Every pool owner starts with good intentions. But life intervenes — vacation, busy seasons, summer heat waves — and small chemistry problems become big ones. Knowing the specific signals that indicate you're past DIY territory isn't defeatist: it's the difference between a $150 service call and a $600 green pool recovery. Here are the situations where calling a professional is the economically rational choice.
Green water (algae bloom) can be handled DIY with the right knowledge and chemical quantities. But black algae — the dark spots that form on plaster and pebble surfaces — is significantly harder to treat. Black algae has a waxy coating that protects it from normal chlorine levels. It requires physical brushing with a stainless steel brush, superchlorination at 20+ PPM, and multiple treatment cycles. Attempting black algae treatment without the right process often results in spending $200 in chemicals to achieve partial results. A professional who treats black algae regularly brings the right protocol and the right concentration on the first visit.
If you've added chemicals based on test readings and the pool is still cloudy after 48 hours with the filter running, something is wrong with the diagnosis. Either the testing was inaccurate, the chemistry correction was off, or there's a filter issue preventing clearance. This is a diagnostic situation — not a "more chemicals" situation. Adding more chemicals to a miscalculated pool usually makes it worse. A professional with a pool store analyzer and diagnostic experience can identify what's actually driving the cloudiness.
When CYA is very high, chlorine becomes progressively less effective — a phenomenon called "chlorine lock." A pool with CYA at 120–150 PPM may not clear even with aggressive chlorination because the stabilizer has impaired the chlorine's ability to sanitize. The fix requires dilution (partial drain and refill). If you're adding chlorine and getting no apparent response, have your CYA tested professionally before spending more on chemicals.
| Symptom | Possible Cause | Why Professional? |
|---|---|---|
| Pump making grinding noise | Failing bearings or impeller | Motor disassembly required |
| Pool losing 1/2 inch+ water per day | Structural leak | Pressure testing, excavation possible |
| Heater not igniting | Gas valve, igniter, or thermocouple | Gas work requires licensing |
| Salt chlorinator error codes | Cell failure, flow sensor, wiring | Diagnostic equipment required |
| Filter pressure won't normalize | Broken laterals, channeling, internal damage | Disassembly and inspection required |
| GFCI breaker tripping repeatedly | Electrical fault in equipment | Electrical hazard — electrician required |
Spring pool opening involves: removing and storing the cover properly, reinstalling equipment (heater, chlorinator, automation), pressurizing the system, inspecting for winter damage, and establishing startup chemistry. The inspection component — checking for freeze damage, cracked pipes, damaged O-rings, and equipment wear over winter — requires experience to do thoroughly. Missing a cracked fitting on opening day leads to a water loss problem that costs far more than the opening service.
Winterizing a pool correctly requires blowing out all plumbing lines, adding antifreeze to equipment, plugging return lines and skimmer, adjusting chemistry for winter balance, and securing the cover properly. Missed steps in closing routinely result in freeze damage to plumbing or equipment — repairs that cost $500–$3,000. In climates where hard freezes occur, professional closing is worth every dollar.
Not all pool service companies are equal. When evaluating a service provider:
If your pool service professional uses SplashLens, they're logging every visit's chemistry readings, service notes, and equipment observations. Ask to see your pool's history — a documented service record is one of the clearest indicators of a thorough service operation.
Pool service professionals use SplashLens to document every visit. Homeowners can use it too — log your own readings and maintenance notes alongside any professional service records. Free, offline-first, no account required.
Open SplashLens Free →Persistent cloudiness after chemical addition usually means either the chemistry correction was wrong (treating the symptom not the cause), the filter is clogged and not clearing particles, or there's an ongoing source of cloudiness (algae bloom, calcium precipitation, or very high TDS). If cloudiness persists after 24 hours of running the filter and correct chemistry, call a professional.
After correct chemical treatment and with a clean, running filter, a mildly cloudy pool should clear in 24–72 hours. A seriously green pool typically requires 3–7 days of aggressive treatment, running the filter 24/7, and multiple backwash or cleaning cycles before water clarity is restored.
Spring pool opening service typically costs $150–$400 depending on region, pool size, and what's included. Basic opening includes removing the cover, reinstalling equipment, turning on the system, testing chemistry, and adding startup chemicals. More complete service includes filter cleaning, equipment inspection, and balancing to perfect chemistry.
Look for pool service companies certified by the Pool and Hot Tub Alliance (PHTA) — the CPO (Certified Pool Operator) credential indicates formal training. Ask for references from current clients, verify licensing and insurance, and get written pricing for what's included in monthly service. Avoid companies that can't explain their chemistry process.
Standard weekly pool service includes: water chemistry testing and adjustment, skimming of surface debris, brushing walls and steps, vacuuming or confirming robotic cleaner operation, emptying skimmer baskets, checking equipment operation, and filter pressure check. Chemical cost may be included or billed separately depending on the service agreement.