Most pool owners fill and top off their pools with a garden hose without a second thought. But there are situations where water delivery by truck is worth considering — and situations where homeowners assume delivery is necessary when it isn't. This guide breaks down the when, why, and cost of pool water delivery for both service professionals and pool owners.
New pool construction is the most common use case for water delivery. Filling a 20,000-gallon pool via garden hose takes 33–42 hours and counts against your residential water meter at full utility rates. In water-restricted municipalities or areas with high water rates, delivery can be cost-competitive — especially if the delivery truck sources water from a different utility district.
Pool contractors often coordinate water delivery as part of the startup package. The truck fills the pool in 2–4 hours instead of days, which accelerates the startup chemistry process and gets the pool commissioned faster.
When a pool requires a full or partial drain — typically due to sky-high CYA, extreme TDS accumulation, calcium hardness above 800 PPM, or persistent algae — refilling takes significant water. If your municipality imposes water restrictions during summer months, water delivery may be the only way to legally refill during drought conditions.
Some municipalities in California, Arizona, Nevada, and parts of the Southwest impose per-day water usage limits during drought periods. In these markets, pool water delivery trucks are licensed to source water differently than residential supply lines. Delivery becomes not just convenient but necessary.
| Pool Size | Gallons Needed | Trucks Required | Estimated Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Above-ground (12 ft) | ~3,500 gal | 1 (partial) | $175–$250 |
| Small inground | ~15,000 gal | 2–3 | $350–$750 |
| Standard inground | ~20,000 gal | 3–4 | $525–$1,200 |
| Large inground | ~35,000 gal | 5–6 | $875–$2,000 |
Prices vary significantly by region. Water delivery is much more common and competitive in the Southwest. In the Midwest and Southeast, options may be limited to septic/well water haulers, and prices can be higher due to fewer providers. Always call at least 2 providers for quotes.
| Factor | Garden Hose Fill | Water Delivery |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | 33–48 hours (20K gal) | 2–4 hours |
| Cost | $40–$120 in utility bills | $500–$1,200 |
| Availability | Always | Scheduling required |
| Water quality | Local municipal (known) | Varies by provider |
| Water restrictions | May be prohibited | Often permitted |
In most markets with normal water rates and no restrictions, filling from a hose is dramatically cheaper. A 20,000-gallon pool at $0.005–$0.008 per gallon costs $100–$160 in water utility costs. Delivery at $800+ is only justified by speed, restrictions, or source water quality issues.
A common misconception is that delivered pool water is somehow pre-treated or chemically superior to tap water. In most cases, delivery trucks source from the same municipal water supply your tap uses. The difference is transport and timing — not treatment.
Some specialty providers offer "pool-ready" water with adjusted pH, added phosphonate for scale prevention, or softened water for high-calcium markets. These services cost more and may be worth it if your source water has high calcium hardness (above 300 PPM) or very high alkalinity that requires significant correction on every fill.
Always test delivered water immediately upon delivery — before adding any chemicals. pH, alkalinity, and calcium hardness from delivered water vary by provider and batch. Assuming delivery water matches your tap water baseline can lead to significant chemistry errors on startup.
Whether filling from a hose or delivery, the startup chemistry sequence is the same:
Do not add salt for a salt pool until alkalinity, pH, and calcium hardness are balanced — then add salt and allow 24 hours of circulation before activating the chlorinator.
Log the fresh fill date and all startup readings in SplashLens. A documented baseline from day one makes every future service call easier — you know exactly what the water started at and can trace any chemistry drift back to its source.
Log startup chemistry, fresh fill dates, and all water balance readings over time in SplashLens. Free for pool service professionals — works offline, no account required.
Open SplashLens Free →Pool water delivery typically costs $175–$400 per truckload, with trucks carrying 5,000–9,000 gallons. For a 20,000-gallon pool, expect to need 2–4 truck deliveries, costing $350–$1,600 total depending on your location and the delivery provider. Prices vary significantly by region.
Not necessarily. Delivered water is typically municipal water transported by truck — the same source as your tap. In some markets, specialty 'pool water' deliveries use pre-treated or softened water, but this is not universal. Always test delivered water before adding chemicals, as its starting chemistry can vary.
Consider draining and refilling when CYA exceeds 100 PPM (cyanuric acid can only be removed by dilution), when calcium hardness is above 800 PPM, when TDS (total dissolved solids) is extremely high, or when the water has chronic algae or chemical balance problems that haven't responded to treatment.
A standard garden hose delivers 8–10 gallons per minute. A 20,000-gallon pool takes 33–42 hours to fill from a hose. A 1-inch supply line runs faster (15–20 GPM), cutting fill time to 17–22 hours. Water delivery trucks can fill the same pool in 2–4 hours.
Yes. Treat a freshly filled pool (from delivery or hose) immediately. Test the starting chemistry — pH, alkalinity, calcium hardness, and CYA will all need to be established. Add a startup chlorine dose, balance alkalinity and pH first, then calcium hardness. Do not swim until free chlorine is between 1–3 PPM and pH is 7.2–7.6.