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Our Credentials & Industry Memberships
Licensed in Texas — TDLR Water Well Driller & Pump Installer
NGWA member — National Ground Water Association
Texas Ground Water Association member
Texas Water Quality Association member
HomeAdvisor Screened & Approved — 10 years
The Good Contractors List — $25,000 per-job guarantee
Disabled-owned & veteran-owned business
A water well runs mostly underground, where you can't inspect the work yourself — so a contractor's credentials are one of the few things you can verify before you hire. This page lays out Flowcore Water's license, industry memberships, and third-party recognitions, and what each one does and doesn't tell you.
Is Flowcore Water licensed to work on wells in Texas?
Yes. Texas law requires anyone who drills a water well or installs a well pump to hold a license from the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR), and every well drilled in the state has to be reported to TDLR on a State Well Report. Flowcore Water holds TDLR Water Well Driller / Pump Installer license, which you can verify directly on the TDLR website. Our well drilling and pump work is performed under that license. Licensing is the baseline — it is the one credential every legitimate well contractor in Texas should be able to show you on request.
What do our industry memberships mean?
Flowcore Water is a member of the National Ground Water Association (NGWA), the national professional body for the groundwater industry, and of the Texas Ground Water Association and the Texas Water Quality Association at the state level. Membership means we take part in the organizations that set water well construction standards, publish current groundwater research, and run the continuing-education programs that keep well and water-treatment professionals current.
One distinction is worth being precise about: NGWA membership is not the same as NGWA certification. NGWA also runs the only national certification program in the industry — the Certified Well Driller and Master Groundwater Contractor designations, which individuals earn by examination and renew with continuing education. Flowcore Water is an NGWA member, and we will never describe membership as certification, because the two mean genuinely different things. We would rather tell you exactly what we hold.
What about our water treatment credentials?
On the water-quality side, Flowcore is a member of the Texas Water Quality Association. The Water Quality Association's "Tested and Certified Under Industry Standards" gold seal certifies water treatment products that have been independently tested to industry standards — so where we install water treatment or whole-house filtration equipment carrying that seal, those components have been verified by a third party rather than only by the manufacturer. This matters in North Texas, where groundwater often carries iron and sulfur that the right treatment system is built to handle.
What do the third-party recognitions tell you?
HomeAdvisor lists Flowcore as Screened & Approved and has for ten years, which reflects a background and licensing screen plus a decade of customer activity on the platform. Flowcore is also listed on The Good Contractors List, an independently vetted Dallas–Fort Worth contractor directory that backs every project booked through it with a $25,000 guarantee. These are not substitutes for the state license — they are outside parties who have reviewed the business and stand behind it. You can also read unfiltered customer feedback on our reviews page.
Why do credentials matter more for well work?
Because a well is high-trust and infrequent. Most homeowners hire a well contractor only once or twice in the time they own a property, the work is largely out of sight once it is finished, and the consequences of a poor install show up months or years later in water quality and pressure. Credentials are how you check the work before it goes in the ground rather than after. Flowcore Water is also a disabled-owned and veteran-owned business — not a technical qualification, but part of who you are working with. You can learn more about our team, see which communities we cover on our Fort Worth service area page, or read our guide to choosing a water well company in North Texas.
How do I verify Flowcore Water's Texas well-driller license?
Is NGWA membership required to drill a well in Texas?
What should I check before hiring a well contractor in North Texas?

