Borehole Drilling &
Groundwater
Solutions Kenya
Kenya’s most reliable water source is beneath your feet. Maji Hill provides end-to-end borehole drilling and groundwater solutions across all 47 counties — from hydrogeological siting surveys and licensed drilling through to pump installation, water quality testing, WRMA licensing, and long-term maintenance. One contractor, one accountable relationship, from first survey to flowing water.
WHY A BOREHOLE IS KENYA’S MOST RELIABLE LONG-TERM WATER SOLUTION
Dependence on mains water supply in Kenya exposes properties to rationing, disruptions, and escalating tariffs. Bulk water deliveries are expensive and logistically complex for large consumers. Rainwater harvesting is seasonal. Groundwater from a properly sited and drilled borehole is the most reliable, cost-stable, and independent water supply available to Kenyan properties — providing water on demand, year-round, from a source entirely within the property’s control.
Independence from Mains Supply
A borehole eliminates dependence on county water supply rationing, network failures, and water utility service disruptions. Once drilled and equipped, a borehole gives the property owner control over their own water supply — available on demand regardless of what is happening with the mains network.
Lowest Long-Term Water Cost
The capital cost of a borehole is recovered through eliminated or reduced water utility bills typically within 2 to 5 years for a commercial property. After payback, the ongoing cost is electricity for pumping and periodic maintenance — a fraction of the tariff cost for an equivalent volume of mains supply or bulk delivery.
Properly Sited Boreholes Succeed
Failed or low-yield boreholes in Kenya are almost always the result of drilling without a proper hydrogeological siting survey. Maji Hill carries out a structured siting survey before any drill bit touches the ground — reviewing regional geology, existing borehole records, satellite lineament analysis, and field reconnaissance to select the site with the highest probability of striking a productive aquifer.
WRMA Compliant from Day One
All groundwater abstraction in Kenya requires a WRMA licence under the Water Act 2016. Maji Hill prepares and submits the WRMA abstraction licence application as part of the standard drilling service — providing the hydrogeological report, yield test data, and site maps required for the application and managing it through to licence issuance.
End-to-End Single Contractor
Managing separate contractors for siting, drilling, casing, pump installation, water testing, and WRMA licensing creates gaps in accountability and quality control. Maji Hill manages the complete scope — from the first survey visit to a fully licensed, pump-equipped, water-tested borehole — under a single contract with a single point of responsibility.
Ongoing Support and Maintenance
A borehole is a long-term infrastructure asset that requires periodic maintenance — pump servicing, yield monitoring, periodic water quality testing, and WRMA licence renewal. Maji Hill offers ongoing pump maintenance contracts and annual yield and quality monitoring programmes that protect the performance and compliance of your borehole investment for its entire operational life.
BOREHOLE DRILLING SERVICES BY PROPERTY TYPE
Select your property type for a full breakdown of what Maji Hill includes in a borehole drilling and groundwater package.
Residential Borehole Package
- Hydrogeological desktop study and siting report
- Field reconnaissance and site selection
- Rotary or percussion drilling to aquifer
- Steel or uPVC casing and screen installation
- Borehole development and airlifting
- Constant rate yield test (8 hours minimum)
- Submersible pump supply and installation
- Rising main, headworks, and surface completion
Residential Inclusions
- Accredited water quality laboratory testing
- Water treatment system where quality requires it
- WRMA abstraction licence application and support
- Borehole completion report
- As-drilled geological log
- Connection to property storage and distribution
- Smart monitoring option (remote pump control)
- Annual pump maintenance contract available
Commercial Borehole Package
- Full hydrogeological siting survey with ERT option
- High-yield large-diameter drilling
- Extended yield test (step and constant rate)
- Pump selection sized to sustainable yield
- Pump house and headworks construction
- Booster system and pressure tank installation
- Smart monitoring with GSM remote control
- WRMA licence and NEMA EIA support
Commercial Deliverables
- Hydrogeological and completion reports
- Yield test analysis and safe yield recommendation
- Full water quality laboratory report
- Treatment system design and installation
- WRMA licence documentation
- As-built drawings and borehole log
- Quarterly water quality monitoring contract
- Annual pump servicing programme
Agricultural Borehole Package
- High-yield siting survey for irrigation demand
- Large-diameter drilling for high abstraction
- Extended step-rate yield test
- Submersible pump for irrigation volumes
- Surface distribution to irrigation system
- Solar pump option for off-grid farms
- Livestock water point connection
