A variable speed pool pump costs $700–1,400 installed versus $300–600 for a single-speed replacement. That upfront delta is where most homeowners stop thinking. The ones who do the math almost always upgrade — and the pool techs who present that math close far more equipment upgrades.
Pump power consumption follows the Affinity Laws — specifically: power varies with the cube of speed. This means cutting pump speed by half doesn't halve the power draw; it cuts it to one-eighth. A pump running at 1,750 RPM (half of 3,450) uses roughly 12% of the power of a pump running at full speed.
Single-speed pumps run at full RPM all the time. They're engineered to move maximum water for spa jets, waterfalls, and cleaners — but that same power is wasted during normal filtration when you need a fraction of that flow. Variable speed pumps run slow for filtration, faster for features, and full speed only when truly needed.
| Scenario | Single Speed (1.5 HP) | Variable Speed (equivalent) | Annual Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 hr/day at $0.12/kWh | ~$525/yr | ~$130/yr | ~$395/yr |
| 8 hr/day at $0.18/kWh | ~$787/yr | ~$195/yr | ~$592/yr |
| 10 hr/day at $0.25/kWh (CA/NY) | ~$1,366/yr | ~$340/yr | ~$1,026/yr |
At California or New York electricity rates, a variable speed pump pays for itself in under 14 months. In the Midwest at $0.12/kWh, payback is typically 2–3 years — still a strong return given pumps last 8–12 years.
| Type | Cost | Efficiency | Flexibility | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Single speed | $300–600 | Poor | None | Budget replacement only |
| Dual speed | $400–700 | Moderate | High/Low only | Transitional upgrade |
| Variable speed | $700–1,400 | Excellent | Fully programmable | All new installs |
The gold standard. Flow-based programming means you set gallons-per-minute targets, not just RPM — the pump self-adjusts as filters load. Integrates natively with Pentair IntelliConnect and ScreenLogic automation. Expect to pay $900–1,100 for the pump unit.
Strong performer with Hayward's OmniHub automation ecosystem compatibility. The 1.85 HP model handles most residential applications. Available at $750–950.
Popular with Zodiac/Jandy automation installs. The VS FloPro 2.0 HP at $700–900 offers good integration with iAquaLink systems.
Most states mandate ENERGY STAR-certified variable speed pumps for new pool installations and pump replacements. If a customer is replacing a failed single-speed pump, the VS upgrade may not be optional — check your local code before ordering a single-speed replacement.
When a customer's single-speed pump fails, frame the conversation around total cost of ownership, not price. A $300 pump that runs at $550/year in electricity costs $2,300 over 4 years. A $1,000 VS pump that runs at $150/year costs $1,600 over the same period — and is 40% of the way to paying for itself in the next 4 years. Present it as a $700 decision that saves $400 the first year alone.
SplashLens stores pump type, speed settings, and equipment notes per account — so you can verify settings on any return visit and catch problems before they become complaints.
Open SplashLens Free →Variable speed pumps typically save $500–$1,500 per year in electricity costs compared to single-speed pumps, depending on local utility rates and run times. Most pay for themselves in 1–3 years.
Many states now require variable speed pumps on new pool installations. California, Florida, Texas, and others mandate VS pumps for energy efficiency compliance. Check your state's code before specifying equipment.
Run filtration at 1,750–2,000 RPM for normal turnover. Drop to 1,000–1,200 RPM overnight for energy savings. Use full speed (3,000–3,450 RPM) only for backwash, spa features, or waterfalls that require high flow.
Almost any pool can accept a VS pump. Verify the new pump's hydraulic curve matches your pool's plumbing (pipe size, distance, fittings) so the low-speed settings still achieve the required turnover rate.