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Best Pool Brushes 2026: Nylon vs Stainless by Surface Type

๐Ÿ“… February 22, 2026โฑ 6 min read

The pool brush is one of the most underrated tools in a service technician's kit. Pick the wrong one and you'll either scratch a fiberglass surface, leave algae behind on plaster, or wear yourself out on a job that should take 10 minutes. Pick the right one and every brushing pass does real work.

The Core Rule: Match Bristles to Surface

Before anything else, know your surface type. The wrong brush can cause permanent, expensive damage โ€” and that damage becomes your liability as the servicing technician.

Pool SurfaceCorrect Bristle TypeWhy
Plaster / Gunite / ConcreteStainless steel or combo (nylon + SS)Aggressive scrubbing needed for rough porous surface
Pebble Tec / QuartzCombo (nylon + SS) or stainlessTextured but sealed; moderate aggression appropriate
FiberglassNylon onlyGel coat scratches easily; stainless will damage it
Vinyl linerNylon onlySS bristles puncture or tear liner material
TileNylon or combo; dedicated tile brushGrout is porous but tile is scratch-sensitive

Never use a stainless steel brush on fiberglass or vinyl liner pools. The scratches are permanent, and damaged gel coat or liner will require costly professional repair or full replacement.

Top Pool Brushes for Service Professionals

1. Poolmaster 21430 Pro Series โ€” Best Combo Brush for Plaster

The Poolmaster 21430 is an 18-inch curved head with alternating nylon and stainless steel bristles. The stainless rows provide the scrubbing power needed for plaster and pebble surfaces while the nylon rows protect grout and help with flexibility. The curved head follows wall contours better than flat heads. At around $25, it's a solid value for plaster pools. Replace when bristles start bending outward permanently โ€” usually after 1โ€“2 seasons of weekly use.

2. Pentair 360068 18" Wall Brush โ€” Best for Vinyl and Fiberglass

Pure nylon bristles, 18-inch head, good ergonomic angle. Pentair's finish on the aluminum backing resists corrosion better than cheap alternatives. For a service company maintaining vinyl liner pools, this is the standard kit-bag brush. Price is around $18 retail. Buy in bulk and you'll drop that price significantly.

3. ProTuff Pool Brush โ€” Best Heavy-Duty for Problem Pools

The ProTuff 18-inch stainless steel brush is designed specifically for aggressive algae removal on plaster pools. The full stainless bristle pack moves significant debris and disrupts established algae biofilm far more effectively than combo brushes. For a pool that hasn't been serviced in weeks or has visible green algae on the walls, this is the right tool. Not for fiberglass or vinyl โ€” ever.

4. Blue Torrent Curved Wall Brush โ€” Best Value

At around $15, the Blue Torrent curved brush offers good bristle density and a sturdy aluminum backing for the price. The nylon-only version covers fiberglass and vinyl pools. The combo version handles plaster well. These are good for restocking kit bags without breaking the budget and perform adequately for routine maintenance brushing.

Carry at least two brushes in your service vehicle โ€” a nylon-only for fiberglass/vinyl pools, and a combo or stainless for plaster. Label them so you never grab the wrong one in a hurry.

Flat vs Curved Brush Heads

Curved or angled brush heads follow the radius of pool walls and stairs more naturally, reducing hand fatigue over a full brushing session. Flat heads are better for large horizontal surfaces like pool floors. For a service tech brushing multiple pools per day, a curved head reduces physical strain noticeably. Most professionals keep both.

The Right Brushing Technique

Brushing technique matters as much as the brush itself. Work walls from top to bottom so debris falls to the floor. Then brush the floor toward the main drain. Use long, overlapping strokes with moderate pressure. On plaster with established algae, you may need two passes. On a well-maintained pool, one thorough pass should be enough. After brushing, let the pump run for at least 30 minutes before vacuuming โ€” this gives stirred debris time to settle.

When to Replace Your Pool Brush

For a service company running 30 pools per week, expect to replace brushes every 4โ€“6 months under regular use. Budget accordingly โ€” a $25 brush that lasts 5 months is $60/year per route, and it's a legitimate business expense.

Track Pool Surface Types in SplashLens

SplashLens lets you store pool surface type, equipment notes, and service history for every account. Know before you arrive which brush to grab. Free, offline, built for pros.

Open SplashLens Free โ†’

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I use a stainless steel brush on a fiberglass pool?

No. Stainless steel bristles will scratch and permanently damage the gel coat on fiberglass pools. Always use nylon-only brushes on fiberglass surfaces.

How often should a pool be brushed?

Weekly brushing is the minimum for a well-maintained pool. Problem pools with algae history, high bather load, or low circulation should be brushed at every service visit.

What size pool brush head should I use?

18-inch heads are standard for most residential pools. 24-inch heads work faster on large commercial pools. Curved or angled heads help clean steps, corners, and curved walls more effectively than flat heads.

How do I know if my pool brush is worn out?

Bristles that are bent permanently outward, missing, or significantly shorter than when new should be replaced. A worn brush doesn't agitate algae and debris off surfaces effectively and may require extra passes to achieve what a fresh brush does in one.

Does brushing help with algae prevention?

Yes. Algae initially grows in a biofilm layer on pool surfaces. Weekly brushing physically disrupts this film before it can establish, and suspends algae spores into the water where chlorine can neutralize them.