Pool Drain and Refill Services
Pool drain and refill services involve the controlled removal of water from a swimming pool, preparation of the interior surface, and restoration of the pool to proper water volume and chemistry. This process is distinct from routine maintenance and is typically triggered by conditions that cannot be corrected through chemical adjustment alone. Understanding when a full drain is necessary — versus when partial water replacement or chemical treatment suffices — is essential for protecting both the pool structure and public health compliance.
Definition and scope
A pool drain and refill service encompasses the complete or partial removal of pool water, any associated surface treatment (such as pool acid wash services or scrubbing), and the controlled reintroduction of fresh water followed by chemical balancing. The scope spans residential, commercial, and HOA-operated pools, each subject to different regulatory standards.
At the federal level, commercial pools are subject to oversight frameworks including the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act (Consumer Product Safety Commission, P.L. 110-140), which governs drain cover specifications and anti-entrapment requirements. State health codes — enforced through agencies such as state departments of health or environmental quality divisions — regulate discharge of pool water into municipal stormwater systems, and many jurisdictions require a permit before draining a pool to a public sewer or waterway.
The service divides into two primary types:
- Full drain: Complete removal of all pool water, typically 10,000–30,000 gallons for a standard residential pool, used when total dissolved solids (TDS), cyanuric acid, or surface contamination are beyond correction by dilution.
- Partial drain: Removal of 25–50% of total volume, used to dilute elevated TDS, calcium hardness, or cyanuric acid levels without exposing the pool shell to structural risk.
The distinction matters structurally. A fully drained pool — particularly a fiberglass or vinyl-liner pool — faces hydrostatic pressure from groundwater that can crack, pop, or permanently deform the shell. Gunite and plaster pools also risk surface delamination when left dry in high-heat or high-UV conditions for extended periods.
How it works
The drain and refill process follows a structured sequence that varies by pool type, local regulation, and surface condition:
- Pre-drain assessment: Pool water testing services establish current TDS, cyanuric acid, calcium hardness, and pH baselines to confirm that draining is the appropriate corrective action.
- Permit verification: The service provider confirms local discharge requirements. The EPA's National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) governs indirect discharge through stormwater systems; municipalities may require neutralization of chlorinated water before release.
- Drain execution: A submersible pump evacuates water through an approved discharge point — typically a sanitary sewer cleanout, not a street drain. Pump capacity for residential pools typically ranges from 50 to 100 gallons per minute, placing full-drain time at 2–6 hours.
- Surface preparation: Once drained, the interior is inspected for cracks, staining, or scale. Acid washing, pool tile cleaning services, or replastering may be performed at this stage.
- Refill: Fresh water is introduced through the primary fill line. Refill time for a 20,000-gallon pool at a standard residential supply rate of 5–10 gallons per minute runs 33–67 hours.
- Chemical startup: Pool chemical balancing services are required immediately upon refill completion to establish safe pH (7.2–7.8), alkalinity (80–120 ppm), and sanitizer levels before the pool returns to use.
Common scenarios
Drain and refill services are indicated in four primary situations:
Cyanuric acid overload: Cyanuric acid (CYA), a chlorine stabilizer, accumulates with each dose of stabilized chlorine product and cannot be removed chemically. The Association of Pool & Spa Professionals (APSP, now Pool & Hot Tub Alliance / PHTA) and NSF International's NSF/ANSI 50 standard reference 100 ppm as the upper threshold beyond which chlorine efficacy is significantly impaired. Dilution through partial or full drain is the only correction.
Total dissolved solids (TDS) elevation: TDS above 2,500 ppm in chlorine pools (or 6,000 ppm in saltwater pools) correlates with corrosion of metal fittings, scale formation, and cloudy water that resists chemical treatment. See pool chemical balancing services for detail on TDS testing methodology.
Algae or contamination events: Severe algae blooms — particularly black algae (Cladophora species) or mustard algae — that persist after shock treatment may require full draining followed by acid washing. Pool algae treatment services outlines the triage decision between chemical treatment and physical removal.
Structural or renovation work: Resurfacing, replastering, tile replacement, or main drain cover upgrades under the VGB Act require complete water removal before work begins.
Decision boundaries
Choosing between a full drain, partial drain, and chemical-only correction depends on five measurable variables:
| Variable | Chemical-Only Threshold | Partial Drain Threshold | Full Drain Threshold |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cyanuric Acid | <100 ppm | 100–200 ppm | >200 ppm |
| TDS (chlorine pool) | <1,500 ppm | 1,500–2,500 ppm | >2,500 ppm |
| Calcium Hardness | <400 ppm | 400–700 ppm | >700 ppm |
| Algae Coverage | Spot treatment | 25–50% surface | Full surface / recurring |
| Surface Condition | Routine service | Minor staining | Plaster failure or major scale |
Pool type introduces a secondary constraint. Above-ground pools with vinyl liners tolerate partial drains but rarely require full removal; full draining risks liner shrinkage and crease damage. Inground fiberglass pools should never be fully drained without engineering assessment of local water table depth. Inground pool services and above-ground pool services address pool-type-specific protocols in detail.
Permitting timelines vary by municipality. Some jurisdictions require 48–72 hours' advance notice before discharge; others require a licensed contractor to pull a discharge permit. Pool service licensing by state provides state-level credential and regulatory context relevant to who is authorized to perform this work in each jurisdiction.
References
- Consumer Product Safety Commission — Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act (P.L. 110-140)
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency — National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES)
- Pool & Hot Tub Alliance (PHTA) — formerly APSP, Industry Standards and Guidelines
- NSF International — NSF/ANSI 50: Equipment for Swimming Pools, Spas, Hot Tubs, and Other Recreational Water Facilities
- U.S. EPA — Managing Pool and Spa Discharges to Stormwater Systems