Lost your water or your pressure? We diagnose and repair submersible and jet well pumps, pressure switches, control boxes, and wiring — fast, with upfront pricing and same-day service whenever we can.
When the taps run dry, most homeowners fear the worst — a failed well. In reality, the well itself is almost never the problem. It’s a component in the system: the pump, the pressure switch, the control box, the pressure tank, or the wiring that feeds them. Pinpointing the right one quickly is the difference between a few hundred dollars and an unnecessary new well.
Across South Carolina, a wave of submersible pumps installed in the 1980s and ’90s are now reaching the end of their life. If your pump is original to a home of that age, a failure isn’t bad luck — it’s simply time.
No water at all from any fixture
Low or fading water pressure
Pump runs constantly and won’t shut off
Rapid cycling — pump clicks on and off fast
Spitting / sputtering air at the faucets
Tripping breaker on the well-pump circuit
Dirty or sandy water when it does run
We service every part of the well system — not just the easy swaps.
Pulling, testing, and replacing deep-well submersible pumps and motors — the workhorse of most SC wells.
Diagnosis and repair of shallow- and deep-well jet pumps, including priming and foot-valve issues.
The small part behind a surprising number of “dead well” calls. Tested and replaced on the spot.
Start components and control boxes that strand an otherwise healthy pump.
We test the full circuit from the panel to the pump to find electrical faults.
Leaks and pressure loss at the wellhead and pitless adapter, sealed up right.
We ask the right questions so we arrive with the parts your symptoms point to.
We test pump, pressure switch, tank, and wiring — and tell you exactly what failed and why.
You approve a clear written price before we touch a wrench. No surprises.
We fix it, confirm steady pressure and clean water, and clean up before we go.
Real ranges, so you can plan. Your exact price is quoted upfront after diagnosis — and most repairs land at the lower end.
| Repair | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Pressure switch replacement | $150 – $350 |
| Diagnostic / minor repair | $150 – $600 |
| Pressure tank replacement | $300 – $1,500 |
| Full well pump replacement | $1,000 – $5,000 |
Pump replacement cost depends mainly on well depth and pump horsepower. Deeper wells require more pipe, wire, and labor to pull and reset the pump. We confirm your number before any work begins.
Fast, licensed well pump repair across South Carolina with honest, upfront pricing.
We bring this service to towns and counties statewide. Pick yours: