Sprinkler system running across Houston Texas suburb

Our Service Areas

We serve the full Houston metro — no travel fees within our service area. If you're not sure we come to your neighborhood, just call and ask.

(832) 555-0147

Houston

Houston proper is the heart of our service area — and it's where we started back in 2003. We cover all of Houston's major neighborhoods from Memorial and the Energy Corridor on the west side to Midtown, Montrose, Bellaire, Meyerland, and the Heights. East Houston, including Gulfgate and Galena Park, is no problem. We're also out in Clear Lake and Webster regularly.

Houston's soil varies quite a bit across the city — Memorial and Meyerland tend to have older systems with 1970s and 80s iron pipe that's prone to corrosion. The Heights and Montrose often have smaller lots with tight zones and outdated controllers. Whatever the neighborhood, we know what to expect before we arrive.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Aging iron mainlines (1970s–80s systems)
  • Root intrusion from large oak trees
  • Erosion around heads in clay-heavy soils

The Woodlands

The Woodlands is one of our busiest areas. Lots here tend to be larger, systems more complex, and homeowners take their lawns seriously — as they should, given the HOA standards in most sections. We service all The Woodlands villages including Creekside Park, Sterling Ridge, Indian Springs, Panther Creek, and Grogan's Mill.

The mature tree canopy in The Woodlands is beautiful but brutal on sprinkler systems. Root intrusion is extremely common here — roots from pines, oaks, and magnolias find underground lines and work their way in through fittings and micro-cracks. We've repaired hundreds of root-related breaks in this area and know exactly where to look.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Root intrusion from mature tree canopy
  • Head elevation issues on sloped lots
  • Hunter and Rain Bird rotor nozzle clogging

Katy

Katy's rapid growth over the last 20 years means you've got two very different situations out there: newer subdivisions with modern systems installed during construction (often with the bare minimum, unfortunately), and older Katy neighborhoods where the systems are 15–25 years old and starting to show it.

The clay soil in Katy is some of the stickiest in the Houston metro — it expands and contracts dramatically with moisture, which shifts pipe joints and cracks fittings over time. We see a lot of leaking lateral lines and sunken heads in Katy. We also do a lot of zone upgrades for newer builds that came with undersized systems that can't keep up with larger lawn areas.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Shifting clay soil causing pipe joint failures
  • Undersized systems in newer construction
  • Zone imbalances in large yard installations

Sugar Land

Sugar Land homeowners tend to be very tuned into their irrigation systems — which is a good thing, because the city is under some of the strictest watering schedules in Fort Bend County. We work in First Colony, Greatwood, New Territory, Telfair, Riverstone, and all the other master-planned communities that make up the Sugar Land area.

One thing we see frequently in Sugar Land is controller drift — where the timer settings have wandered over time and no one's sure what's actually running when. We find systems watering at 2am on weekdays for 90 minutes a zone, running up enormous bills and soaking grass that would do better with lighter, more frequent cycles.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Controller misconfiguration and schedule drift
  • Backflow preventer failures (common in older systems)
  • Drainage issues leading to pooling in low spots

Pearland

Pearland is a great mix of older and newer properties, and we love working out there. The Pearland-Friendswood corridor along Highway 35 has some of the nicest landscapes in the Houston area — and some of the most complex irrigation systems to go with them.

Pearland's proximity to Galveston Bay means higher humidity and a slightly different fungal pressure on lawns than you see further inland. Overwatering is a real problem in Pearland, and we frequently recalibrate systems that are running too long per zone. Clay-heavy soils here also mean you don't need as much water as you might think — three to four inches per week max in summer, delivered in shorter, more frequent cycles.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Overwatering leading to fungal disease
  • Head-to-head spacing gaps on larger lots
  • Worn zone valves in systems installed 15+ years ago

Friendswood

Friendswood has a lot of character — mature neighborhoods, big trees, and homeowners who've been in their houses for decades. That means a lot of older irrigation systems that haven't been touched in years. We regularly dig up valve boxes in Friendswood that are completely buried under soil and roots and haven't been serviced since the late 90s.