- WRMA agricultural abstraction licence
Agricultural Deliverables
- Yield and safe abstraction rate report
- Irrigation water quality analysis
- Irrigation suitability assessment
- WRMA agricultural licence application
- Solar pump sizing and installation
- Seasonal abstraction schedule guidance
- Annual yield monitoring programme
- Water storage and distribution design
Community and Rural Borehole Package
- Community water demand assessment
- Participatory siting with community engagement
- Hand pump or submersible pump installation
- Sanitary seal and surface drainage apron
- Water user committee formation support
- Community operator training
- Solar powered pump option
- WRMA community licence application
Community Deliverables
- Borehole completion report in ONA/KoBo format
- GPS-referenced water point for WRMA register
- Water quality test certificate
- Community O&M manual in Kiswahili
- Donor reporting compatible data package
- Chlorination and disinfection protocol
- Annual water quality monitoring programme
- Spare parts package for community operator
THE MAJI HILL BOREHOLE DRILLING PROCESS IN DETAIL
Every stage of a properly executed borehole project — why each step matters, and what we do differently to maximise the probability of a successful, productive borehole.
Hydrogeological Siting Survey
The siting survey is the most important investment in a borehole project — and the one most frequently skipped by operators who then wonder why they drilled dry holes. Maji Hill carries out a desktop hydrogeological review using published geological maps, the WRMA borehole database (reviewing the yield, depth, and failure rate of existing boreholes in the area), satellite lineament analysis to identify fault zones and fracture corridors that channel groundwater, and field reconnaissance. Where the geology warrants it and the investment justifies it, we deploy geophysical methods — principally Electrical Resistivity Tomography (ERT) — to image subsurface geology and identify aquifer targets. The siting survey concludes with a ranked list of drilling locations, estimated depth and yield range for each, and a formal siting report with supporting maps.
Borehole Drilling — Rotary and Percussion Methods
We use the drilling method best suited to the geology at the siting location. Rotary drilling with a mud flush or air flush is the most common method for basement rock formations across Kenya’s highlands and central regions — capable of penetrating hard rock efficiently to the depths required. Down-the-hole hammer (DTH) percussion drilling is used in very hard or fractured formations where the hammer’s impact energy breaks rock ahead of the bit. In softer alluvial and sedimentary formations, cable tool percussion or rotary with drilling fluid is used. Geological cuttings are collected at regular depth intervals throughout drilling to build an as-drilled lithological log that forms part of the borehole completion record.
Casing, Screening, and Borehole Development
After drilling reaches the target aquifer, the borehole is cased with steel or uPVC casing through the unstable upper formation, with a perforated screen section positioned across the productive aquifer. Gravel pack is installed around the screen to support the formation and improve yield. The borehole is then developed — using airlift pumping, surge pumping, or high-velocity jetting — to remove fine material from the formation and maximise the connection between the borehole and the aquifer. A properly developed borehole has a significantly higher initial yield and longer productive life than one that is cased and immediately put into production.
Aquifer Yield Testing — Step Rate and Constant Rate Tests
A yield test is essential before selecting and installing a pump — it determines the sustainable yield the aquifer can deliver without the borehole pumping dry. We carry out a step-rate test (pumping at progressively higher rates with water level monitoring at each step) to identify the critical pumping rate, followed by a constant rate test at the recommended pumping rate for a minimum of 8 hours with continuous water level monitoring. Recovery monitoring after the test confirms the aquifer’s hydraulic properties. The yield test data produces a safe yield recommendation — the maximum rate at which the borehole can be continuously pumped without causing progressive dewatering of the aquifer.
Water Quality Sampling and Accredited Laboratory Testing
Borehole water quality in Kenya varies significantly — from excellent potable water requiring no treatment to water with elevated fluoride, iron, manganese, nitrate, hardness, or microbial contamination requiring treatment before consumption. Maji Hill collects water samples from every new borehole following standard protocol and submits them to accredited laboratories for analysis against the Kenya Bureau of Standards drinking water quality standards. The laboratory report confirms which parameters, if any, exceed the standards and forms the basis for treatment system design. We supply and install the appropriate treatment system — from simple UV disinfection to iron removal filters, fluoride removal units, or reverse osmosis — as part of the complete borehole package.
