Pool Maintenance Checklist
Water Chemistry Testing
DPD-1 reagent measures free chlorine; target 1.0–3.0 ppm for community pools, with most state public-pool codes requiring a 1.0 ppm minimum during operating hours. Replace reagents annually — expired DPD reads artificially low and triggers unnecessary shock dosing.
Target pH 7.4–7.6 and total alkalinity 80–120 ppm. Out-of-range pH cuts chlorine effectiveness sharply — at pH 8.0, less than 25% of free chlorine remains as active hypochlorous acid.
Record all readings and the resulting balance status (calculated by Langelier Saturation Index or your state's required parameters). Most state codes require chemistry logged at least daily during operating hours; some require twice-daily during peak season.
Sodium bicarbonate for low alkalinity; muriatic acid or sodium bisulfate for high pH; calcium hypochlorite or liquid chlorine for low free chlorine. Always dilute and add chemical to water — never water to chemical — and broadcast away from the skimmer to avoid feeder damage.
Close the pool to bathers until free chlorine drops below 4.0 ppm and combined chlorine below 0.4 ppm. Dose at 10× the combined chlorine reading as breakpoint chlorination. Document the closure on the bather log and post signage at every entrance.
Surface and Deck Inspection
Plaster cracks wider than 1/16" or loose tile near the waterline are early signs of pool-shell movement. Photograph anything beyond cosmetic wear so the maintenance lead can scope a repair before it becomes a re-plaster job.
Look for raised concrete, exposed rebar, missing expansion-joint material, and pooling water around the deck — common slip-and-fall liability sources. Cone off any hazard before resuming service.
The Virginia Graeme Baker Pool & Spa Safety Act requires anti-entrapment drain covers in all public pools, replaced before their stamped expiration date. A loose, cracked, or expired cover is a federal compliance failure and triggers immediate pool closure.
Submit through the property management software with photos attached. Notify the property manager directly when damage rises to a closure-eligible defect — don't rely on the queue alone for safety items.
Cleaning and Filtration
Clogged baskets drop circulation flow and force the pump to cavitate. Dump debris in the trash, not back into the surrounding landscape where leaves blow straight back into the pool.
Algae and biofilm build up most aggressively at the waterline where chlorine outgases. Brush before vacuuming so loosened material gets pulled to the filter.
Manual or robotic. If using a robotic cleaner, confirm cord integrity before submerging — exposed wires in a powered pool are a serious electrical hazard and a finding inspectors call out by name.
Read the gauge after the pump has run at least 5 minutes. Pressure 8–10 psi above the clean-filter baseline is the standard backwash trigger; record the reading every visit so trend data is available when the filter media needs full replacement.
Backwash 2–3 minutes until the sight glass runs clear, then rinse for 30 seconds before returning the multiport valve to filter. Top off the pool to compensate for water loss and re-test chemistry — backwashing always pulls down chlorine residual.
Safety and Compliance
Most state pool codes require a USCG-approved 17–19" ring buoy with 50+ feet of throw line and a 12-foot reaching pole within sight of the pool. Frayed line, a corroded pole, or a missing buoy fails health-department inspection on the first walk.
Stocked first aid kit per state requirement (typically bandages, gloves, CPR mask, blanket). The AED needs current pads (24-month shelf life) and a working battery — confirm the indicator light, don't assume.
All gates must self-close from any open position and self-latch above 54" reach height. A failed gate is a drowning-liability finding and most jurisdictions require immediate pool closure until repaired.
Depth markers in feet and meters at maximum depth, minimum depth, and all break points; bather-load capacity, no-diving, and pool-rules signage at every entrance. Faded paint on deck markings is a routine citation that's cheap to fix and expensive to ignore.
Mechanical System Check
Listen for cavitation, bearing whine, or seal-chamber drips. A clamp meter reading well above the motor's nameplate amperage is an early sign of impeller obstruction or a failing motor — flag it before the pump seizes overnight.
