Geo-targeted directory

Well Water Testing Near Me

Find and compare 2708 verified well water specialists across 44 states — filtered by location, EPA-Certified Labs credentials, and the exact services you need.

~43 million U.S. homes rely on private wells; the majority are under-tested.

Informational only. This page helps you find certified professionals. It is not medical, legal, or structural safety advice. For any health or safety hazard, consult a certified/licensed expert. See our verification methodology.

How to choose a local certified well water professional

Searching for a "well water pro near me" returns dozens of options — but proximity alone is the wrong filter. Private wells are not regulated by the EPA — testing is the homeowner’s responsibility. The single most important screen is credentials: a genuinely qualified local professional carries recognized certification (EPA-Certified Labs) and can show it on request. Everything else — distance, price, reviews — comes after that gate.

Use this short checklist when you shortlist a nearby provider. It is the same logic our directory uses to verify every listing, so you can apply it whether you start here or on a generic search engine.

1. Verify the credential first

Confirm active EPA-Certified Labs status. A local pro who can't name or evidence their certification is a red flag, regardless of how close they are.

2. Match the service to your situation

Not every well water provider handles every job. Confirm they perform the specific work your home needs before booking an on-site visit.

3. Confirm they actually service your area

"Near me" is about the service area, not the office address. Make sure your ZIP or city falls inside their stated coverage so you avoid trip surcharges.

4. Get the cost in your local context

Typical well water projects run $150–$600, but local labor and home conditions move the number. Get a written, itemized quote.

5. Read reviews for the work, not the vibe

Look for reviews that describe outcomes and follow-up testing for your niche — not just friendliness. Verified ratings carry far more weight than volume alone.

6. Mind the timing

Counter-intuitively, bacterial contamination peaks in summer heat (90°F+). Booking ahead of peak demand usually means faster scheduling and better pricing.

Top states for well water providers

Well Water requirements and provider density vary by state. Start with your state hub to see local credentialing context and every verified provider we list there.

Texas

1415 verified providers

California

664 verified providers

Delaware

146 verified providers

Utah

56 verified providers

Pennsylvania

40 verified providers

Maryland

36 verified providers

Connecticut

33 verified providers

Washington

33 verified providers

Arizona

24 verified providers

Nevada

23 verified providers

Illinois

20 verified providers

New Jersey

18 verified providers

New York

17 verified providers

Idaho

15 verified providers

Colorado

13 verified providers

Oklahoma

13 verified providers

Wisconsin

12 verified providers

New Mexico

11 verified providers

Georgia

9 verified providers

Louisiana

9 verified providers

Oregon

9 verified providers

Massachusetts

8 verified providers

Ohio

7 verified providers

Florida

6 verified providers

North Carolina

6 verified providers

Iowa

5 verified providers

Missouri

5 verified providers

Virginia

5 verified providers

Wyoming

5 verified providers

Arkansas

4 verified providers

Indiana

4 verified providers

Michigan

4 verified providers

Minnesota

4 verified providers

Mississippi

4 verified providers

Montana

4 verified providers

Nebraska

4 verified providers

Tennessee

4 verified providers

Alabama

3 verified providers

Kansas

2 verified providers

Kentucky

2 verified providers

North Dakota

2 verified providers

West Virginia

2 verified providers

Rhode Island

1 verified provider

South Dakota

1 verified provider

Browse by credential

The fastest way to filter "near me" results down to the trustworthy ones is by the credential that matters for well water.

Well Water near me — frequently asked questions

How often should I test my well water?

The CDC recommends annual testing for bacteria, nitrates, and pH — and after any flooding or nearby land-use change.

What does a well water test cost?

A standard panel runs $150–$600 depending on the contaminants screened (bacteria, nitrates, arsenic, lead, VOCs).

Why use a certified lab?

Only EPA/state-certified or NELAP-accredited labs produce results accepted for real-estate transactions and regulatory purposes.

Ready to find a well water pro near you?

Browse 2708 verified well water specialists across 44 states — every listing screened against EPA-Certified Labs.