Well Drilling in Kissimmee, FL
Quality Filters And Pumps provides well drilling for homes throughout Kissimmee, Florida and the surrounding Osceola 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 Kissimmee Homes Choose Quality Filters And Pumps for Well Drilling
Kissimmee (approximately 80,000 residents, in Osceola County) is served by Toho Water Authority. The municipal supply comes from groundwater from the Upper Floridan Aquifer treated at Toho Water Authority 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 well drilling guide.
How Our Well Drilling Process Works
Residential and light-commercial water well drilling in Central Florida. Permitting through the relevant Water Management District, site evaluation, drilling, casing, grouting, sanitary well-head completion, and pump installation. State of Florida Water Well Contractor License #7494.
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 How much does it cost to drill a well in Central Florida in 2026? or our Well Drilling service page.
What's Included
- Site evaluation and pre-drilling geology review
- Florida Water Management District well-construction permit application and approval
- Drilling to the appropriate Floridan Aquifer or surficial aquifer zone for the property
- Steel or PVC casing through unconsolidated overburden, grouted per FDEP rule
- Sanitary well seal and pitless adapter installation
- Well development, disinfection, and bacteriological clearance sampling
- Submersible or jet pump selection, sizing, and installation
- Pressure tank and control panel installation
- Initial water-quality test and walkthrough
For more on equipment selection and the regional water chemistry behind our recommendations, see our company overview, the related New Well Drilling Permits in Florida: A Step-by-Step Guide article, and our water-quality reference page.
Kissimmee-Specific Considerations
Kissimmee sits in Osceola County. The water you draw, drink, or irrigate with is regulated by Toho Water Authority 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:
- Toho-served water is treated to remove hydrogen sulfide and reduce hardness; private wells in Osceola County typically need iron and sulfur treatment (source)
- the South Florida Water Management District regulates well construction permits for Osceola County (source)
For the live municipal numbers, pull Kissimmee'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: Kissimmee Neighborhoods and ZIPs
We serve homeowners across Kissimmee. Common neighborhoods we work in include Buenaventura Lakes, Poinciana, Celebration, Campbell, plus the broader Osceola County area. Primary ZIP codes: 34741, 34743, 34744, 34746, 34747, 34758, 34759. 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 Well Drilling in Orlando, FL or Pump Repair in Kissimmee, FL.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a permit to drill a new well in Kissimmee?
How deep do wells typically go in Osceola County?
How long does the whole well-drilling process take?
Will you install the pump and pressure tank too?
Related Resources
Ready to fix the water at your Kissimmee home?
Free quote. On-site evaluation. A written scope before any work starts.
Social preview image: Water well drilling rig by Mcfly05, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.
