Groundwater Location Technology
Before you drill, find out what the ground actually holds. An on-site Well Water Finders survey measures groundwater and depth on the acres you choose - so you drill where the data points, not where you're hoping.
Find water before you drill
Drilling a well is one of the biggest unknowns in developing a property. A dry hole can cost thousands, and a second attempt costs thousands more.
A survey gives you direct measurement before the drill goes in - groundwater and depth at the coordinates we survey, in a report you can hand straight to your driller.
Across the wells drilled after our surveys, our technology has found groundwater with 90%+ accuracy - measured by how often our detected depth and location matched what the driller found. What we can't guarantee is the well itself, because drilling outcomes depend on factors beyond the survey.
What the survey measures
Your report is built for the drill site, not the filing cabinet.
Groundwater and depth
Measured at the coordinates we survey, across the acres you choose.
Mapped to your land
Findings tied to landmarks on the property - gates, ponds, trees - plus exact coordinates for your driller.
Dry-hole warnings
When no viable groundwater is detected, the report says so - so you don't pay to drill a dry hole.
Patented detection, no drilling required
The survey is a reading, not a dig. Our patented technology sends electromagnetic signals into the ground and measures what returns - no drilling, no trenching, no disturbance to the land. A scan can cover multiple acres in a day.
Want the detail on how the detection works? See our technology →
Who it's for
Groundwater location helps anyone facing a drilling decision:
- Landowners and ranchers siting a well for the house, livestock, or irrigation
- Developers and builders evaluating a property before construction
- Engineers, planners, and agricultural operations that need reliable field data
Ready to measure groundwater at your site?
Book a SurveyPlanning across multiple sites or a large tract? Explore Large-Scale Projects →