Three ways site selectors put Texas groundwater data to work.

Your client is moving operations to Texas. The site has to deliver water.

A California-based client wants to relocate their facility to Texas, and water reliability is non-negotiable for the operation. Pull up Texas Well Water Map and scan their shortlist of properties — success rates, industrial well depths, and how nearby wells have performed in each candidate area. In an afternoon, you can rank the sites by water potential and bring your client a shortlist backed by real data.

Texas is the answer. Which part of Texas is the question.

Your corporate real estate team has narrowed expansion to Texas, and now you're comparing regions — the Hill Country, the I-35 corridor, East Texas, the Panhandle. Open Texas Well Water Map and scan the statewide heat map to see where industrial wells have come in strong and drilling project success is good. With Texas industrial wells running $55–$100 per foot, knowing ahead of time that your client could face a $200K+ water well vs. a $50K water well might shift the location.

Two finalists. Your client wants confidence on the water.

You've narrowed your client's search to two parcels, and the final question is groundwater. Drilling a big water well is always going to have risk. We can lessen that even more by performing an on-site survey with our patented groundwater detection technology.

For Site Selectors

Texas groundwater data for the properties on your shortlist.

Compare candidate sites at half-mile resolution. See success rates, industrial well depths, and the individual records that go into a deal memo — all in one platform.

Texas Well Water Map desktop view showing an average industrial well depths near Austin — borehole depth averaging 500 ft., status Successful — the level of detail Premium subscribers see when validating a site for selection.

Five candidate properties. One afternoon. A shortlist your client can act on.

A client manufacturing food-grade products wants to relocate from California to Texas. They need at least 50 gpm of reliable water for their operation, and they've sent you five candidate properties across the state — two near Austin, one outside Lubbock, one in East Texas, and one in the Hill Country.

You open Texas Well Water Map and start with the statewide heat map. Two of the five properties sit in mixed-success geoblocks where industrial well outcomes are inconsistent. The other three sit in areas with stronger industrial well histories.

You zoom in to each remaining property at half-mile resolution. The Hill Country property shows the strongest pattern: a 100% success rate in the immediate area, industrial wells averaging 500 feet to a successful well, and three individual records nearby labeled "Good, Successful Well" at the right depth range. The Lubbock property looks workable but thinner on industrial well data. The East Texas property has good success rates but most nearby wells are residential — the industrial pattern is harder to read.

By end of day, you've ranked the five properties from strongest to weakest on water potential. Your client gets a memo with the rankings, the data behind them, and a recommendation that doesn't require a follow-up call to defend.

Compare candidates across Texas

Start with statewide heat maps and narrow toward properties that fit your client's water needs. Filter for industrial well patterns, scan success rates across regions, and shortlist before you commit to specific parcels.

Drill into a parcel

Premium tier delivers half-mile resolution and individual well records - the granularity site selectors need for deal memos and client briefings. Industrial well depths, success-rate distributions, and historical outcomes for any address in Texas.

Build the evidence trail

Every map view and instant assessment generates a record you can attach to a memo, share with a client, or file in your project documentation. Defensible evidence, not vague reassurances.

When the project is bigger than one parcel.

For most site selection work, Texas Well Water Map at Premium tier delivers what you need — half-mile resolution, individual well records, instant assessments. Subscribe, evaluate, deliver the memo.

For engagements that need more — multi-site portfolios, organizational subscriptions for in-house corporate real estate teams, or projects where your client wants on-site survey work at finalist properties — Well Water Finders also offers custom-scoped engagements. We can structure subscriptions for multi-user teams, run survey work in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Arkansas, and combine map data with point-specific measurement where the project warrants it.

Our on-site surveys deliver direct measurement of groundwater on the acres you select — depth, location, and aquifer activity — with 90%+ accuracy based on wells drilled after our surveys. For finalist properties where your client's drilling investment is on the line, the survey turns regional patterns into a specific spot.

If you're scoping a project that calls for more than the platform itself, get in touch.

Well Water Finders is a 2026 Global Top 50 Planet-First Innovation, recognized by the Sustainable Innovation Council.

Our technology is built on research backed by Texas A&M, the University of Texas at Austin, and Pepperdine Graziadio.

FAQs

At Premium tier, half-mile resolution lets you pull up any Texas property and see success rates, depth distributions, individual well records, and our outcome labels on nearby wells. Instant assessments generate a written summary you can share with your client or attach to a memo. The data covers all 254 Texas counties and updates quarterly.

For internal corporate real estate teams or multi-user site selection firms, we structure subscriptions for team access, run multi-site evaluations, and combine map data with on-site survey work where projects warrant it. Custom engagements are scoped based on portfolio size, geography, and timeline.

Yes. Well Water Finders on-site surveys are available in Texas, Oklahoma, New Mexico, and Arkansas. The Texas Well Water Map itself covers Texas; survey services extend across the four-state region. For projects spanning multiple states, contact us to scope the engagement.

Success rates and depth patterns reflect the combined record of 3,200+ on-site surveys and 600K+ historical drilled-well data — a signal, not a guarantee. Drilling outcomes still depend on local geology, equipment, and conditions beyond the dataset. For site selection work, the data is reference for ranking and memo-building, not a substitute for parcel-specific due diligence. We define "successful" as a well delivering at least 5 gpm and able to provide water for at least 8 hours.

Bring the data into the deal memo.

Open Texas Well Water Map to see the platform. Or talk to us about a multi-site engagement.