Black Hills limestone aquifers deliver reliable water — but often with hard minerals, sulfur odor, or iron staining along the way. We connect you with a licensed local tech to test your water and fix what's actually wrong.
Limestone geology means mineral-rich water is common — leaves scale on fixtures and shortens appliance life.
A rotten-egg odor is usually hydrogen sulfide from the aquifer, not contamination — treatable without a new well.
Orange-brown staining on fixtures and laundry points to dissolved iron, common in this geology and straightforward to filter out.
Pricing depends on what your test results actually show.
Testing alone runs $150-$400. Full treatment systems vary by what's needed.
Call (605) 000-0000A sulfur or rotten-egg smell is common in Black Hills limestone aquifers and is usually caused by naturally occurring hydrogen sulfide or sulfur bacteria, not contamination. It's typically resolved with a treatment system, not a new well.
Most guidance recommends annual testing for bacteria and nitrates, with a fuller mineral panel every few years or whenever water quality noticeably changes.
Yes — a water test is a standard part of due diligence on any home with a private well, alongside a well inspection.
Test first, treat second — no guessing.