Well Pump Cycling On and Off: Causes and How to Fix It

Well pump cycling on and off is normal behavior, up to a point. A healthy pump on a 30/50 PSI system cycles every 30-60 seconds during active water use. Cycling every 5-10 seconds, or water pulsing at your faucets, is short cycling and almost always means the pressure tank has failed. Our well pump repair overview covers the full diagnostic tree. This guide focuses on cycling behavior and its three fixable causes.

well pump pressure tank showing air valve and Schrader valve location

Is your pump cycling normal or abnormal?

A well pump is supposed to cycle. It doesn’t run continuously like a municipal supply line. The question is how frequently, and whether it matches water demand.

Normal cycling means the pump runs 30-60 seconds while water is actively flowing (shower, dishwasher, filling a tub), then shuts off. The pressure tank absorbs small draws like a quick hand wash or a toilet flush without triggering the pump at all. Occasional cycling during active household use is by design.

Short cycling is different: the pump turns on and off every 5-10 seconds, even without heavy water use. The most recognizable symptom is water pressure that pulses at faucets, building and dropping in quick rhythmic waves instead of holding steady. That surge-and-drop pattern is the signature sign of a waterlogged pressure tank.

Quick test: Time the gap between pump starts during light water use (one faucet open, medium flow). Under 30 seconds consistently means short cycling. Under 10 seconds means the pump motor is absorbing a startup current surge on every cycle and cutting its service life significantly.

Well pump short cycling is caused by a waterlogged pressure tank or a defective pressure switch in the majority of cases. The fixes below are ordered by how often each cause appears. We recommend starting with the Schrader valve test before spending any money, since it confirms or rules out the most common cause in under two minutes.





Video guide

Video: “Troubleshoot: Water Well Pump Starts too Often (Rapid Cycling)” by R.C. Worst & Co.

Cause #1: waterlogged pressure tank (most common)

Inside the pressure tank sits a rubber bladder that holds air under pressure. The bladder absorbs pressure swings between pump cycles, keeping faucet flow smooth and preventing the pump from firing with every minor draw. When the bladder fails, water fills the air space entirely. With no air cushion left, even the smallest pressure drop triggers the pump. The pump cycling on and off every few seconds begins.

Run two tests before buying a replacement:

Air valve test: unscrew the plastic cap on the Schrader valve at the top of the tank. Press the valve stem with a small screwdriver. Air should discharge. If water comes out instead, the tank is waterlogged. This is the fastest diagnostic confirmed by Family Handyman’s well pump troubleshooting guide{:target=“_blank”} for cycling problems.

Same again.

Rock test: push the top of the tank gently side to side. A healthy tank with air inside shifts slightly when nudged. A waterlogged tank is solid water throughout. It feels rigid and top-heavy with no movement at all.

A waterlogged pressure tank can’t be repaired, only replaced. Basic models start at $200; quality bladder tanks from Amtrol, Franklin Electric, or Flotec run $350-$600. Professional installation adds $300-$500 in labor. DIY replacement is manageable for tanks under 52 gallons in an accessible location. See our pressure tank for well pumps guide for sizing and the full swap procedure.

diagram of well pump system showing pressure tank and pump connection





Cause #2: incorrect tank pre-charge pressure

Every pressure tank ships from the factory with an air charge in the bladder (the pre-charge). Over time, the Schrader valve can lose air slowly, dropping pre-charge pressure and causing the bladder to underperform even though it hasn’t ruptured.

Shut off the pump, drain the tank fully, then press a standard tire gauge onto the Schrader valve at the top of the tank. Ensure you’re using a system like a 30/50 PSI setup that requires a 28 PSI pre-charge or a 40/60 PSI system needing 38 PSI. If your reading is short by more than 5 PSI, use a bicycle pump to add air and test again.

The full procedure:

Turn off the breaker for safety first. Drain by opening a faucet until no water flows; this ensures an accurate reading later. Use your Schrader valve-equipped gauge, placing it on the tank to compare against 28 PSI for a 30/50 system or 38 PSI for 40/60 setups. Should you see less than that, top up in small increments with a bicycle pump or low-pressure compressor; check each time until hitting the mark. Then restore power and confirm all operates correctly post-drain.

If air doesn’t hold (the gauge reads near zero immediately after adding air), the bladder has ruptured and the tank needs replacement regardless of the pre-charge result.





