Everything we deliver, what it roughly costs, and how the process works. No mystery, no surprise fees at the gate.
From a single tinaco refill to a season-long farm contract — the calls we handle most across Guanacaste's dry months:
Dry season pushes wells past their limit every year. We refill your storage tank the same day so the house keeps running while the well recovers.
When the AyA or your local ASADA cuts service for days, a cisterna load bridges the gap — for one home or a whole condo building.
Tinacos, underground cisterns, rooftop tanks — scheduled top-ups or emergency fills, with a hose run long enough to reach them.
New pool, post-repair refill, or topping up after the dry season. We quote the full volume up front — usually several truckloads.
Concrete, compaction, dust control. Recurring deliveries on a schedule your project can actually plan around.
Cattle troughs, irrigation reserves and farm tanks across the province — the driest months are exactly when animals need water most.
This is the most important question in the order, so we always ask it: what is the water for? Drinking-water deliveries are coordinated from approved, regulated sources and carried in food-grade tanks — that's the load that goes into a household tank that feeds your taps. Pools, irrigation, dust control, concrete and livestock troughs take the more economical utility option. Mixing these up is either wasted money or a health risk, so we confirm it on every order — and if you're not sure what your tank feeds, describe your setup on WhatsApp and we'll help you figure it out.
These are honest ranges, not quotes — distance and access move the number. But a standard household delivery in Guanacaste lands between $60 and $100:
You always get a firm quote before the truck rolls. If a smaller load covers your need, we'll say so.
Tell us your location, how many liters (or describe your tank — a photo helps), and what the water is for. We'll confirm the right load size.
You get one price — load plus distance — before we dispatch. Emergencies get priority; scheduled deliveries get a time window.
The truck arrives with enough hose to reach your tank, fills it, and you pay by SINPE Móvil, card or cash. Recurring routes available all dry season.
A standard 5,000-liter cisterna load lands between $60 and $100 (₡30–50,000) depending on distance. Small 1,000–2,000 L deliveries run $30–50, large 10,000–12,000 L loads $100–160. Pool fills are quoted by total volume and start from about $300. Same-day emergency dispatch adds $20–30.
In most of Guanacaste, same day — especially if you call in the morning. No-water emergencies get priority over scheduled routes. Remote areas like the Nosara road may be next-day.
Tell us what the water is for. Drinking-water deliveries are coordinated from approved, regulated sources and transported in food-grade tanks. For pools, irrigation, livestock and construction we use the more economical non-potable option. Never assume trucked water is potable unless that was agreed.
A typical household tinaco holds 750–1,100 liters — a day or two of normal use. A 5,000-liter load keeps an average family running for one to two weeks of careful use, less for a full vacation rental where guests use 200–400 liters per person per day.
Yes. A typical villa pool holds 30,000–60,000 liters, which means several truckloads scheduled back to back. We quote the complete job up front so there are no surprises halfway through.
Same-day water truck delivery across Guanacaste. Firm price before the truck rolls.