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Pennsylvania well drilling cost

Cost to Drill a Well in Pennsylvania

Water wells in Pennsylvania average about 181 feet deep across the 417,259 records in our database. At typical U.S. drilling rates, that puts the drilling and casing at roughly $4,700 to $7,100, before the pump, tank, treatment, and permits that complete a working system. Here is how the numbers break down, and the real Pennsylvania data behind them.

Reviewed byDrillerDB Editorial TeamLast updated
Avg depth
181 ft
Well records
417,259
U.S. $/ft
$21-42

Typical U.S. well drilling rates by depth

These are national average residential rates for the drilling and casing, not Pennsylvania-specific prices. Rates fall into depth bands, with a setup (mobilization) fee on top. Use them as a yardstick, then get local quotes.

Well depthDrilling + casing (per ft)Setup fee
Up to 100 ft$28 - $42$400 - $600
101-300 ft$24 - $36$400 - $600
301-600 ft$25 - $30$750 - $800
601 ft and deeper$21$1,000

National residential rate model, drilling and casing only. Higher per-foot rates apply to larger casing and hard-rock drilling. Pump, pressure tank, treatment, and permits are separate (see below).

What Pennsylvania well records actually show

Cost follows depth, so the most useful Pennsylvania number we have is the real one: our database holds 417,259 water-well records across Pennsylvania, with completed wells averaging about 181 feet deep. The typical static water level - how far down the water table sits - runs about 88 feet across 248,182 recorded readings. These are real construction records you can review before you hire.

Well records

417,259

Avg depth

181 ft

Water table

~88 ft

What that means for a typical Pennsylvania well

Illustrative drilling + casing at 181 ft

$4,700 - $7,100

This applies the national residential rate ($24 to $36 per foot at this depth) to Pennsylvania's real average well depth of 181 feet. It is an illustration built from a national rate card and Pennsylvania's recorded average depth - not a quote, and not a price observed in Pennsylvania. Your actual cost depends on your site's depth, geology, and casing, plus the pump, tank, treatment, and permits covered below.

One more thing quotes can't promise: depth. Nobody knows exactly how deep the water is until the drill finds it, so drillers quote a per-foot rate against an estimated depth - and if your well has to go deeper to reach a reliable aquifer, the extra footage bills at that same rate. That is normal practice, not a sign of a dishonest driller. Budget a 15-25% depth contingency above any estimate, and plan for the deeper half of your local range rather than the shallowest case.

Beyond the hole: the complete water system

The drilled hole and casing are only part of the bill. A working well also needs a pump and pressure tank, wiring and a pitless adapter, a sanitary cap and grouting, water testing, and often treatment for hardness, iron, or bacteria. Add it up and a complete private well system commonly runs $5,000-$12,000 for Pennsylvania, based on our state cost research, versus $5,000-$15,000 nationwide. The low end is a shallow well with simple equipment; the high end is a deep well with treatment and difficult access. A typical Pennsylvania project takes 4-8 weeks from planning to usable water.

What drives the cost of a well in Pennsylvania

  • Depth

    The biggest lever. Pennsylvania wells average about 181 feet, but deeper aquifers mean more feet at the per-foot rate.

  • Geology and casing

    Hard rock drills slower and can push per-foot rates toward the high end. Loose or caving formations need more casing, which adds material cost.

  • Water table and yield

    The water table around Pennsylvania sits near 88 feet in our records, but wells are drilled well past it to reach a dependable, year-round supply.

  • Pump, tank, and treatment

    The pump, pressure tank, and any treatment for hardness, iron, or bacteria are a large share of a complete system - often several thousand dollars.

  • Permits and testing

    Pennsylvania: No state permit required. Permit, inspection, and water-test fees are usually modest but affect the timeline.

  • Site access

    A rig needs room to work. Tight lots, long driveways, steep grade, or remote sites raise mobilization and labor.

Well drilling cost FAQ for Pennsylvania

There is no single Pennsylvania price - cost tracks depth, geology, and casing. As a starting point, water wells in Pennsylvania average about 181 feet deep in our records, and at typical U.S. residential drilling rates that works out to roughly $4,700 to $7,100 for the drilling and casing alone. A complete water system (pump, pressure tank, treatment, permits) commonly runs $5,000-$15,000 nationwide. Get written quotes from at least two licensed Pennsylvania drillers for a real number.

Typical U.S. residential rates run about $21 to $42 per foot for drilling and casing, with the lower end on shallow, small-casing wells and the higher end on shallow large-casing or hard-rock work. Most drillers also charge a setup or mobilization fee of a few hundred dollars. These are national averages, not Pennsylvania-specific prices - your driller's rate depends on local rock and rig.

Across the 417,259 Pennsylvania well records in DrillerDB, completed wells average about 181 feet deep. Depth is the single biggest cost lever: because drilling is priced largely per foot, a well twice as deep costs roughly twice as much to drill. Your site's actual depth depends on where the local aquifer sits, so a local driller reading nearby records is the best guide.

Permitting in Pennsylvania: No state permit required (17 Pa. Code Section 47). Permit and inspection fees are usually a small part of the total, but they affect the timeline. A licensed Pennsylvania contractor typically pulls the permit and folds it into the quote.

The drilled hole and casing are only part of it. A working system also needs a pump and pressure tank, wiring and a pitless adapter, a well cap and grouting, water testing, and often treatment for hardness, iron, or bacteria. Those add several thousand dollars on top of the drilling, which is why a complete private well system commonly runs $5,000-$15,000.

More Pennsylvania well resources

Pennsylvania Well Drillers

Browse licensed, insured drilling and pump contractors serving Pennsylvania and request quotes.

Find drillers

Water Table Depth

Free tool: enter any Pennsylvania address to see the likely water table and typical well depth from real nearby wells.

Look up depth

Pennsylvania Well Owner Guide

Costs, permits, timeline, water quality, and maintenance for private wells in Pennsylvania.

Open guide

Cost to Drill a Well

The national picture: what a private well costs, what drives the price, and how to budget.

Read the guide

Get a real Pennsylvania well quote

National rates get you in the ballpark. For a firm number, check your address depth and get written quotes from licensed Pennsylvania drillers.

Cost figures on this page are national averages from DrillerDB's rate model paired with real Pennsylvania well-depth records. They are estimates for planning, not quotes. Depth quotes are per-foot estimates, and actual drilling can run past the quoted depth, so budget 15 to 25 percent of leeway and ask your driller how overage is billed. Always confirm with a licensed local driller before you budget a project.