Water Well Drilling & Pump Repair in Mineral Wells, TX | DFW Well Service
Service Area Overview
Water well drilling and pump service in Mineral Wells and Palo Pinto County. Pennsylvanian Cross Timbers Aquifer, modest yields, no GCD. Local know-how matters.
DFW Well Service provides water well drilling, pump repair, and inspection in Mineral Wells and throughout Palo Pinto County. Mineral Wells earned its name from the naturally mineralized groundwater that made it a health destination a century ago, and the county’s Pennsylvanian-age bedrock still defines what it takes to drill a good well here today. This is different country from the rest of North Texas — the water comes from the Cross Timbers Aquifer, not the Trinity — and that changes how a well gets drilled, how deep it goes, and what you can expect for yield.
Services We Provide in Mineral Wells
Well Depth & Geology in the Mineral Wells Area
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.
- Topsoil — Cross Timbers0–15 ft
- Pennsylvanian Canyon Group (limestone, shale, sandstone/conglomerate lenses)15–250 ft
- Pennsylvanian Strawn Group (sandstone, conglomerate, shale, thin coal)250–450 ft
This cross-section shows the layer stack typical of Palo Pinto County. The exact formations and depths under a specific Mineral Wells-area property vary — see the details above.
- Primary Aquifer
- Cross Timbers Aquifer (Pennsylvanian)
- Typical Well Depth
- 100–450 ft
- Groundwater District
- No GCD — TDLR standards only
- Confinement
- Pennsylvanian bedrock; water in fractures and localized sand and limestone lenses
Secondary: Thin Trinity remnant on the far eastern edge (often brackish; not a routine target)
Palo Pinto County overview → Permit & regulations → TDLR License #61234 DKMPW Updated June 4, 2026
Palo Pinto County sits on Pennsylvanian-age bedrock — older rock than the Cretaceous Trinity that supplies most of North Texas. The water-bearing system here is the Cross Timbers Aquifer, made up of the Strawn Group and the Canyon Group: shale, limestone, sandstone, and conglomerate. Productive water comes from localized sandstone, conglomerate, fractured limestone, and lens-style sand bodies rather than from a single thick, continuous sand. That makes well results more variable from one property to the next than they are farther east.
Most residential wells in the county fall in a planning range of roughly 100 to 450 feet, though the Pennsylvanian beds dip to the west-northwest, so depths vary by location. Yields are typically modest — often under 20 to 45 gallons per minute — and dry holes do happen in areas dominated by tight shale. An experienced local driller who knows the fracture and sand patterns in your part of the county is worth more here than anywhere else in our service area.
Drilling cost in Palo Pinto County is harder to pin to a flat per-foot rate than in most areas, because wells here can hit dry zones or need to go deeper than expected depending on the local rock. We give a detailed free estimate after looking at your specific property and the well records nearby, rather than quoting a number that may not hold for your parcel.
Water Quality
Mineral Wells is named for its history: wells drilled here in the early 1900s, generally 150 to 380 feet deep, produced heavily mineralized water that drew visitors from across the country. The Brazos River Conglomerate is still the source of the commercial “crazy water” bottled in town today — but that’s a specialty source, separate from both the city’s modern municipal supply (surface water from Lake Palo Pinto) and a typical residential well. Cross Timbers groundwater is fresh to slightly saline in most of the county but varies a lot, and can be hard with elevated iron or manganese; wells in the Strawn Group can occasionally encounter stray gas. We recommend a water quality test after any new well so you know exactly what you’ve got.
Palo Pinto County Permit Requirements
No groundwater conservation district has jurisdiction in Palo Pinto County. There is no pre-drilling permit, no local well-spacing rule, no pumping limit, and no production reporting required by a district. Wells here are governed only by the state: your driller and pump installer must hold a current TDLR license, and Texas Water Code Chapter 36 default rules apply. Palo Pinto County borders Parker County (Upper Trinity GCD) and Erath County (Middle Trinity GCD), but those districts stop at the county line — they do not cover Palo Pinto. Because there’s no local district, Texas common law governs groundwater, including the rule of capture, and a property owner has no local avenue to challenge a neighbor’s pumping. State well-construction standards still apply, and DFW Well Service builds every well to those standards.
For more on what this means for your project, see our guide to Palo Pinto County water well regulations.
DFW Well Service (TDLR License #61234 DKMPW) has the rigs and the Cross Timbers expertise for Palo Pinto County well drilling — and we’ll give you a straight read on whether a productive well is realistic for your tract before you commit. Call (940) 536-8560 for a free estimate.