Pool Services Providers

The pool services providers on this resource catalog licensed and credentialed pool service providers operating across the United States, organized by service type, geographic region, and facility category. Each entry reflects structured data points drawn from publicly available business records, state licensing databases, and industry association networks. Understanding how these providers are structured helps property owners, facility managers, and procurement teams locate the right service provider for a specific pool type, service scope, or regulatory environment. For broader context on why this provider network exists and what it covers, see the pool services provider network purpose and scope page.


What Each Provider Covers

Every provider in this network is built around a defined set of data fields that correspond to verifiable, public-record information. Providers do not contain promotional copy, self-reported ratings, or unverified claims. The core function of each entry is to give the reader enough structured information to evaluate a provider against objective criteria before pursuing any direct contact.

Providers are segmented by service category. A provider that offers pool cleaning services is verified under that category separately from one that offers pool equipment inspection services, even if a single company performs both. This separation prevents misclassification and allows users to search by specific need rather than by company name alone.

The service categories covered in this network map directly to the classification framework described in types of pool services explained, which distinguishes between routine maintenance services, chemical management services, mechanical services, and seasonal services. providers participate under one or more of these four major branches based on the services they have documented capacity to deliver.


Geographic Distribution

Providers are organized across all 50 states, with concentration in regions where licensed pool service activity is highest. Florida, California, Texas, and Arizona account for the largest share of active providers, reflecting both climate patterns and the density of residential and commercial pool infrastructure in those states. The pool service regional variations page documents how service availability and regulatory requirements differ across these markets.

State licensing requirements directly affect which providers are eligible to appear in this network. Pool service contractors in states with contractor licensing boards — including California (Contractors State License Board, C-53 Swimming Pool Contractor classification) and Florida (Department of Business and Professional Regulation, Chapter 489, Florida Statutes) — must hold a valid, active license to be verified. Providers in states without a dedicated pool contractor license classification are evaluated against general contractor licensing requirements applicable in that jurisdiction, as documented on the pool service licensing by state page.

Commercial providers, including providers serving hotels, resorts, and HOA-managed facilities, are tagged with the applicable facility type. A provider verified under commercial pool services is not automatically verified under HOA pool services, because the regulatory and insurance thresholds differ between those two categories. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Healthy Swimming program and the Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC) set baseline standards for commercial aquatic facility operation, and commercial providers note whether a provider's documented scope aligns with MAHC guidance.


How to Read an Entry

Each provider entry follows a structured format with six defined fields:

  1. Provider name and legal entity type — Sole proprietor, LLC, corporation, or franchise affiliate, as registered with the relevant state authority.
  2. State license number and classification — Where a state-issued license exists, the license number and category are displayed. For states without a pool-specific license, the general contractor license number is shown.
  3. Service categories — A comma-separated list drawn from the classification framework, such as "chemical balancing, filter cleaning, pump services."
  4. Geographic service area — The counties or metro areas the provider has documented capacity to serve, not simply a self-reported radius.
  5. Insurance documentation status — Whether the provider's general liability and workers' compensation insurance is on file and current, with the policy carrier name where available. Insurance requirements by service type are detailed on the pool service insurance requirements page.
  6. Industry association affiliations — Membership in the Association of Pool and Spa Professionals (APSP), the Pool and Hot Tub Alliance (PHTA), or state-level trade associations is noted where verified. Credential types covered by these bodies are explained on the pool service associations and certifications page.

Entries do not include customer reviews, star ratings, or testimonials. The provider network format is reference-grade, not review-grade.


What Providers Include and Exclude

Included in providers:

Excluded from providers:

This inclusion and exclusion framework is consistent with the credential evaluation criteria described on the pool service company credentials page. Providers are not endorsements. The presence of a provider in this network reflects that the provider meets the minimum documented criteria described above — it does not represent an assessment of service quality, pricing competitiveness, or customer satisfaction outcomes. Pricing structures typical to verified providers are addressed separately on the pool service pricing and costs page.

References