Indiana Well Data › Randolph County
Randolph County, Indiana: well depth, water level & drilling cost
✓ 2,885 IDNR records · verified 2026-06-30
How deep are wells in Randolph County, Indiana?
The median drilled well depth in Randolph County is 100 ft, based on 2,752 wells with recorded depths in the state IDNR database. Half of all wells fall between 64 ft and 145 ft; 90% are shallower than 199 ft. Wells drilled since 2016 have a median depth of 595 ft.
How much does it cost to drill a well in Randolph County?
Applying published per-foot rates to the local median depth of 595 ft: drilling and casing alone typically runs $14,875–$38,675; a complete system including pump, pressure tank, and hookup typically runs $35,700–$59,500. Actual quotes depend on site access, geology, and casing requirements.
What is the static water level in Randolph County?
The median static water level is 22 ft below ground surface (middle half of wells: 15 ft–33 ft), from 2,591 measurements.
How much water do wells in Randolph County produce?
The median tested yield is 30 gpm (middle half: 15 gpm–60 gpm), from 2,287 pump tests. A typical household needs 5–10 gpm.
Pull every recorded well near a Randolph County address — $19
Drilled depth distribution
See every recorded well near any address — depths, water levels, yields, original driller's logs — in a one-time report.
Free lookup Property report — $19Method: medians computed from IDNR records (filed water-well records from the Indiana DNR Division of Water (the public dataset carries no well-use code, so all records are included); depths 0–5,000 ft). Cost estimate applies published per-foot ranges (checked 2026-06-11) to the local median depth — full methodology & sources.