Cause #3: defective or mis-set pressure switch

The pressure switch, mounted on a quarter-inch tube near the pressure tank, signals the pump to start and stop. Standard cut-in and cut-out settings are:

  • 30/50 PSI: pump starts at 30 PSI, stops at 50 PSI
  • 40/60 PSI: pump starts at 40 PSI, stops at 60 PSI

If the switch contacts are worn or the differential is set too narrow, the pump fires again before the system builds adequate pressure, causing rapid pump cycling on and off even with an intact tank.

Quick test: Watch the pressure gauge while the pump is cycling. If the needle shifts only 5-10 PSI before the pump fires again, the switch differential is too narrow or the contacts are worn out.

Pressure switch replacement costs about $25 and takes 20-30 minutes with a screwdriver and Teflon tape. For the full tap-test diagnostic, wiring procedure, and what a spark vs. no-spark result means, see our well pump pressure switch guide. We’ve found that replacing the switch and the tank at the same time (when both are suspect) saves a second service call and is worth the extra $25 for a new switch.

When to call a professional

Replace the tank or switch yourself if:

  • The tank is in an accessible basement or pump house (not underground or in a tight crawl space)
  • The tank is under 52 gallons (larger tanks require two people minimum to move safely)
  • You’re comfortable shutting off the pump breaker and draining plumbing

Call a licensed well driller or plumber if any of these apply:

  • The pump is short cycling and you have no water pressure at any faucet (this points to a broken line or failed pump, not just a tank)
  • The breaker trips during or alongside the cycling (electrical fault, not a tank or switch problem)
  • Cycling started immediately after a power outage (the pump controller may be damaged)
  • Pre-charge and bladder tests both check out normal but rapid pump cycling continues

Costs for professional repair:

  • Tank pre-charge adjustment by a pro: $150-$200 (labor only)
  • Pressure switch replacement by a pro: $150-$350
  • Full tank replacement by a pro: $400-$800 including parts and labor

For cycling that has progressed to full water loss, our complete well pump troubleshooting guide walks the 8-step diagnostic sequence from breaker to underground failure. The FreshWater Systems guide to 5 common well pump problems{:target=“_blank”} is also useful for identifying whether short cycling has caused enough motor damage to warrant replacement over repair. Getting the diagnosis right matters either way. Replacing a $200 tank when the real problem is a $25 switch is a common and avoidable mistake.





FAQ

How often should a well pump cycle?

A well pump on a functioning 30/50 PSI system cycles roughly every 45-90 seconds during normal household water use: running a shower, a dishwasher, or filling a large pot. Well pump cycling on and off every 5-10 seconds at any point is short cycling and signals a problem. Cycling under 10 seconds between starts actively damages the pump motor with each high-amperage startup surge.

Can a well pump short cycle for years without damage?

Short cycling cuts pump motor life because each startup draws a significant current surge above the pump’s normal running load. A pump rated for 15 years of normal cycling may fail in 7-8 years under chronic short-cycling conditions. Most pump warranties exclude damage from documented short cycling. Fix the tank or switch. The repair cost pays for itself many times over in extended pump life.

How much does it cost to fix a well pump that short cycles?

If the fix is a pre-charge pressure adjustment: near zero in parts, 15 minutes of time. Pressure switch replacement: about $25 in parts plus 20-30 minutes. Pressure tank replacement: $200-$600 for parts, plus $300-$500 for professional installation if you hire it out. Getting the diagnosis right matters before spending money on parts.

What is the correct air pressure for a well pressure tank?

For a 30/50 PSI setup, adjust your pressure tank’s pre-charge pressure to 28 PSI, and for 40/60, set it to 38 PSI. Before testing, always shut down the pump and drain the tank; any water in the tank will lead to inaccurate readings due to back-pressure, causing an under-inflated state.

You’ll want to check this setup to ensure accurate pressure readings.

Why does water pulse at my faucets?

Pulsing water pressure (pressure that builds and releases in rhythmic waves) is the signature symptom of a waterlogged pressure tank. When the tank’s rubber bladder fails, the air cushion disappears entirely. Every small pressure drop triggers the pump, and faucet pressure surges with each cycle rather than holding steady. If pulsing comes alongside discolored or unusual-smelling water, prioritize water testing per EPA private wells guidance{:target=“_blank”} before diagnosing the pump equipment.