When a pump is past its service life or the repair cost no longer makes sense, we install a correctly-sized replacement — submersible or jet, matched to your well's depth and your household's actual water usage.
Well pumps typically last 8-15 years for submersible models, 15-20 for jet pumps. If yours is within that range and the repair cost is under roughly half of what a full replacement would cost, repair is usually the better call. Past that point — or if you're already on a second or third repair — replacement is usually the more sensible long-term investment. We'll give you the real comparison, not just an upsell.
Deep well submersible pumps: $1,000-2,500 installed. Shallow well jet pumps: $400-1,400 installed. Pump unit alone (if you're comparing quotes): $150-1,700 depending on horsepower and depth rating. Deeper wells cost more due to the labor and equipment needed to pull and reinstall.
A pump too large for your well can draw in sediment and debris, damaging itself and your plumbing. Too small, and it won't keep up with your household's demand. We size based on your well's actual depth, static water level, and your home's fixture count — not a generic default.
Deep well submersible pump replacement typically runs $1,000-2,500 installed. Shallow well jet pumps run $400-1,400 installed.
Under 10 years old with a repair cost under half the replacement cost — repair. Past 10-15 years or repair approaching replacement cost — replacement is usually the better long-term value.
Most residential well pump replacements take 3-6 hours, depending on well depth and access.
Call and describe what you're seeing — we'll tell you honestly which one makes sense before we ever quote a price.
Call (479) 555-0100