Cost Comparison
Well Water vs City Water: The Full Cost Comparison
Should you drill a well or connect to municipal water? The answer depends on your upfront budget, how long you plan to stay, and what is available at your location. Here is a complete financial comparison. Last verified April 2026.
Private Well
Advantages
- No monthly water bill
- Independence from municipal system
- No water restrictions during drought
- No chlorine or fluoride (unless added)
- Potential property value increase
- No exposure to aging municipal pipes
Disadvantages
- High upfront drilling cost
- You are responsible for maintenance
- Water quality is your responsibility
- Power outages affect water supply
- May have minerals requiring treatment
- Well can run dry in extreme drought
City/Municipal Water
Advantages
- Low upfront cost to connect
- Professionally treated and tested
- Reliable supply with backups
- No maintenance responsibility
- Works during power outages (gravity-fed)
- Consistent pressure and quality
Disadvantages
- Ongoing monthly bills ($600–$1,200/year)
- Water restrictions during drought
- Chlorine and chemical treatment
- Rate increases over time
- Dependent on aging infrastructure
- Fluoride added (concern for some)
Long-Term Cost Comparison
| Timeframe | Private Well | City Water |
|---|---|---|
| Year 1 | $5,000–$30,000 + $600–$1,000 | $1,000–$5,000 + $600–$1,200/year |
| 10-Year Total | $8,000–$36,000 | $7,000–$17,000 |
| 20-Year Total | $10,000–$42,000 | $13,000–$29,000 |
| Break-Even Point | 8–15 years (well becomes cheaper after this) | |
* Well costs include upfront drilling, pump electricity ($400/yr), maintenance ($400/yr avg), and one pump replacement. City costs include connection fee and rising rates (3% annual increase assumed).
When a Well Makes Financial Sense
- You plan to stay 10+ years: The break-even point is 8–15 years. If you are staying long-term, a well saves money.
- Municipal water is not available: Rural properties often have no choice — well is the only option.
- Local water rates are high: If your city charges $80+/month for water, the payback period shortens.
- You have high water use: Irrigation, livestock, or large families benefit more since well water use has no volume charge.
When City Water Makes More Sense
- You are selling soon: The upfront cost is hard to recoup if you move within 5–8 years.
- Your lot is small: Setback requirements may make a well difficult or impossible on a small lot.
- Local geology is difficult: If neighbors have 400+ foot wells in hard rock, city water may be cheaper.
- Water quality concerns: If the local aquifer has known contamination (arsenic, nitrates), city water's treatment is an advantage.
Comparison FAQ
Is well water cheaper than city water?
Over 20 years, well water often costs less. A well costs $5,000–$30,000 upfront plus $200–$600/year in maintenance and ~$400/year in electricity. City water costs $600–$1,200/year with no large upfront cost. The break-even point is typically 8–15 years, after which well water is cheaper. However, this depends on your drilling cost and local water rates.
Is well water better than city water?
Neither is universally 'better.' Well water is free of chlorine treatment and fluoride, which some prefer. However, it may contain minerals, iron, or hardness that require treatment. City water is professionally treated and monitored but may have chlorine taste, fluoride, and is subject to aging infrastructure. Well water quality depends entirely on your local aquifer and geology.