Most pool service techs leave $15,000–$40,000 per year on the table in repair and equipment revenue. Not because they don't know the work — they do. It's because they feel awkward about suggesting repairs, so they don't mention things they notice, or they mention them once and never follow up. That restraint costs them real money and, ironically, doesn't serve the customer either.
The reframe: recommending a repair you've identified during service isn't selling. It's advising. You're the expert your customer hired to watch their pool. Telling them what you see is the job.
The best upsell doesn't feel like a sales pitch because it isn't one — it's a report. Your service visit is an inspection opportunity. Every week, you see things the homeowner doesn't notice:
When you see something, you document it (photo + note in your service log), alert the customer, and offer a solution. The structure:
"I noticed your pump motor is running hotter than normal and making more noise than it did two months ago. It's probably getting close to the end of its life — these typically last 8–12 years and yours is 11. I can replace it before it fails, which would avoid an emergency call and give you peace of mind. Want me to get you a quote?"
This is not pushy. This is professional. Any customer who responds poorly to that advisory probably wasn't going to give you the repair anyway, and the ones who respond well will thank you when the pump doesn't fail mid-summer.
Single-speed pump mandates are rolling out state by state. California's Title 20 energy efficiency requirements have applied to new pool pumps since 2008. Other states are following. Beyond compliance, VS pumps typically cut electricity consumption 60–80% compared to single-speed equivalents. The energy savings sell themselves — a $200/month electric bill becoming $60/month pays for the pump in under 3 years. This is the most self-evident upgrade in the industry.
Many pool owners are aware of saltwater systems but haven't made the switch. Converting a traditional chlorine pool to salt requires: a salt cell, controller integration, and salt addition. The ongoing benefit is dramatically reduced chemical handling and cost. Present it as a lifestyle upgrade, not just a chemistry change.
Pentair IntelliCenter, Hayward OmniLogic, and Jandy AquaLink all offer smartphone control for pump speed, heater, lights, and cleaner scheduling. Pool owners who see you controlling their equipment via app immediately want the same capability. This is a high-dollar, high-satisfaction upsell with strong close rates when demonstrated in person.
Filter cleanings are the most natural upsell in routine maintenance. "Your filter pressure has been trending up — I think it's time for a full cleaning and I want to check the media. Want me to schedule that?" This is work you can do during a longer service visit or as a dedicated appointment, and it's expected maintenance, not a surprise.
| Repair | Parts Cost (approx.) | Labor | Quote Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pump motor replacement | $150–$350 | 1.5–2 hrs | $350–$650 |
| VS pump install | $400–$900 | 2–4 hrs | $800–$1,800 |
| Salt cell replacement | $100–$350 | 0.5–1 hr | $200–$500 |
| Filter multiport valve | $80–$200 | 1–1.5 hrs | $200–$400 |
| Automation install | $600–$1,500 | 4–8 hrs | $1,200–$3,500 |
Mark up parts 20–40% over your cost. This is standard in every trade. At distributor pricing, your cost is 30–50% below retail — you're still providing the customer fair value while capturing your sourcing, warranty, and expertise margin.
Most techs mention a repair once and then never bring it up again. Customers get busy, forget, and nothing happens. A simple follow-up protocol converts more of those initial observations into closed repairs:
After the third touchpoint, drop it unless the customer brings it up again. You've done your professional duty. The customer has the information. Aggressive follow-up after that damages the relationship.
Log your chemical readings accurately at every stop with SplashLens — the service history supports informed conversations about equipment trends and lets you say, with confidence, "your pump pressure has been climbing for the past 6 weeks" because you have the data to back it up.
SplashLens gives you accurate readings and service history at your fingertips — free, offline, no subscription.
Open SplashLens Free →The most natural upsell is observation-based: you notice something during your regular service visit, document it, alert the customer, and provide a quote. Customers hire you to watch their equipment — a repair recommendation is you doing your job.
For well-maintained residential pools, repair and equipment revenue typically runs $200–$600/account/year. For aging pools or problem equipment, it can exceed $1,500/account.
Yes. A 20–40% markup on parts is standard and expected. You're sourcing, stocking, and warranting the parts. At distributor pricing, your cost is well below retail — the markup is your margin for time and expertise.
Parts at cost + 20–40% markup, plus labor at your hourly rate ($75–$125/hour). Add a trip fee if the repair is not during a regular service visit. Always present a quote before starting work.
Variable speed pump upgrades, salt system upgrades, automation installation, filter media replacement, and heat pump installation are the most common high-value repair upsells.