Payette County, Idaho
Well drilling in New Plymouth, Idaho
Well drilling in New Plymouth, Idaho in the Payette River valley.
New Plymouth sits in the Payette River valley in Payette County, a farming town laid out in its distinctive horseshoe shape with orchards and ranch ground all around it. We drill across the area.
Mostly residential and small farm work out here. We size each well to what your specific piece needs.
What we do here
Drilling for homes and farms near New Plymouth.
Questions we hear a lot
Straight answers for New Plymouth property owners.
How deep will my well need to be?
Depth varies across the range we work, and we estimate before we drill using local knowledge, neighboring well logs, and geology data when we need it. Most domestic wells in southwest and central Idaho land between 100 and 400 feet, with mountain sites running deeper.
How much does a new well cost?
It depends on your site. Depth, geology, and the system all shape the job, so rather than guess over the phone, we come look and give you a free estimate. Call us and we'll walk through it together.
Where do you work?
We work a big stretch of southwest and central Idaho out of Midvale. Washington and Adams counties at home (including New Meadows up at the junction), plus McCall and Donnelly in Valley County, Riggins up the Salmon, Fruitland, New Plymouth, and Payette in Payette County, Emmett in Gem County, Horseshoe Bend and Garden Valley in the Boise Basin, Boise and Kuna in the Treasure Valley, Marsing on the Snake, Mountain Home east of Boise, and the Idaho side of Hells Canyon. We don't cross the Oregon line since we're not licensed there. If your place sits outside that range, call anyway and we'll tell you honestly whether it makes sense.
Wondering what a well runs? See what it costs to drill a well in Idaho.
We also drill across Payette County , including nearby Fruitland and Payette .
Need a well in New Plymouth? Call us.
Tell us about your property and we'll walk through what it can support. Free estimates, straight answers, and a Langer on the other end of the line.