very dark grayish-brown to black Vertisols formed in calcareous clayey alluvium and lacustrine deposits of the Gulf Coastal Plain. These smectitic clay soils exhibit pronounced shrink-swell behavior: COLE (Coefficient of Linear Extensibility) values of 0.09–0.15 are common, meaning soils crack deeply in drought and heave significantly when rewetted. Percolation rates in Beaumont clay range from 90–180 minutes per inch when saturated, making conventional drainfields marginal at best. Montgomery County immediately north transitions to Malbis and Katy series sandy loam soils on the dissected Lissie Formation, offering far better drainage for rural installations in the outer Houston metropolitan area.
Water Table: Harris County's Gulf Coast Aquifer system creates water tables ranging from near-surface (0–3 feet) in the low-lying bayou floodplains and coastal prairie to 10–25 feet in the slightly elevated interfluve areas. Significant land subsidence — up to 10 feet in some areas since the 1920s from groundwater withdrawal — has lowered many areas into active flood zones. Montgomery County parcels on the upland Lissie terrace typically see water tables at 4–12 feet depth. Seasonal variation is high: Gulf rainfall events can raise the water table to the surface within 24 hours in flat clay-dominated areas.
Climate Impact: Houston's humid subtropical climate delivers 49 inches of annual rainfall spread across the year with no true dry season, but extreme variability — tropical storms and slow-moving frontal systems can deposit 20–40 inches in a single event, as Hurricane Harvey demonstrated in 2017 with 60 inches in four days over Harris County. The combination of flat topography, impermeable clay soils, and a compromised stormwater system from subsidence means ponding over drainfields is a routine occurrence. Average summer temperatures of 93–95°F with dew points above 75°F create prolonged soil saturation conditions during thunderstorm seasons. This climate makes drainfield hydraulic loading calculations conservative: many engineers design at 40–50% of rated capacity to account for saturated-soil recovery periods.
Signs You Need Well Pump Repair
- No water at any faucet in the house
- Pump runs continuously without building pressure
- Pump cycles on and off rapidly (short-cycling)
- Sputtering water or air in the lines
- Sudden drop in water pressure throughout the house
- Unusually high electric bills (pump running constantly)
The Well Pump Repair Process
- 1 Diagnose the failure — check electrical supply, pressure switch, and pressure tank
- 2 Test the well pump motor for electrical faults
- 3 If pressure tank is waterlogged, replace or recharge the air bladder
- 4 If pump has failed, pull the pump from the well using specialized equipment
- 5 Install new pump at the correct depth with new safety rope and wiring
- 6 Test system operation, verify proper pressure range and cycle times
No Well Pump Repair providers listed yet in Houston
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Frequently Asked Questions — Houston
Why is it so hard to get a conventional septic system approved in Harris County?
What happened to Houston-area septic systems during Hurricane Harvey?
How does Houston's land subsidence affect septic system installation?
What are the septic rules in the fast-growing Houston suburbs like Montgomery County?
How often should I pump my septic tank in the Houston area?
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