Well Pump Repair in Hays, TX

No water, low pressure, or a pump that won’t stop running? We diagnose and repair well pump problems fast.

Pump Repair in Hays

When a well pump acts up, you feel it at every faucet — weak pressure, sputtering air, water that comes and goes, or no water at all. The pump and its controls are mechanical and electrical, and a lot can go wrong: a tripped breaker or burned wiring, a failed pressure switch, a worn or seized pump, a waterlogged pressure tank making the pump short-cycle, or a dropping water level in a drought. We diagnose and repair well pump problems across Hays County. We test the pump, the wiring and breaker, the pressure switch, and the tank to find the actual cause before pulling anything, then make the repair — replacing a switch, fixing the wiring, addressing the tank, or pulling and rebuilding or replacing the pump if it has failed. Because no water is urgent out here, we work to get you running quickly and tell you honestly whether you are looking at a small fix or a pump that is at the end of its life.

Well Pump Repair in Hays, TX

Well service in Hays

Hays is a small community in the central part of the county that shares its name, set among the ranch land and low hills between Buda, Kyle, and Dripping Springs. It is rural, low-density country where homes run on private water wells drawing from the Trinity and Edwards aquifers — there is no municipal supply reaching most of these properties. We drill, pump, and service water wells throughout the Hays area. The local pattern is acreage homes and small ranches on long-held land, with older wells and pumps, plus newer rural builds as growth spreads through the county. We see Trinity wells declining in drought, worn pumps, short-cycling pressure tanks, and homes set well off the road. Depth and yield vary across this central stretch of the county. Tell us where your well is and what is going on — a new build, no water, low pressure, or a pump that keeps cycling — and we will give you a straight answer and a real price from a crew that knows central Hays County wells.

  • No-water and low-pressure problems diagnosed and repaired
  • Breaker, wiring, and pressure switch tested and replaced
  • Short-cycling traced to the tank or switch and fixed
  • Worn or failed pumps pulled, rebuilt, or replaced
  • We check the cheap causes before condemning the pump
  • Fast turnaround because no water can’t wait

Need pump repair elsewhere? See all of our Hays services or pump repair across Hays County.

Pump Repair in Hays

Tell us what’s happening and we’ll call you back — local Hays service.

Prefer to talk now? Call (512) 555-0133.

Areas We Cover in Hays

In town or out on rural acreage — if it’s in or around Hays, we come to your property.

  • Hays core
  • Niederwald Road area
  • Cole Springs
  • Buda edges
  • Dripping Springs edges

Common Well Issues in Hays

The water well problems we see most around here — and how we handle them.

Rural ranch land on private wells

The community of Hays sits in low-density ranch country where homes depend entirely on private wells, with no city water reaching most lots. We drill new wells and keep existing wells, pumps, and tanks running for households that have no municipal backup if the system goes down.

Trinity and Edwards wells across the county’s middle

Wells around Hays tap the Trinity and Edwards aquifers depending on location, and depth and yield vary across this central stretch. We use area well records and local geology to drill and service wells correctly for your specific spot rather than a one-size approach.

Drought-stressed wells and aging pumps

Central Hays County sees the regional drought that drops aquifer levels and stresses older wells and pumps. We diagnose whether low water is a falling level or a failing pump, and replace worn pumps and short-cycling tanks with correctly sized equipment built to last.

Pump Repair in Hays — FAQs

Do you cover the Hays community and central Hays County?
Yes. We cover the community of Hays and the surrounding ranch country between Buda, Kyle, and Dripping Springs, including properties well off the road. Tell us where the well is and we will confirm and come prepared.
How do I know whether to repair or replace my well pump?
It depends on the cause and the pump’s age. A bad switch, breaker, or pressure tank is a repair that can get years more out of a good pump, while a worn-out or burned-up pump near the end of its life is usually better replaced. We give you the honest call based on what we find.
I’m building on acreage near Hays — when should the well go in?
Early. On most rural lots there is no city water, so the well comes before the rest of the build can connect to anything. We help site the well, drill to a reliable water-bearing zone, case it correctly, and set the pump and tank so your build has water when it needs it.
I suddenly have no water — what should I check first?
Check your breaker or fuse for the well pump first — a tripped breaker is one of the most common causes and an easy fix. If it keeps tripping, do not keep resetting it; that points to an electrical or pump fault and you should call us. If the breaker is fine and you still have no water, the pump, switch, or tank likely needs a look.
My pump keeps turning on and off rapidly — is that bad?
Yes — that is short-cycling, and it wears out a pump fast. It usually means the pressure tank has lost its air charge or its bladder has failed, so the tank can no longer hold pressure between cycles. Fixing or replacing the tank stops the cycling and protects the pump. Call before it costs you the pump too.
My water sputters and spits air at the faucet — what causes that?
Air at the faucets can mean the water level in the well has dropped near the pump (common in a drought), a leak in the drop pipe pulling air, or a pressure tank problem. We diagnose which it is — a dropping aquifer is a different fix than a leaking pipe — so you are not throwing parts at it.
Should I repair my pump or replace it?
It depends on the cause and the pump’s age. A bad switch, breaker, or tank is a repair that can get years more out of a good pump. A worn-out or burned-up pump near the end of its life is usually better replaced than rebuilt. We give you the honest call based on what we find, not the most expensive option.

Need Pump Repair in Hays?

Call now for a fast quote — we come to your property, and no-water emergencies get priority.