Low pool pH is one of the most common and consequential chemistry problems in residential pools. Water with pH below 7.0 is corrosive — it etches plaster, corrodes metal fittings, pits vinyl liners, and irritates swimmers' eyes. It also causes chlorine to "burn through" faster by converting it to hypochlorous acid more aggressively than the pool needs. Raising pH is a routine task, but the specific chemical choice and technique matter more than most techs realize.
pH is a logarithmic scale measuring hydrogen ion concentration. A pool at pH 7.0 is 10 times more acidic than one at pH 8.0. This means small changes in pH — dropping from 7.4 to 7.0 — represent a much larger change in actual acidity than the numbers suggest. The target for most pools is 7.4–7.6, with 7.5 as the sweet spot. At this level, chlorine is highly effective and water is comfortable for swimmers.
Never adjust pH and alkalinity at the same time. Adjust alkalinity first (target 80–120 ppm), wait 24 hours, then test and adjust pH. Alkalinity is the foundation — it determines how stable your pH will be.
Soda ash is the go-to chemical for raising pH efficiently. It has a very high pH (~11.6) and dissolves rapidly in pool water. A small amount produces a significant pH increase. Sold as "pH Up," "pH Increaser," or simply "Sodium Carbonate" at pool supply stores. It also raises total alkalinity slightly — typically 1–2 ppm per pound per 10,000 gallons — but its primary effect is pH elevation.
Baking soda raises pH only slightly — its primary job is raising total alkalinity. The pH of sodium bicarbonate solution is about 8.3, so it does push pH upward, but slowly and modestly. If pH is below 7.0 and alkalinity is also low, you can use baking soda to address both simultaneously. But if you need a targeted pH increase, soda ash is the correct tool.
| Starting pH | Target pH | 10,000 gal | 15,000 gal | 20,000 gal |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7.0 | 7.4 | 12 oz | 18 oz | 24 oz |
| 7.2 | 7.4 | 6 oz | 9 oz | 12 oz |
| 7.0 | 7.6 | 18 oz | 27 oz | 36 oz |
| 6.8 | 7.4 | 18 oz | 27 oz | 36 oz |
These are approximations — actual dose is affected by total alkalinity, temperature, and cyanuric acid levels. Use SplashLens to calculate your exact dose with your specific water parameters.
Warning: Soda ash added directly to a pool without pre-dissolving can create a white cloud of calcium carbonate precipitation if calcium hardness is already high. Always pre-dissolve in a bucket of water first, especially in hard water pools.
If you're constantly fighting low pH, the root cause matters:
SplashLens calculates exact soda ash and baking soda doses for your pool. Offline access, instant results, no signal needed.
Open SplashLens Free →Soda ash (sodium carbonate, Na2CO3) is the primary chemical for raising pool pH. Baking soda (sodium bicarbonate) also raises pH, but more slowly and less dramatically — it primarily raises total alkalinity.
Approximately 6 oz of soda ash per 10,000 gallons raises pH by approximately 0.2 units at normal alkalinity levels. Use SplashLens for an exact dose based on your pool volume and current pH.
Yes, but you'll need significantly more baking soda for the same pH increase. Baking soda primarily raises total alkalinity with a secondary effect on pH. Soda ash is more efficient for raising pH specifically.
Chronic low pH is most commonly caused by heavy chlorine tablet use (trichlor has a pH of 2.8–3.0), heavy bather load, heavy rainfall, or naturally acidic source water.
The ideal pool pH range is 7.4–7.6. Below 7.0, water becomes corrosive to equipment and irritating to eyes. Above 8.0, chlorine effectiveness drops significantly.