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No person shall drill, own, pump or operate a well or produce groundwater from a well located within an Underground Water Reservoir aquifer without a permit unless that well is exempt under Rule 3.2. Owners of all wells not exempt by Rule 3.2 shall be required to obtain a permit following the procedures in Section 4.
In most states, it is legal to drill your own well. However, in some states, you must have a permit to drill over 200 feet, so you may need to get the permit or have the well professionally drilled. Check your local codes by calling local officials or searching online. Dont put the well near sources of contamination.
The Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation is responsible for well construction regulations and enforcement though their licensing and registration of water well drillers and pump installers. To locate a Licensed Well Driller/Pump Installer in your area visit the TDLR License Data Search.
50 feet from septic tank, cesspool, property boundary or non-potable water well. Groundwater conservation districts may require greater setback distances from property boundaries. 100 feet from septic drain field or leach field.
Groundwater is governed by the rule of capture, which grants landowners the right to capture the water beneath their property. The landowners do not own the water but have a right only to pump and capture whatever water is available, regardless of the effects of that pumping on neighboring wells.
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Landowners have a right to access any water beneath their ground. This means there is no need to acquire planning permission to drill a water borehole, thus making it easy for a developer to a borehole during a property build process.
The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) scanned water well reports that were submitted by mail. The reports can be viewed and printed via the Water Well Report Viewer.
Groundwater Conservation Districts (GCDs) also maintain records and registrations for water wells specific to their jurisdictions - contact your local GCD for assistance in obtaining up-to-date information on water levels, pump levels, and any recent changes made to your water well.
Explains how groundwater production and use is managed and regulated in Texas. State law does not provide any state agency with the authority to regulate the use or production of groundwater. Groundwater production and use is managed and regulated by local or regional groundwater conservation districts (GCDs).
The wells average about 600 feet, but can range anywhere between 60 feet to 1,260 feet depending on location. There are approximately 200 feet between zones in aquifers underground thats how much farther drillers have to go on average to hit water in an aquifer when the zone above is dry.

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