Water Well Drilling Cost Per Foot in Michigan (2026): $25-$55/ft

· By WellDrillingCosts.com Editorial Team

When Michigan drillers quote you a price, it almost always comes down to a per-foot rate. Understanding what that rate includes — and why it ranges from $25 to $55 per foot — is the single most important thing you can do before signing a contract. This guide breaks down per-foot drilling costs across Michigan so you can evaluate quotes with confidence.

For a full overview of Michigan well costs, see our complete Michigan well drilling cost guide.

Michigan Per-Foot Cost at a Glance

Cost FactorMichigan 2026
Per-foot range$25–$55
Average per-foot rate$38
Typical residential depth110 ft (range: 25–350 ft)
Primary aquiferMichigan Basin Glacial Drift Aquifers / Marshall Sandstone / Saginaw Formation
Water table depth15-60 feet in most of the Lower Peninsula; 30-150 feet in the Upper Peninsula’s bedrock areas
Best drilling seasonApril through November

What’s Included in Michigan Per-Foot Pricing

Most Michigan drillers include the following in their quoted per-foot rate:

  • Drilling labor and equipment mobilization — getting the rig to your property and the actual drilling operation
  • Drill bit wear and fuel — consumables used during boring
  • Basic borehole logging — recording depth, geology, and water-bearing zones
  • Drilling fluid — mud rotary or air rotary medium for flushing cuttings

What’s Typically NOT Included

These items are typically quoted separately:

  • Well casing — PVC or steel pipe lining the borehole ($8–$25 per foot)
  • Well screen — slotted section at the water-bearing zone ($10–$20 per foot)
  • Grout and seal — cement seal preventing surface contamination ($3–$8 per foot)
  • Pump and pressure system — submersible pump, pressure tank, wiring ($2,500–$6,000)
  • Electrical hookup — wiring from well to home electrical panel ($1,000–$3,000)
  • Water testing — bacteria, mineral, and chemical analysis ($150–$500)
  • Permit fees — varies in Michigan (Michigan Department of Environment, Great Lakes, and Energy (EGLE); county health departments also issue permits) — typically $50–$500

Always ask for an itemized quote to see exactly what your per-foot rate covers.

Casing Cost Per Foot in Michigan

Casing is one of the biggest cost variables beyond the drilling itself:

Casing TypeCost Per FootBest ForLifespan
Schedule 40 PVC (4”)$8–$12Shallow wells, sandy/sedimentary formations30–50 years
Schedule 80 PVC (4”)$10–$16Standard residential, moderate depths40–60 years
Steel (4”)$15–$25Deep wells, hard rock formations50+ years
Steel (6”)$20–$35High-flow residential, light irrigation50+ years

In areas of Michigan with hard bedrock or deeper wells (typically the upper end of the 25–350 ft range), steel casing is often required because PVC can crack at depth. In sandy/sedimentary regions and shallower wells, PVC handles the load.

How Depth Affects Per-Foot Rates in Michigan

Per-foot rates often increase with depth — even within Michigan:

0–200 feet: The most straightforward drilling. Standard rigs handle these depths easily; formations are usually softer. Rates stay at the $25–$38 range.

200–400 feet: Rates typically increase $5–$10 per foot above the base rate. Harder formations may be encountered, drilling takes longer per foot, more casing is required.

400–600 feet: Specialized equipment may be needed. Drill bit changes are more frequent and the risk of problematic formations increases. Add $10–$20 per foot above base rate.

600+ feet: Heavy-duty rigs, steel casing, and significantly more time. Rates can reach the upper end of Michigan’s range ($55/ft) or beyond. Michigan’s deepest wells are typically in the 250–350+ ft range.

Many Michigan drillers quote a base per-foot rate for the first 200–300 feet, then a higher rate for additional depth. Make sure your quote specifies the rate structure for different depth tiers.

Why Per-Foot Costs Vary in Michigan

Michigan sits within the Michigan Basin, a bowl-shaped sedimentary formation covered by thick glacial drift. The glacial deposits — sand, gravel, and till — provide excellent shallow aquifers across most of the state, with deeper Paleozoic sandstone and limestone bedrock available where drift is thin.

