The most expensive mistake in buying farm land is not overpaying — it is buying a plot that cannot hold water. In this semi-arid belt, the borewell is the farm. Here is how to plan it before you sign.
Assess before you buy - Ask neighbours what depth their borewells hit water — the cheapest, most honest data you will get. - Check existing borewell records if the plot has one: depth, yield, and whether it runs dry in summer (visit in May, not October). - Look at the landscape — valleys and areas near tanks recharge better than ridge tops.
Typical depths near Bangalore - Belt — Common depth — Notes - Chintamani / Kolar — 400-700 ft — Reliable in valleys - Chikkaballapur — 500-800 ft — Deeper on ridges - Hosur / Thally — 300-600 ft — Better foothill recharge
Testing yield A borewell''s yield (litres per hour) matters more than its depth. A test pump run for a few hours tells you if it sustains flow or drops fast. For 2 acres of horticulture you want a dependable 2,000+ litres/hour.
Make the water go further - Drip irrigation cuts water use 40-60% — pairs with almost any crop. - A farm pond stores monsoon runoff and buffers dry months. - Recharge pits around the borewell extend its life.
Schemes for micro-irrigation and farm ponds may apply — we help check eligibility.