WRMA Abstraction Licence Application and Management
Under Kenya’s Water Act 2016, every borehole used for abstraction — regardless of size or purpose — requires a valid WRMA abstraction licence. The licence application requires a hydrogeological report, a borehole completion report with the as-drilled log, yield test data, GPS coordinates, a site map, and the intended use and abstraction volume. Maji Hill compiles and submits the complete WRMA application package for every borehole we drill and manages the application through to licence issuance. We also handle WRMA licence renewals for existing boreholes and assist clients who have been operating without a licence to regularise their position with WRMA.
GROUNDWATER IN KENYA — GEOLOGY AND EXPECTED DEPTH BY REGION
Kenya has five main hydrogeological zones, each with characteristic aquifer types, expected borehole depths, and typical yield ranges. Understanding the geology at your site is the starting point for every successful borehole.
8 SITUATIONS WHERE A BOREHOLE IS THE RIGHT DECISION IN KENYA
These situations are the clearest indicators that a borehole will deliver a significant return on investment for a Kenyan property — residential, commercial, agricultural, or institutional.
Mains Water Supply is Unreliable or Insufficient
Properties experiencing frequent supply interruptions, prolonged dry spells in supply, or insufficient pressure and volume from the mains utility network benefit immediately from a borehole that provides independent, on-demand supply regardless of the mains network status.
You Are Spending Heavily on Bulk Water Delivery
Properties spending Ksh 30,000 or more per month on bulk water deliveries can typically recover a full borehole investment within 2 to 4 years. The borehole eliminates the logistics, storage constraints, and unit cost premium of tanker delivery entirely.
Your Property Is Not Connected to the Mains Grid
Rural homes, farms, off-grid lodges, and institutions in areas without mains water coverage have groundwater as the most practical and cost-effective water supply option. A borehole provides self-sufficiency without dependence on infrastructure that may not reach the site for years.
You Are Developing Agricultural Irrigation
Reliable irrigation water is the key constraint for commercial agriculture in Kenya. A high-yield borehole correctly sized for the irrigation demand provides the water security needed for year-round production, eliminating dependence on seasonal rainfall and river flows that are increasingly unreliable under climate variability.
A New Development Requires an Independent Water Supply
New residential estates, hotels, schools, and commercial developments in areas with limited or unreliable mains supply should include a borehole in the infrastructure plan from the outset — it is significantly less expensive to site and drill a borehole during construction than to retrofit one after completion when access is constrained.
Your Existing Borehole Has Low Yield or Has Failed
If your existing borehole is producing less water than you need, has been pumped dry repeatedly, or has failed mechanically, Maji Hill can assess whether the issue is the pump, the borehole development, or the aquifer yield — and recommend rehabilitation, deepening, or a new borehole at a better-sited location.
You Need Water Security for a Critical Facility
Hospitals, schools, data centres, food processing plants, and hotels cannot afford water supply disruptions. A borehole provides backup or primary supply that is completely independent of utility network failures — ensuring business continuity regardless of what happens to the mains supply.
You Have a Borehole Without a WRMA Licence
Operating a borehole without a WRMA abstraction licence is a violation of the Water Act 2016. If your existing borehole is unlicensed, Maji Hill can prepare and submit the retroactive WRMA licence application — including the required hydrogeological assessment, completion report, and yield data — to regularise your position before a WRMA inspection finds the non-compliance.
FROM SURVEY TO FLOWING WATER — THE COMPLETE BOREHOLE PROJECT TIMELINE
A structured six-phase project from initial siting survey to a fully licensed, tested, and producing borehole — with clear milestones and documentation at every stage.
Hydrogeological Siting Survey
Drilling and Geological Logging
Casing, Development, and Yield Test
Pump Installation and Headworks
Water Quality Testing and Treatment
WRMA Licence Application and Handover
BOREHOLE PUMP TYPES — WHICH IS RIGHT FOR YOUR BOREHOLE IN KENYA?
