Well Volume Calculator

Calculate the water volume in a drilled or dug well based on diameter, depth, and static water level. Get gallons, liters, and chlorination dosing info.

About the Well Volume Calculator

The Well Volume Calculator determines the total water volume stored in a drilled or dug well based on its casing diameter, total depth, and static water level. Whether you're a homeowner testing water quality, a well driller sizing a pump, or a contractor planning well disinfection, knowing the exact volume of water in your well is essential for proper treatment and maintenance.

Calculating well volume involves simple cylindrical geometry — the volume of water equals the cross-sectional area of the casing multiplied by the height of the water column. However, most people don't have the formulas memorized, and converting between cubic feet, gallons, and liters adds complexity. This calculator handles all the math instantly and provides results in multiple unit systems.

Beyond basic volume calculation, this tool provides practical outputs including chlorination dosing for shock treatment (the amount of bleach or chlorine granules needed to achieve 200 ppm concentration), pump sizing guidance, estimated fill time at various flow rates, and a reference table for common well casing sizes. It's an indispensable tool for well owners, water treatment professionals, and drilling contractors.

Why Use This Well Volume Calculator?

Accurate well volume measurement is critical for proper shock chlorination dosing, pump sizing, and water treatment. Over-chlorinating wastes chemicals and time; under-chlorinating fails to disinfect. This calculator eliminates guesswork with precise calculations for any well configuration.

It is useful because the same well can be described in feet, gallons, or liters depending on who is talking about it. Keeping the casing size, water column, and treatment dose together makes the calculation easier to trust.

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your well casing diameter in inches (common sizes: 4", 6", 8")
  2. Enter the total well depth from ground level to the bottom in feet
  3. Enter the static water level — the depth from ground to the water surface when the pump is off
  4. Select your preferred output units (gallons, liters, or cubic feet)
  5. Review the calculated water volume and chlorination dosing information
  6. Use the common well sizes table for quick reference on standard configurations
  7. Check the chlorination guide for proper shock treatment procedures

Formula

Volume (gallons) = π × (Diameter/2)² × Water Column Height × 7.48052. Water Column Height = Total Depth − Static Water Level. Where diameter is in feet (inches ÷ 12), heights are in feet, and 7.48052 converts cubic feet to gallons. Chlorine Dose (oz) = Volume (gal) × Target PPM / (Bleach Strength × 1,000,000) × 128.

Example Calculation

Result: 220.5 gallons

A 6-inch diameter well with 200 ft total depth and 50 ft static water level has a 150 ft water column. Volume = π × (0.25)² × 150 × 7.48052 = 220.5 gallons of standing water.

Tips & Best Practices

Understanding Well Construction

Residential water wells typically consist of a vertical borehole lined with casing pipe that extends from the surface down to the water-bearing formation (aquifer). The casing prevents the hole from collapsing and isolates the well from surface contamination. Modern wells use PVC or stainless steel casing, while older wells may have carbon steel or even concrete tile casing.

The annular space between the casing and the borehole is sealed with grout (usually cement or bentonite) to prevent surface water from entering the well. A well screen or perforated section at the bottom allows groundwater to enter the casing from the aquifer. Understanding this construction is important because the casing diameter determines the volume calculation.

When to Calculate Well Volume

Knowing your well's water volume is essential in several situations. Shock chlorination after bacterial contamination requires precise dosing based on the total water volume. Pump sizing depends on the available water column height and recovery rate. Water treatment system design requires flow rate and volume data during installation and maintenance.

Well volume calculations are also important during drought conditions to monitor declining water levels, after well rehabilitation to assess improved capacity, and when planning irrigation systems that may draw heavily on the well's supply.

Common Well Sizes and Volumes

Standard residential wells in the United States typically range from 4 to 8 inches in diameter and 100 to 400 feet in depth. A 6-inch diameter well with 100 feet of water column holds approximately 147 gallons — enough for typical household use with adequate aquifer recharge. Larger diameter wells (8-12 inches) are common for agricultural or commercial applications where higher flow rates are needed. Shallow dug wells may be 24-36 inches in diameter but only 20-30 feet deep, holding similar volumes to deeper drilled wells.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is static water level?

Static water level is the depth from the ground surface to the top of the water in your well when the pump has been off for at least 24 hours. It's different from the total well depth, which includes the dry portion of the casing above the water.

How do I find my well's diameter and depth?

Check your well completion report (also called a well log or driller's report), which should be on file with your state's water resources department. Common residential well diameters are 4", 6", or 8". If you don't have records, a well inspector can measure these.

How much chlorine do I need to shock my well?

For standard shock chlorination (200 ppm), you need approximately 3 pints of household bleach (8.25% sodium hypochlorite) per 100 gallons of well water. This calculator provides exact dosing based on your well volume.

Does this account for the aquifer outside the casing?

No, this calculator measures only the water volume inside the well casing. The actual aquifer around the well contains additional water, but casing volume is what's used for chlorination dosing and pump sizing calculations.

What if my well has different diameter sections?

Some wells have a larger diameter upper casing and a smaller diameter lower section (telescoped wells). Calculate each section separately using the respective diameters and add the volumes together.

How often should I test my well water?

The EPA recommends testing private well water at least once per year for bacteria, nitrates, and pH. Test more frequently if you notice changes in taste, odor, or color, or after flooding, nearby construction, or well repairs.

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