Well Pump Losing Prime: Root Causes and Repair Methods
A well pump that loses prime is one of the most disruptive failures in a private water supply system, cutting off water delivery entirely until the underlying fault is diagnosed and corrected. This page covers the mechanical and hydraulic causes of prime loss, the structural differences between shallow-well and deep-well pump systems as they relate to priming failures, common field scenarios, and the decision boundaries that determine when repair versus replacement is the appropriate course of action. Understanding how prime loss is classified helps property owners, licensed pump contractors, and well system inspectors apply the correct intervention.
Definition and scope
Prime, in the context of a well pump system, refers to the water-filled state of the pump casing, suction line, and foot valve that allows a centrifugal or jet pump to generate suction and move water. A pump "loses prime" when air enters the suction side of the system, breaking the hydraulic seal and preventing water from being drawn upward. The pump motor continues to run, but no water is delivered — a condition sometimes called "dry running."
Prime loss is distinct from pump mechanical failure. The pump itself may be fully functional; the fault lies in the inability to maintain a continuous water column from the source to the pump inlet. This distinction directly determines the repair pathway. Documented under the scope of the National Ground Water Association (NGWA) standards for well construction and pump installation, prime loss is categorized as a hydraulic system fault rather than an equipment defect in most cases.
Shallow-well jet pumps — which draw from depths of 25 feet or less — are significantly more susceptible to prime loss than submersible pumps installed below the water table. Submersible pumps are inherently self-priming because they operate while submerged; prime loss in submersible systems typically indicates a check valve failure or a broken drop pipe rather than a priming mechanism fault. For a broader overview of system types and qualified contractors in this sector, see the Well Pump Repair Listings.
How it works
A jet pump or centrifugal pump maintains prime through 3 components working in concert:
- Foot valve — A one-way check valve installed at the bottom of the suction pipe, preventing water from draining back into the well when the pump is off.
- Suction line integrity — A continuous, airtight pipe between the well casing and the pump inlet; any crack, loose fitting, or corroded joint introduces air.
- Pump casing water volume — The casing must remain filled with water to allow the impeller to generate the velocity needed for suction lift.
When the pump cycles off, the foot valve holds the water column in place. If the foot valve fails — which occurs when sediment, debris, or wear prevents full closure — water drains back, and the pump starts dry on the next cycle. The impeller spins in air, generates no suction, and the system fails to deliver water.
Shallow-well jet pumps are limited by atmospheric pressure to a theoretical maximum suction lift of approximately 25 feet at sea level. In practice, the Water Systems Council (WSC) identifies the effective operational limit at 20–22 feet depending on altitude and water temperature. Deep-well jet systems use a two-pipe ejector assembly at depth and are less exposed to surface-side prime loss but introduce ejector nozzle clogging as an additional failure mode.
Common scenarios
Prime loss presents across a defined set of failure scenarios, each with distinct diagnostic indicators:
- Failed or worn foot valve: The most frequent cause. Water drains back between pump cycles; the pump runs but delivers no water on startup. Inspection requires pulling the suction pipe.
- Cracked or loose suction pipe: Air infiltration at a joint, threaded fitting, or hairline pipe fracture. Detectable by pressure-testing the suction line or applying soapy water to fittings while the pump runs.
- Dropping water table: Seasonal or drought-related drawdown can expose the foot valve, admitting air. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) monitors groundwater levels nationally; local well records held by state agencies identify static water depth baselines.
- Clogged ejector nozzle or venturi (deep-well jet systems): Mineral scale or debris occludes the ejector, preventing recirculation pressure that drives suction.
- Air locked pressure tank: A waterlogged or failed bladder pressure tank can contribute to erratic prime cycling, though this typically presents as short-cycling rather than complete prime loss.
- Pump casing drain-back: Some pump installations include a drain port that opens when pressure drops; if the port malfunctions or is incorrectly sized, the casing empties.
Contractors certified through the NGWA Pump Installation Contractor (PIC) program or licensed under state well driller and pump installer statutes are the qualified service category for diagnosis. Licensing requirements vary by state; most jurisdictions require a state-issued pump installer license for any work below the wellhead casing seal.
Decision boundaries
The repair-versus-replacement determination for a pump losing prime follows a structured assessment:
- Confirm the system type: Shallow-well jet, deep-well jet, or submersible. Each has a different prime-loss mechanism and a different repair approach.
- Test the foot valve: Pull and bench-test or replace in place. A failed foot valve is a low-cost repair — replacement valves are a consumable part — and resolves a large share of prime-loss calls.
- Pressure-test the suction line: A line that fails a static pressure test requires repair or replacement of the affected segment.
- Measure static water level: If the water table has dropped below the foot valve position, the well yield or pump setting depth must be reassessed. This may trigger a well inspection under state groundwater regulations.
- Evaluate pump age and run history: Jet pump service life averages 10–15 years under continuous residential use (Water Systems Council, Wellcare Information). A pump approaching or past that threshold presenting with prime loss alongside reduced pressure or motor amperage anomalies is a replacement candidate.
- Assess permit requirements: In most states, pulling a pump and reinstalling it at a different depth, or replacing a pump on an existing well, requires a permit filed with the state environmental or health agency. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) private well guidelines reference state primacy frameworks; state-level well construction codes (such as those administered under state departments of natural resources or environmental quality) govern the permitting threshold.
Shallow-well jet pumps losing prime due to foot valve failure represent a straightforward field repair within the scope of a licensed pump installer. Deep-well jet systems with ejector faults require more involved disassembly. Submersible pump prime loss — typically a check valve or drop pipe fault — requires pulling the pump from the well, which is classified as well work under most state codes and requires a licensed well contractor.
For professional service referrals and contractor qualification data, the Well Pump Repair Listings provides categorized access to service providers. Additional context on the structure of this reference resource is available at Well Pump Repair Directory Purpose and Scope.
References
- National Ground Water Association (NGWA) — Industry standards for well construction, pump installation, and pump installer certification programs.
- Water Systems Council (WSC) — Wellcare Program — Technical publications on residential well pump systems, service life data, and maintenance standards.
- U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) — Water Resources Mission Area — National groundwater level monitoring and aquifer data used in assessing water table depth and drawdown.
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency — Private Wells — Federal framework for private well owner guidance and state primacy references for well construction regulations.