Muriatic acid — also called hydrochloric acid (HCl) — is one of the most powerful and cost-effective chemicals in the pool service toolkit. It lowers pH, reduces total alkalinity, and can descale pool surfaces and equipment. It's also one of the most hazardous pool chemicals you'll handle. This guide covers everything you need to use it effectively and safely.
Muriatic acid is a strong acid that reacts immediately with the water and the buffering compounds dissolved in it. When added to pool water:
Pool-grade muriatic acid is typically sold at 31.45% HCl concentration (also labeled as "20 Baumé"). Some "safer" or "low-fume" formulations run at 15–20% — these work but require larger doses for the same effect. Always note the concentration on the bottle before calculating your dose.
Muriatic acid fumes (HCl gas) are immediately irritating to eyes, nose, throat, and lungs. The liquid will cause chemical burns on skin and serious damage to eyes within seconds. Never skip PPE — not even for "just a quick pour."
Dosing is affected by current pH, current total alkalinity, and pool volume. The table below provides estimates for standard pool-grade 31.45% muriatic acid. Use SplashLens to calculate your exact dose based on your specific readings.
| Desired pH Drop | Pool Volume | Starting TA 80 ppm | Starting TA 120 ppm |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.2 units | 10,000 gal | 4–5 oz | 7–8 oz |
| 0.4 units | 10,000 gal | 8–10 oz | 14–16 oz |
| 0.2 units | 20,000 gal | 8–10 oz | 14–16 oz |
| 0.4 units | 20,000 gal | 16–20 oz | 28–32 oz |
| Factor | Muriatic Acid | Dry Acid (NaHSO4) |
|---|---|---|
| Cost per pH unit drop | Lower (cheaper) | Higher |
| Safety hazard | Higher (liquid acid, fumes) | Lower (solid, low fumes) |
| Storage | Requires ventilated storage away from chlorine | Easier — dry storage |
| Residue | Chloride ions only | Sulfate ions accumulate over time |
| Effectiveness per oz | Higher | Lower |
Warning: Never mix muriatic acid with chlorine products, even their vapors. The reaction creates chlorine gas — the same gas used in chemical warfare. Store them separately, add them to the pool at separate times (minimum 30 minutes apart), and never put both into a chemical feeder.
If your goal is to lower total alkalinity specifically (common when TA is over 120 ppm and causing pH bounce), the technique is different from simple pH adjustment. For targeted TA reduction, turn the pump off, pour the full acid dose directly into one spot in the deep end, let it sit for several minutes to react with the TA without aerating the water, then turn the pump back on. This "slug dose" technique preferentially attacks TA over pH. Test both after 4–6 hours of circulation.
SplashLens calculates exact muriatic acid doses based on your pool volume, current pH, and current alkalinity. Free, offline, works without signal.
Open SplashLens Free →Muriatic acid (hydrochloric acid) lowers both pH and total alkalinity. The effect on pH is immediate and significant. The effect on total alkalinity is slower and requires the acid to react with the bicarbonate buffering system.
Approximately 6–8 oz of muriatic acid per 10,000 gallons typically lowers pH by 0.2 units at a starting pH of 7.8 and TA of 100 ppm. Exact amounts vary with alkalinity — higher alkalinity requires more acid for the same pH drop.
Yes, but it must be broadcast in the deep end with the pump running, never poured into the skimmer, and never added near metal fittings. The pool should not be occupied for at least 30 minutes after addition.
Dry acid (sodium bisulfate) is easier and safer to store and handle, but it's more expensive per unit of pH drop. Muriatic acid is cheaper and more effective per dollar but requires careful PPE and handling protocols.
Use chemical-resistant gloves (nitrile or neoprene), safety glasses or a face shield, and work in a well-ventilated area. Muriatic acid fumes (HCl gas) are irritating to the respiratory system even at low concentrations.