The geology summarized above is the primary driver of per-foot cost variation within Michigan. Areas with softer sedimentary formations drill faster and cheaper. Areas with limestone, granite, or volcanic rock require slower, more expensive methods. Michigan’s primary aquifer — the Michigan Basin Glacial Drift Aquifers / Marshall Sandstone / Saginaw Formation — sits at 15-60 feet in most of the Lower Peninsula; 30-150 feet in the Upper Peninsula’s bedrock areas, which directly affects how deep your well must go.

Total Well Cost Estimates in Michigan

Here’s what Michigan property owners actually pay when you combine per-foot drilling, casing, pump, and all other costs:

Well DepthDrilling OnlyComplete System (with pump, casing, electrical)
25 ft (shallow)$625–$1,375$3,125–$6,375
110 ft (typical)$2,750–$6,050$5,250–$11,050
350 ft (deeper)$8,750–$19,250$11,250–$24,250
350 ft (deepest typical)$8,750–$19,250$11,250–$24,250

How to Compare Per-Foot Quotes

When you receive quotes from multiple Michigan drillers:

  1. Confirm what’s included. A $40/ft quote that includes casing is cheaper than a $30/ft quote where casing is extra.
  2. Ask about depth tiers. Will the rate increase after 200 or 300 feet?
  3. Get a not-to-exceed estimate. Good drillers cap the total cost based on expected depth in your area.
  4. Check for mobilization fees. Some drillers charge $500–$2,000 to move the rig, especially for rural locations.
  5. Verify licensing. Michigan requires all water well drillers to be registered with EGLE.

We recommend getting at least three quotes. Request free quotes from licensed Michigan drillers to compare pricing in your area.

When to Drill in Michigan

April through November; frozen ground in the Upper Peninsula can persist into May

Driller schedules typically fill 4–8 weeks in advance, especially in peak drilling season. Off-season drilling (where weather allows) sometimes captures 5–15% labor savings.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to drill a water well per foot in Michigan?

Michigan well drilling costs $25–$55 per foot in 2026, with $38 per foot as the average. Total cost depends on depth — a typical 110-foot well costs $2,750–$6,050 for drilling alone, plus $2,500–$5,000 for pump and connection.

Why is well drilling cost per foot different across Michigan?

Michigan’s geology varies regionally — softer sedimentary formations drill faster and cheaper than hard limestone, granite, or volcanic bedrock. Wells targeting deeper aquifers also cost more per foot because of additional drill bit wear, slower progress, and the need for steel rather than PVC casing.

Does the per-foot rate include the well casing?

Usually not. Most Michigan drillers quote drilling and casing separately. PVC casing adds $8–$16 per foot; steel casing adds $15–$35 per foot. Always ask for an itemized breakdown so you know exactly what the per-foot rate covers.

How deep do you have to drill for water in Michigan?

In Michigan, residential well depths typically range from 25 to 350 feet, with 110 feet being the average. Your specific depth depends on local geology, target aquifer, and how productive nearby wells have been. The Michigan Basin Glacial Drift Aquifers / Marshall Sandstone / Saginaw Formation is Michigan’s primary residential aquifer, sitting at 15-60 feet in most of the Lower Peninsula; 30-150 feet in the Upper Peninsula’s bedrock areas.

Is it cheaper to drill a shallow well in Michigan?

Yes — both the per-foot rate and total cost are lower for shallow wells. A 25-foot well costs $625–$1,375 for drilling, while a 350-foot well runs $8,750–$19,250. However, you can’t choose your well depth — it depends on where the productive aquifers are beneath your property.

Do Michigan well drillers charge a flat rate or per-foot rate?

Most Michigan residential well drillers quote per-foot rates, though some offer flat-rate packages where well depth is predictable. Per-foot pricing is more common because depth can vary even between neighboring properties. Some drillers quote a base rate for the first 200–300 feet and a higher rate for additional depth.

How can I get the best per-foot rate on well drilling in Michigan?

Get at least three quotes from licensed drillers, drill during the slower season (april through november is peak; outside that window can save 5–15%), and choose a property access point that minimizes mobilization costs. Request free quotes here to compare rates from drillers in your area.

Next Steps

Understanding per-foot pricing is just one piece of the puzzle. Explore our other Michigan well drilling resources:

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