The good news is that most of these older systems have solid bones — good pipe, proper layout — they just need maintenance, new heads, and updated controllers. We can usually bring an older Friendswood system back to full operation for a fraction of the cost of a replacement.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Deeply buried valve boxes from soil buildup
  • Obsolete controller models needing replacement
  • Cracked PVC from age and freeze exposure

Cypress

Cypress is booming — new neighborhoods seemingly every year along the 290 corridor. We do a lot of work out in Bridgeland, Towne Lake, Blackhorse Ranch, and all the newer master-planned communities. New construction irrigation out here is a mixed bag — some builders do it right, others cut corners with too few zones and heads placed for speed rather than coverage.

One of the most common calls we get in Cypress is a new homeowner who's moved into a 2–3 year old house and discovered their irrigation isn't covering the back portion of the yard. We evaluate the existing system and either optimize it or add zones as needed.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Incomplete coverage in builder-grade installations
  • Pressure regulation issues in newer developments
  • Wi-Fi controller setup and smart home integration

Spring

Spring is a sprawling area with a huge variety of property types — from garden-home communities near I-45 to large ranch-style properties further north toward The Woodlands. We cover all of Spring, including Klein, Kleinwood, and Champions area.

Spring has some of the best lawns in Harris County, and homeowners take pride in keeping them that way. We see a lot of Bermuda grass out here, which is pretty drought-tolerant compared to St. Augustine but still needs a well-tuned irrigation system to look its best from May through September.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Rotor head clogging from sediment in well-fed systems
  • Hunter Pro-C controller programming issues
  • Overspray onto hardscape from improper head adjustment

Humble

Humble and Atascocita are areas we service regularly on the northeast side of Houston. The IAH airport corridor means a lot of clay-heavy, poorly-draining soil — irrigation systems here need to be especially careful not to overwater, because water has nowhere to go quickly after a rain event.

We see a lot of waterlogged valve boxes out here, which accelerates corrosion and solenoid failure. We address this during repairs with better drainage and waterproof wire connectors.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Poor drainage causing waterlogged valve boxes
  • Solenoid corrosion from moisture exposure
  • Irrigation scheduling during wet season

Kingwood

Kingwood calls itself the "Livable Forest" for good reason — it's gorgeous. The dense tree canopy creates constant challenges for irrigation systems, including blocked spray coverage, root intrusion, and heads buried under years of leaf litter and soil buildup.

We work throughout Kingwood's villages and are familiar with the older systems installed in the 80s and 90s, as well as the newer systems in Kingwood's more recently developed sections near Beltway 8. If you've got a system that's been running on autopilot for years without anyone looking at it, it's time for an inspection.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Blocked coverage from mature trees and shrubs
  • Root intrusion in lateral lines
  • Heads buried by decade of soil and leaf accumulation

League City

League City and Webster are in our regular rotation on the southeast side of Houston. League City has seen massive residential growth over the last decade, and a lot of those newer homes came with builder-grade irrigation that's now hitting the 5–8 year mark — the age when cheap parts start failing.

The salt air proximity to the bay can also accelerate corrosion on exposed metal components like backflow preventers and controller terminals. We recommend annual inspections for League City homeowners, particularly those within a mile or two of the water.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Salt air accelerating metal corrosion
  • Builder-grade systems reaching failure age
  • Irrigation scheduling compliance with LCISD restrictions

Missouri City

Missouri City and Sienna Plantation are beautiful communities that we service regularly on the southwest side. Sienna in particular has large, well-landscaped properties with complex irrigation layouts — multiple zones, drip irrigation in the beds, rotors in the lawn areas, and often smart controllers managing it all.

The expansive clay soil in Fort Bend County is among the most challenging for irrigation in the Houston area. We've seen it shift mainlines, crack fittings, and swallow heads over the course of a wet spring. If your system is running properly in October, give it an inspection after spring rains before you crank it back up for summer.

Common Issues in This Area

  • Expansive clay causing underground pipe movement
  • Complex multi-zone systems needing professional programming
  • Drip irrigation emitter clogging in bed zones

Don't See Your City?

This list isn't exhaustive. We regularly work in Galveston County, Montgomery County, and parts of Fort Bend and Brazoria counties. Give us a call and we'll let you know if we can reach you.

(832) 555-0147