Need well service in Boyd?

DFW Well Service helps property owners with water well drilling, pump service, inspections, and related well issues across North Texas.

Welcome to Boyd, TX — DFW Well Service serves Boyd and Wise County

Water Well Drilling & Pump Repair in Boyd, TX | DFW Well Service

Service Area Overview

Licensed well drilling and pump service in Boyd, TX, reaching Wise County's Trinity aquifer (Paluxy and Twin Mountains sands); depth varies by parcel.

Services We Provide in Boyd

DFW Well Service (TDLR License #61234 DKMPW) provides water well drilling, pump service, and all related well work for residential and rural customers in Boyd and southern Wise County.

Well Depth & Geology in Boyd Area

Isometric geological cross-section cube illustration showing Wise County, Texas stratigraphy — Topsoil, Alluvial deposits (localized along major drainages), Comanche Peak / Walnut limestone cap, Paluxy Formation (southern Wise County) / upper Antlers (central and northern Wise County), Glen Rose Formation (eastern Wise County only), Twin Mountains Formation (southern Wise County) / lower Antlers (central and northern Wise County), and the Trinity (Antlers — Paluxy/Twin Mountains coalescence in central/northern Wise County; Paluxy/Glen Rose/Twin Mountains stack in southern Wise County) aquifer at the base.

Tap any layer in the cube — or in the list below — to see what it is and what it means for drilling a well here.

  1. Topsoil — West Cross Timbers
    0–20 ft
  2. Antlers Formation
    outcrop / shallow confined — varies
Tap or hover a layer in the cube to see what's beneath the surface here.

This cross-section shows the layer stack typical of Wise County. The exact formations and depths under a specific Boyd-area property vary — see the details above.

Explore the full Wise County geology →

Primary Aquifer
Trinity (Antlers — Paluxy/Twin Mountains coalescence in central/northern Wise County; Paluxy/Glen Rose/Twin Mountains stack in southern Wise County)

Secondary: Cross Timbers Aquifer (Pennsylvanian/Permian — significant in west-central Wise County)

Typical Well Depth
Varies by location

We estimate from nearby well records

Groundwater District
Upper Trinity GCD
Confinement
outcrop / shallow confined — Wise County sits on the geological boundary line where the Glen Rose Formation thins to extinction

Wise County overview → Permit & regulations → TDLR License #61234 DKMPW Updated June 4, 2026

Wells around Boyd draw from the Trinity aquifer, and southern Wise County keeps the layers more distinct than the rest of the county. Near the Parker County line, the full Paluxy / Glen Rose / Twin Mountains stack is usually still intact here — unlike central and northern Wise, where the Glen Rose thins to nothing and those sands merge into the Antlers Formation. There’s no single typical depth: it varies by parcel and by which layer the well targets.

The rural community around Boyd includes a mix of longtime farming families and newer rural residential buyers. Both groups depend on private wells, and the area has a long history of successful Trinity aquifer completions.

Wise County Permit Requirements

All new water wells in Wise County, including the Boyd area, must be permitted through TDLR and the Upper Trinity Groundwater Conservation District. The GCD requires pre-drilling permits and post-completion well reports. Proper setback distances from septic systems and neighboring wells must also be maintained.

See our full guide to Wise County water well regulations for more information.

For a free estimate on well drilling or pump repair near Boyd, call DFW Well Service at (940) 536-8560. We work throughout Wise County and will give you straightforward answers and honest pricing before any work begins.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Boyd have city water, or do most properties use wells?
Boyd has a municipal water system serving properties within city limits. However, many rural properties on acreage outside of Boyd rely on private water wells, especially those on county roads in the surrounding Wise County area.
How deep will a well need to be in the Boyd area?
There's no single typical depth around Boyd — it varies meaningfully by parcel and by which sand the well targets, so we review the driller's logs from neighboring wells before quoting a project. Boyd is in southern Wise County, closer to Parker, where the full Paluxy / Glen Rose / Twin Mountains stack is usually still intact — unlike central and northern Wise, where the Glen Rose pinches out and those sands merge into the Antlers. Which layer your well completes in depends on the parcel.
What does well drilling cost near Boyd, TX?
Wise County drilling costs run roughly $38–$50 per foot. Total cost depends on completion depth and the full system (casing, pump, pressure tank, electrical). We provide a free itemized written estimate after reviewing neighboring driller's logs for your parcel.
Do I need a permit for a new well in Wise County?
Yes. Wise County wells require permits from both TDLR and the Upper Trinity Groundwater Conservation District before drilling begins. We take care of the permit process for our customers.
How do I find out if my property near Boyd has an existing well?
Older rural properties often have wells that may not appear on county records. We can inspect your property and conduct a well assessment to locate and evaluate any existing well. TDLR's online database is also a starting point for researching permitted wells.
Can you install a pressure tank for my well system near Boyd?
Yes. We install and replace pressure tanks for all well systems, including sizing the tank correctly for your household water demand. A properly sized pressure tank protects your pump and provides consistent water pressure.
Is the well water in Boyd salty or brackish?
Mostly fresh. Boyd's Trinity (the Antlers and Twin Mountains sand) is generally fresh, but the Texas Water Development Board found scattered slightly-salty spots in the deep basal Trinity sand, and the older Cross Timbers rock in far-western Wise County can be mineralized. A total-dissolved-solids test (a measure of how mineral-heavy the water is) is worth it on deep or far-western wells.

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