Pump selection for a Kenyan borehole depends on yield, depth, power availability, and application. This guide shows the main options Maji Hill specifies and installs.
| Pump Type | Best For | Yield Range | Power Source | Remote Control |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Submersible Electric Pump | Most residential and commercial boreholes | 0.5–30 m³/hr | Mains electricity | Available with GSM |
| Solar Submersible Pump | Off-grid farms, rural communities, lodges | 0.5–10 m³/hr | Solar panels + battery | Available with IoT |
| Hand Pump (Afridev / India Mk II) | Community water points, shallow boreholes | 0.1–0.5 m³/hr | Manual — no power | Manual operation |
| Submersible + Generator Backup | Critical facilities — hospital, hotel, school | 2–20 m³/hr | Mains + generator | Available with ATS |
| Windmill Pump | Remote pastoral and livestock sites | 0.2–1 m³/hr | Wind — no power | Mechanical operation |
| High-Volume Turbine Pump | Agricultural irrigation, large commercial | 10–100+ m³/hr | Three-phase electricity | SCADA/IoT available |
IS A BOREHOLE RIGHT FOR YOUR PROPERTY IN KENYA?
Answer four quick questions for a personalised recommendation on the right borehole solution for your property and location.
What is your current water supply situation?
What type of property is this for?
Where in Kenya is the property located?
Is reliable grid electricity available at the site?
BOREHOLE DRILLING COVERAGE ACROSS ALL 47 COUNTIES OF KENYA
Maji Hill drilling teams and hydrogeologists operate nationwide — from Nairobi to the northern frontier, coast to western Kenya. Type your county or town below to confirm coverage.
WHAT CLIENTS ACROSS KENYA SAY ABOUT MAJI HILL BOREHOLE DRILLING
Feedback from homeowners, farmers, hotel managers, and NGO project teams whose boreholes Maji Hill has sited, drilled, and commissioned across Kenya.
“We had two failed boreholes on our Laikipia farm drilled by other contractors — both dry holes, both expensive. Maji Hill carried out a proper hydrogeological survey with an ERT resistivity scan before committing to a drill location. They drilled to 98 metres and struck water at 72 metres with a yield of 7 m³/hr. They completed the WRMA licence application, tested the water quality, and installed a solar pump so we don’t need grid power. The yield has been consistent for two years. Worth every shilling.”
“We built a 60-unit estate in Kiambu and included a Maji Hill borehole in the infrastructure from the start. They sited it correctly on the first attempt, drilled to 85 metres, achieved a yield of 4.5 m³/hr, installed a submersible pump with GSM remote control, and handled the WRMA licence. Water quality came back excellent — just UV disinfection required. Our residents have reliable water independent of the mains supply, which has been a major selling point. Professional from first survey to last document.”
“We drilled six community boreholes across Turkana County for our WASH programme. Maji Hill’s hydrogeologists carried out the siting surveys, the drill teams managed the challenging northern Kenya geology professionally, and they delivered all data in the ONA-compatible format we needed for our UNICEF reporting and WRMA water point registration. All six boreholes were productive. Community O&M manuals in Kiswahili and spare parts packages handed over at each site. Exactly the standard a development programme needs.”
GET A PROPERLY SITED, LICENSED BOREHOLE ANYWHERE IN KENYA
From the first hydrogeological survey to a flowing, licensed, water-tested borehole — Maji Hill provides the complete end-to-end service across all 47 counties. No dry holes from poor siting. No unlicensed boreholes. No guesswork on water quality. One contractor, accountable for the whole project.
REQUEST A BOREHOLE SITING SURVEY AND PROJECT PROPOSAL
Tell us about your property and water needs. We will prepare a scoped proposal covering the siting survey, drilling estimate, pump system, water quality testing, and WRMA licence — with a timeline from survey to flowing water.
BOREHOLE DRILLING KENYA – FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
Honest answers to the questions property owners, farmers, developers, and NGO teams across Kenya ask before commissioning a borehole drilling project.
How deep does a borehole need to be in Kenya?
