Non-chlorine shock (potassium monopersulfate, or MPS/KMPS) is one of the most misused products in the pool chemical market. Homeowners reach for it because it sounds like a solution to pool problems — and pool store employees sometimes sell it as a chlorine-free alternative to shocking. Pool service techs need to understand exactly what MPS does, what it cannot do, and when it actually makes sense to use it.
Potassium monopersulfate (K₂S₂O₈) is an oxidizing agent — not a sanitizer. It destroys organic compounds in pool water by donating oxygen to chemical reactions, breaking down nitrogen-containing compounds, chloramines, and organic bather waste (sweat, oils, urine). Common brand names include:
Most non-chlorine shock products contain 35–42% active MPS, with potassium sulfate and potassium bisulfate as the inert remainder. They are typically sold as granular products that dissolve quickly in pool water.
| Function | MPS Effectiveness | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Break down chloramines (CC) | Excellent | Primary use — oxidizes combined chlorine to release free chlorine |
| Oxidize organic bather waste | Good | Reduces chlorine demand from oils, sweat, sunscreen |
| Improve water clarity | Good | Clears haze from organic loading |
| Oxidize in Baquacil (PHMB) pools | Good | Primary oxidizer in PHMB system — necessary, not optional |
| Reduce combined chlorine odor | Excellent | Chloramine odor drops significantly after MPS treatment |
| Kill algae | Very poor | Cannot eradicate algae — no sanitizing mechanism |
| Raise free chlorine | None | Does not contain chlorine in any form |
This is the subtlety that trips up many technicians. MPS interferes with DPD-based chlorine test kits. When you test a pool that was recently treated with MPS using a standard DPD test (drop test or test strips), MPS can oxidize the DPD reagent and produce a false high reading for free chlorine — or in some cases, a false high total chlorine reading.
If you test a pool shortly after MPS treatment, you may read 3–4 ppm FC even though the actual free chlorine hasn't changed. The recommendation:
Standard non-chlorine shock dose for routine oxidation (chloramine removal, weekly maintenance): approximately 1 lb per 10,000 gallons. For heavily used pools after parties or significant bather load: 2 lbs per 10,000 gallons.
For Baquacil pools, refer to the specific BioGuard/Baquacil dosing schedule — the oxidizer schedule in that system is non-negotiable and is dosed every 2 weeks regardless of visible problems.
After a pool party, large family gathering, or swim team practice, combined chlorine typically spikes from the surge in bather waste. If the pool is otherwise balanced and you need people back in the water quickly, MPS breaks down the combined chlorine without requiring a chlorine blackout period. Add MPS, wait 15 minutes, test FC — swimmers can return immediately if FC is in range.
If a pool's CYA is at 75–80 ppm and you need to shock without pushing CYA higher (as dichlor would), MPS is an option for oxidation-only treatments. It won't help if algae is present, but for organic demand buildup, it adds zero CYA.
Baquacil pools require periodic hydrogen peroxide-based oxidizer — the Baquacil Oxidizer / Burnout product. This is not optional in a PHMB pool. Skipping the oxidizer is the most common cause of pink slime and water mold outbreaks. MPS products from non-Baquacil brands work in PHMB pools (they are both oxidizers), but verify compatibility before recommending.
High-use residential pools (active families with kids, daily lap swimmers) accumulate chloramine precursors faster than normal. Some service pros add a half-dose of MPS mid-week between their regular visits to keep combined chlorine from building up and causing odor or eye irritation complaints. This is a legitimate preventive use.
SplashLens lets you log treatments including shock type, dose, and the reason — high bather load, algae emergency, routine oxidation. Build a chemical history for every account and stop guessing what was done last week. Free and offline.
Open SplashLens Free →Non-chlorine shock is potassium monopersulfate (MPS or KMPS), an oxidizer that breaks down chloramines and organic bather waste without adding chlorine to the pool. Common brands include BioGuard Burn Out, Leisure Time Renew, and In The Swim Non-Chlorine Shock. It does NOT sanitize like chlorine and cannot kill algae or bacteria effectively.
No. Non-chlorine shock (MPS) is an oxidizer, not a sanitizer. It can eliminate chloramines and refresh water clarity, but it cannot kill algae or pathogens. If a pool has algae, green water, or a sanitation problem, you need chlorine shock — not MPS.
Yes, generally within 15–30 minutes after adding non-chlorine shock with the pump running, since it does not add chlorine and won't elevate FC levels. Always follow the specific label instructions for the product used.
No. Potassium monopersulfate does not contain cyanuric acid and does not affect CYA levels. This is one advantage in situations where CYA is already at the upper end of the acceptable range — you can shock without pushing CYA higher.