Quality Filters and Pumps

Pump Repair in Ocala, FL

Quality Filters And Pumps provides pump repair for homes throughout Ocala, Florida and the surrounding Marion County. Every job starts with a written quote and an on-site evaluation, not a phone estimate. Owners Chase and Katie Norris run a state-licensed Florida well-drilling and pump company (License #7494) with 15+ years serving Central Florida.

Why Ocala Homes Choose Quality Filters And Pumps for Pump Repair

Ocala (approximately 64,000 residents, in Marion County) is served by City of Ocala Water Resources / Marion County Utilities (varies by service address). The municipal supply comes from groundwater from the Floridan Aquifer treated at municipal and county facilities. Many homes in the surrounding unincorporated areas still draw from private wells, where the same regional groundwater chemistry applies.

For private wells, we test on site before sizing anything. For wider context, see our full pump repair guide.

How Our Pump Repair Process Works

Pump repair and replacement for submersible well pumps, jet pumps, irrigation pumps, booster pumps, pressure tanks, pressure switches, and constant-pressure controllers across Central Florida.

Every job starts with a real on-site visit. We do not size a pump, recommend a filter, or quote a well off a phone call. For deeper background on this work, read Why is my well pump running constantly (or not at all)? or our Pump Repair service page.

What's Included

  • Pump pulling and inspection for submersible failures
  • Above-ground jet pump and irrigation pump rebuild or replacement
  • Pressure tank diagnosis, recharge, or replacement
  • Pressure switch, check valve, and torque arrestor service
  • Constant-pressure controller (VFD or CSV) diagnosis and replacement
  • Pump motor capacitor and start-relay replacement
  • Drop pipe, wire, and pitless adapter replacement when corroded
  • System pressure and flow verification on completion

For more on equipment selection and the regional water chemistry behind our recommendations, see our company overview, the related Signs Your Well Pump Is Failing in Central Florida article, and our water-quality reference page.

Ocala-Specific Considerations

Ocala sits in Marion County. The water you draw, drink, or irrigate with is regulated by City of Ocala Water Resources / Marion County Utilities (varies by service address) for service-connection customers, and by the relevant Florida Water Management District and the county health department for private-well owners.

Regional notes that tend to apply here:

  • Marion County is one of the most heavily private-well counties in Central Florida; Floridan Aquifer wells here are very hard (often 20-30+ grains per gallon) with frequent hydrogen sulfide (source)
  • Marion County is karst country; well construction in this geology requires careful casing and grouting through cavities, which Florida-licensed contractors handle under WMD permit (source)

For the live municipal numbers, pull Ocala's most recent Consumer Confidence Report directly from the utility. For wells, the only number that matters is the one from your own water, which is why every job starts with an on-site test.

Service Area: Ocala Neighborhoods and ZIPs

We serve homeowners across Ocala. Common neighborhoods we work in include On Top of the World, Stone Creek, Marion Oaks, Silver Springs Shores, plus the broader Marion County area. Primary ZIP codes: 34470, 34471, 34472, 34473, 34474, 34475, 34476, 34480, 34481, 34482. Outside this list? Call us anyway, most of Central Florida is in our normal service zone. Schedule a free quote or call (352) 268-9048.

Looking at a neighboring city or a different service? See Pump Repair in Orlando, FL or Well Drilling in Ocala, FL.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is my well pump running constantly at my Ocala home?

A pump that runs without cycling off usually means a waterlogged pressure tank, a leaking check valve, or a stuck-open pressure switch. Constant running burns out motors quickly, so we treat it as a same-week priority. We diagnose at the pressure tank and switch first, then up the well.

Can you repair my pump or do I need a new one?

It depends on the failure mode and age. Failed capacitors, pressure switches, check valves, and clogged screens are usually economic to repair. Cracked housings, seized motors, and badly worn impellers on pumps over 10 years old are usually better replaced. We give you both options in writing.

Do you do emergency pump service in Ocala?

Yes. No-water calls are our highest priority. We dispatch as fast as parts and schedule allow. Many Central Florida well pumps fail after a lightning event or a long dry-run; we keep common submersible sizes and pressure switches in stock for fast turnaround.

How much does a typical well pump replacement run?

Total cost depends on pump size, well depth, drop pipe and wire condition, and whether the pressure tank needs replacing at the same time. We give a written quote on site after pulling the pump and inspecting the system, before doing any work beyond the diagnostic.

Related Resources

Ready to fix the water at your Ocala home?

Free quote. On-site evaluation. A written scope before any work starts.

Social preview image: Submersible pump 0.75HP by Mar11, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.