Borehole depth in Kenya varies significantly by geology and location. In Nairobi and the central highlands, productive aquifers in fractured basement rock are typically encountered between 40 and 120 metres depth. Along the coast, sedimentary aquifers can be struck at 20 to 60 metres. In the Rift Valley volcanic terrain, depths range from 30 to 150+ metres. In ASAL northern Kenya, depths of 100 to 250 metres or more are common. These are typical ranges — the actual productive depth at a specific site depends on local geology, and a hydrogeological siting survey reviews all available data to estimate the expected depth range and yield before drilling begins. This is the reason a siting survey is so important: it avoids the expensive mistake of stopping drilling too shallow, or drilling unnecessarily deep.
What is a WRMA abstraction licence and do I need one?
Yes — every borehole in Kenya used for water abstraction requires a valid Water Resource Management Authority (WRMA) abstraction licence under the Water Act 2016, regardless of the scale of abstraction or the purpose. Operating a borehole without a WRMA licence is an offence. Maji Hill prepares and submits the complete WRMA application as part of our standard borehole service — the application requires a hydrogeological report, borehole completion report, yield test data, GPS coordinates, and the intended use and abstraction volume. We manage the application through to licence issuance. For clients who already have an unlicensed borehole, we prepare and submit a retroactive licence application to regularise the position with WRMA before an inspection identifies the non-compliance.
What pump should I use for my borehole in Kenya?
The correct pump depends on the borehole’s confirmed safe yield from the yield test, the static and dynamic water levels, the required flow rate at the surface, the borehole diameter and casing size, and the power source available. The most common pump for Kenyan boreholes is a submersible electric pump installed below the dynamic water level. Pump selection must be carried out after the yield test — installing a pump rated higher than the aquifer’s sustainable yield will pump the borehole dry, damaging both the pump and potentially the aquifer. For off-grid sites, solar submersible pumps are an increasingly cost-effective option. Community water points often use hand pumps for simplicity and maintenance ease. Maji Hill selects, sizes, and installs the correctly matched pump for every borehole we drill.
Is borehole water safe to drink in Kenya?
Borehole water quality in Kenya is variable. Some boreholes produce excellent potable water that needs only disinfection. Others have elevated fluoride (common in Rift Valley, ASAL areas), iron and manganese (common in basement rock areas), nitrate (near agricultural land), or microbial contamination (near surface water or sanitation facilities). You cannot tell from appearance or taste alone whether borehole water is safe. Maji Hill carries out comprehensive water quality sampling and accredited laboratory analysis against Kenya Bureau of Standards drinking water standards on every borehole we drill. Where parameters exceed standards, we design and install the appropriate treatment system — UV disinfection, iron removal filter, fluoride reduction unit, or reverse osmosis — as part of the borehole completion package. Drinking untested borehole water is a health risk that is easily and affordably eliminated by proper testing.
How long does it take to drill a borehole in Kenya?
The complete borehole project timeline in Kenya from commissioning to a licensed, pump-equipped, water-tested borehole is typically 8 to 14 weeks. The siting survey takes 3 to 5 days. Drilling a 100 to 150 metre borehole in typical Kenyan geology takes 3 to 7 days. Casing, development, and yield testing add 3 to 5 days. Pump installation takes 1 to 2 days. Water quality laboratory results take 10 to 15 working days from sample submission. The WRMA licence application currently takes 4 to 8 weeks for processing after submission — this is the main timeline driver and is outside Maji Hill’s control. We submit the WRMA application as soon as the completion data is available to minimise the waiting period before the licence is issued.
Can a failed or low-yield borehole be rehabilitated in Kenya?
Some failed or low-yield boreholes can be rehabilitated — but the feasibility depends on why the borehole is underperforming. If the issue is borehole encrustation (mineral scale deposited on the casing and screen reducing flow), rehabilitation by acid treatment or mechanical brushing and jetting can restore yield. If the screen is blocked by fine material that was not properly developed out during construction, airlifting and surge development can improve yield. If the pump is incorrectly sized or installed at the wrong depth, replacing or repositioning it may solve the problem. If the aquifer itself is of limited yield at that specific location — a poor siting decision at the outset — rehabilitation cannot generate water that is not there. Maji Hill assesses failed boreholes, identifies the cause, and recommends rehabilitation where it is technically viable, or a new well at a better-sited location where it is not.
