Kansas Water Well Drilling Contractors

Find qualified Water Well Drilling contractors in Kansas using our contractor lookup tool. Learn more about NGWA Contractor Certifications here.

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Clarke Well and Equipment Inc

Contractors Company
8822 3rd St
Great Bend, KS 67530-9766
(620) 793-8493

Craig Haldeman Well Drilling & Pump Service

Contractors Company
6601 W 63rd Ave
Manhattan, KS 66503-8702
United States
(785) 539-9295

Premier Pump & Well Service Inc

Contractors Company
PO Box 637
Colwich, KS 67030-0637
United States
(316) 722-8380

East Wichita Well & Pump Srv LLC

Contractors Company
5159 N 119th St W
Maize, KS 67101-9560
United States
(316) 644-1401

Associated Drilling Inc

Contractors Company
PO Box 7
Olsburg, KS 66520
United States
(785) 468-3324

H2O Drilling LLC

Contractors Company
5946 SE 180 St
Harper, KS 67058-8814
United States
(620) 840-1207

Nash Water Well Svc LLC

Contractors Company
PO Box 1388
Cimarron, KS 67835-1388
United States
(620) 277-5657

Alexander Pump & Services Inc

Contractors Company
17728 NW 62nd St
Saint Marys, KS 66536-9602
United States
(785) 383-1752

Below Ground Surface Inc

Contractors Company
1126 E 1823 Rd
Lawrence, KS 66046-9289
(785) 542-1200

M & T Pump Service LLC

Contractors Company
PO Box 141
Moscow, KS 67952
United States

Garrett Thompson

Contractor Individual
12371 KS Highway 7
Mound City, KS 66056
United States
(918) 757-2178

Stacy Podjun

Contractor Individual
7921 Carter St Apt 3108
Overland Park, KS 66204-1388
United States
(810) 348-6571

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a drilled well?

A drilled well consists of a hole bored (a borehole) into the ground, with the upper part or the entire depth of the well being lined with casing. Drilling is most typically conducted with a portable drilling machine brought to the site to construct the borehole. Various methods are used to advance the borehole to the necessary depth, and to remove formation material loosened and suspended by the drilling bit and fluid circulation or bailing system.

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Does water well drilling require a license?

In the United States, most states require licensing of water well contractors, and in most cases, this means that licensed contractors have passed tests and met certain professional requirements to obtain their license. Canadian provinces, Australian states, and New Zealand also use qualification-based licensing. To find out if a contractor is licensed, contact your state government (licensing is often handled by the Department of Natural Resources or Department of Health).

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What is a Certified Well Driller (CWD)?

The Certified Well Driller (CWD) designation from the National Ground Water Association (NGWA) encompasses general industry knowledge as well as practice and expertise in at least one well drilling method.

To achieve NGWA certification, contractors must pass exams testing their technical knowledge, and they must have at least twenty-four consecutive months of full-time groundwater contracting experience. They maintain their certification by obtaining continuing education credits annually.

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Kansas Groundwater and Water Well Statistics

Groundwater plays an important role in Kansas’s economic vitality.

  • Approximately 94,400 known residential wells statewide
  • 512 community water systems use groundwater for 724,000 people
  • 39 non-community, non-transient water systems use groundwater for 20,100 people
  • 72 non-community, transient water systems use groundwater for 3,600 people
  • 23,100 irrigation wells used serving 4,750 farms and 2,810,000 acres

 

Water Well Drilling Articles and Resources

Mud Rotary Drilling Method: What You Need to Know By Gary L. Hix, R.G., CWD/PI There are many different ways to drill a domestic water well. One is what we call the “mud rotary” method. Whether or not this is the desired and/or best method for drilling your well is something more fully explained in this brief summary. Air and water are both fluids […]