Professional water_well Services in Fort Worth, TX

Well Pump Services | Legacy Water Well

Expert Well Pumps services in Fort Worth, TX. Licensed, insured, and ready to help.

What Well Pump Services Does Legacy Water Well Offer?

Legacy Water Well provides complete well pump services across North Texas, including installation, repair, replacement, and emergency service for all pump types. Whether you have a shallow jet pump on a 50-foot well or a submersible pump sitting 600 feet down in the Trinity Aquifer, we handle it.

Our core well pump services include:

  • Submersible Pump Service — Deep well specialists for 150–600+ ft wells common throughout Parker, Wise, and Hood counties.
  • Jet Pump Service — Shallow well pump repair, replacement, and upgrade paths to submersible systems.
  • Booster Pump Installation — Pressure boosting for homes and properties with low well yield or long distribution runs.
  • Well Pump Repair — Same-day diagnostics and repair for loss of water, low pressure, short-cycling, and tripped breakers.
  • Well Pump Replacement — Full system replacement when repair is no longer cost-effective.
  • New Well Pump Installation — Properly sized pump systems for new wells and new construction.

How Do You Know If Your Well Pump Needs Service?

Most well pump problems show up the same way — you turn on the faucet and something is not right. Here are the signs we see most often on service calls across the Fort Worth–Weatherford corridor:

  • No water at all — Pump failure, blown control box, or tripped breaker.
  • Sputtering or air in the lines — Pump is losing prime, drop pipe leak, or falling water table.
  • Low pressure throughout the house — Worn pump impellers, undersized system, or failed pressure tank.
  • Pump cycling on and off rapidly — Almost always a waterlogged pressure tank, but can also indicate a check valve failure.
  • High electric bills — A pump running constantly due to a leak in the line or a failing check valve.
  • Dirty or sandy water — Pump set too low, screen failure, or well casing issue.

If any of these sound familiar, request a free diagnostic quote and we will get it figured out.

Why North Texas Well Owners Trust Legacy Water Well

Justin Holt started Legacy Water Well because too many North Texas families were getting the runaround from pump companies that wanted to sell equipment instead of solve problems. Every job starts with an honest diagnosis. If your pump can be repaired, we will tell you. If it needs to be replaced, we will explain exactly why and give you options — not a pressure pitch.

We work exclusively on water wells. We are not a plumber who also does wells. That specialization means we carry the right equipment on every truck, stock the most common pump sizes and controls, and can diagnose problems faster than a generalist ever could.

Service area: Fort Worth, Weatherford, Azle, Springtown, Aledo, Millsap, Mineral Wells, Granbury, Stephenville, and everywhere in between. If you are on well water in North Texas, we can help.

FAQ

Well Pump FAQs

How long does a well pump last?
Most submersible well pumps last 8–15 years depending on water quality, usage, and whether the pressure tank is maintained. Jet pumps typically last 10–20 years since they sit above ground and are easier to service.
How much does it cost to replace a well pump in North Texas?
Typical well pump replacement costs range from $1,500 to $4,500 depending on well depth, pump type, and whether the pressure tank and controls also need replacement. Deep submersible replacements on 400+ ft wells will be at the higher end.
My well pump keeps turning on and off — what is wrong?
Rapid cycling (short-cycling) is almost always caused by a waterlogged pressure tank. The bladder inside the tank fails, the tank fills with water instead of holding air pressure, and the pump has to kick on every time you open a faucet. This is hard on the pump and should be fixed quickly.
Do you offer emergency well pump service?
Yes. No water is an emergency, especially if you have livestock or a family without running water. Call us and we will get to you as fast as possible — usually same day in our primary service area.
What is the difference between a submersible pump and a jet pump?
A submersible pump sits inside the well, submerged in the water. A jet pump sits above ground and uses suction to pull water up. Submersibles are more efficient and better for deep wells. Jet pumps work for shallow wells under about 70 feet but are less common in North Texas because most wells here are deeper.

Need Well Pump Service?

Call Legacy Water Well for honest diagnostics and expert pump service across North Texas.

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Well Pump Services | Legacy Water Well | Legacy Water Well