Virginia is a "buyer beware" state. Any well or groundwater problems not detected by the buyer during the sale process become the buyer's problem upon closing the sale. There is no legal recourse back to the seller. These are the rules for buying house with a well to help you to avoid properties that are potential big problems before you close on a house.
- The house must have 2-3 acres of land.
- There must be a well completion report on file with the county health department that shows:
- The well stabilized yield should be greater than or equal to 6 gallons/minute
- The well should be drilled and more than 100 feet below grade (deep)
- The well should be a 6 inch diameter pipe with a bolted cap sticking at least a foot out of the ground
- Do not buy a home with a shared well
- The well was drilled after April 1, 1992 (under the current regulations).
- The well head must be at least 100 feet from the nearest edge of the septic drainfield and at least 50 feet from the nearest corner of the house.
- Health Department records show regular septic pump outs at least every 5 years. Annual inspections for alternative septic systems should be on file.
- Don’t buy a house with a well in Karst terrain.
- Test the well water for all the primary and secondary contaminants regulated under the safe drinking water act as well as pesticides. At the very least test the well water for Total coliform, E. coli, nitrate, lead, iron, pH, hardness, and residual chlorine.
- Don’t buy a house with a well that found E. Coli is present in the water or nitrate at more than three times background levels (of 2mg/L).
- Don’t buy a house that found lead present in a flushed sample.
- The well water must have a pH > 6.0
- Draw a glass of water from the cold tap in a bathroom sink and taste it. Don't buy a house with water you don't like.
You need to make sure that the well is constructed properly
and that the groundwater that is drawn into the home is safe to drink. Though
there are many treatment options to fix contaminated water, you might not want
to buy problematic water and some water problems can create a cascade of
issues, so I have eliminated them. If you are buying a house, you need to make
sure that you will have an adequate and safe water supply. This is not the same
thing as strategies to live with diminished well yield or fixing your existing
water quality problems. This is your one chance to make sure the water supply
to the home is acceptable before you buy the home. There is no recourse
after you buy the home.
Virginia Tech recommends that buyers should engage a
licensed well contractor to assess the well and any treatment. As part of the
assessment, the home buyer should obtain a copy and review with the licensed well
professional the "Water Well Completion Report" and the septic system
(or AOSS) repair/permit history and the history of septic tank pump-outs. This
information is on file at the local health department.
If you see more equipment than a blue pressure tank in the
basement you need to know what water treatment equipment is being used, why it
was installed and if it is working properly. It is not always obvious what a
particular piece of equipment is just by looking at it because manufacturers
tend to use the same casing style for all their products. You will need to test
the water before the treatment equipment and after the equipment and determine
if you can or want to live with the findings. There is a limit to the life
cycle of any equipment and wells themselves. How old the equipment is can
determine how effective it is and how long it will continue working.
For purchase I would recommend a broad stroke water test
that looks at all the primary and secondary contaminants regulated under the
safe drinking water act as well as pesticides. These kinds of tests exist. An
example is the WaterCheck
Deluxe plus pesticides test kit from National Testing Laboratories which
is an EPA certified laboratory would work. There are others. Buying a package
reduces the cost though the drawback is these packages are performed at a lower
sensitivity level and WaterCheck was the most economical test I found. All the
packages compare their results to the US EPA’s Safe
Drinking Water Act limits for the primary and secondary contaminants. Since
there are no regulation for private well water, that is a reasonable standard
to compare the water test results to. Be alert to anything that should not be
in groundwater. The presence of low levels of man made contaminants may be an
indication of a bigger problem.
There are no national standards for construction of private
water wells, thought in recent decades more and more states have developed
standards at least for construction. Wells are typically managed and regulated
by the State or Local Health Districts, state departments of the environment or
ecology. You need to know what the regulations are in your local area and when
they were implemented. In Virginia the regulations went into effect in 1992.
You want a well built to the current standards, but the truth is that the well
may not last more than 30-40 years. Geology matters in how a well ages. Check water
level and yield in an old well yield diminishes over time.
Most states require a permit to drill a well and well
drillers to be licensed. Make sure you know what that means in your location.
In Virginia that is a decent standard, but in Pennsylvania anyone with $60 can
get a well driller license, there are no minimum training or knowledge required
there. There are still a few locations where a shallow dug well does not
require a permit or license. Know these things when you go looking for a house
with a well.
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