Wells, Septic, and Long Power Runs: What Rural Site Work Really Involves
The unglamorous first chapter of every rural build: water, waste, power, access, and dirt — each one a budget line, none of them a surprise.
Every rural build starts with a phase nobody photographs for Instagram: site work. It’s also where budgets are won or lost. Here’s the plain-English version of what actually happens between “we own land” and “there’s a slab.”
The five site-work questions
- WaterA well, or a tap and line to co-op or city water. Depth, distance, and district all price differently — it gets bid for your tract.
- WasteSeptic design starts with your soil. The system is designed and permitted for your specific land, not copied from the neighbor’s.
- PowerElectricity has to travel from the line to your home site. Long runs are real money — one reason the “perfect” far-back building spot needs a second look.
- AccessA driveway and culvert built for a wet Texas winter. Gravel now, concrete later is a fine plan — washouts are not.
- Dirt & drainageGrading, pad elevation, and a foundation engineered from a soil report. This is the line where the cheapest bid can become the most expensive mistake.
Why we bid it before you commit
Two identical homes on two different tracts can carry very different site budgets. That’s not a scare line — it’s the reason we bid site work for your specific property before anything is signed, openly, so the number you plan around is real. It’s the same reason our cost guide refuses to hand out a per-square-foot fantasy number.
“Site work is where a build is won or lost. Bid it for the land you actually own.”
The first rule of rural building
What you can do this week
- Find out what water district (if any) serves your tract.
- Ask neighbors what their wells hit and where their septic went.
- Stand on your building site during a hard rain. Watch the water.
- Walk it with a builder before you finalize the site plan.
Keep reading
- Build on your land, start to finish
- 8 land-buying mistakes in Parker County
- Springtown & north Parker barndos: the acreage playbook
Tell us where the land is
We’ll talk wells, septic, power, and dirt — openly, before you spend real money.