Erosion feeders for trichlor tabs, peristaltic pumps for liquid chlorine. Refill before the reservoir drops below one quarter to keep dosing consistent between service visits — a feeder that runs dry overnight wipes out residual.
Gas heaters: confirm pilot, check stack temperature, verify the pressure switch operation. Heat pumps: check refrigerant pressures on the gauge port if equipped. Soot or scorching around the burner tray indicates an airflow or gas-pressure problem that needs a licensed tech.
Walk the equipment pad slowly, look for fresh wet spots on dry concrete, listen at unions and valves. A 1/16" leak loses 5–10 gallons a day — the make-up water bill hits the owner's statement before you notice it on the deck.
Documentation and Owner Reporting
Most state public-pool codes require a daily log signed by a CPO (Certified Pool Operator) covering free chlorine, pH, water clarity, and any closures. Health-department inspections pull this log first — gaps in the record are the easiest violation an inspector writes.
Photograph the pool from a consistent vantage point on each visit so changes in water clarity or debris are obvious in the owner's portal. Two shots — full pool and equipment pad — is the working standard.
Submit through the property management software (AppFolio, Buildium, Yardi, or whichever the firm uses) so the owner statement, the bather log, and the maintenance ticket history stay in sync. The technician signature closes the visit.
Use this template in Manifestly
- Rental Payment Checklist
- Property Management Office Spring Cleaning
- Security Deposit Checklist
- Apartment Turnover Maintenance Checklist
- Annual Rental Property Inspection
- Property Inspection Checklist
- Tenant Eviction Checklist
- Tenant Move-Out Checklist
- Employee Training Checklist
- Property Maintenance Inspection Checklist
- Pet and Assistance Animal Approval Checklist
- Tenant Offboarding Checklist
- Tenant Move-In Checklist
- Lease Agreement Checklist
- Tenant Screening Checklist
- Property Manager Performance Review
- Vendor Performance Evaluation Checklist
- Tenant Onboarding Checklist
- Rent Roll Audit Checklist
- Employee Offboarding Checklist
- Service Contract Renewal Checklist
- Utility Management Checklist
- Eviction Process Checklist
- Tenant Communication Checklist
- Monthly Financial Reporting Checklist
- Capital Expenditure Planning Checklist
- Vendor Onboarding Checklist
- Roof Inspection Checklist
- Contractor Management Checklist
- Property Tax Review Checklist
- HR Compliance Checklist
- Rent Increase Notice Checklist
- Rent Collection Process Checklist
- Payroll Processing Checklist
- Property Inspection Checklist
- Emergency Contact List Maintenance
- Annual Budget Preparation Checklist
- Building Code Compliance Checklist
- Employee Records Management Checklist
- Property Acquisition Due Diligence Checklist
- Property Showing Checklist
- Accessibility Compliance Checklist
- Tenant Eviction Checklist
- Lease Renewal Checklist
- Legal Document Storage Checklist
- Seasonal Maintenance Checklist
- Investment Analysis Checklist
- Appliance Maintenance Checklist
- Tenant Move-Out Checklist
- Move-In Package Preparation
- Property Management Staff Onboarding Checklist
- Property Management Software Implementation Checklist
- Security Audit Checklist
- Sustainable Procurement Checklist
- Water Conservation Measures Checklist
- Emergency Preparedness Checklist
- Grounds Maintenance Checklist
- Green Building Standards Checklist
- Energy Efficiency Audit Checklist
- Data Backup and Recovery Checklist
- HVAC Maintenance Checklist
- Tenant Applicant Screening
- Routine Property Inspection Checklist
- New Property Management Onboarding
- Leasing Process Checklist
- Rental Advertisement Checklist
- Annual Insurance Review Checklist
- Plumbing Maintenance Checklist
- Preventive Maintenance Checklist
- Property Risk Assessment Checklist
- Pest Control Checklist
- Property Safety Inspection Checklist
- IT Equipment Inventory Checklist
- Disaster Recovery Plan Checklist
- Move-Out Procedure Checklist
- Cybersecurity Protocol Checklist
- Lease Signing Checklist
- Rental Market Analysis Checklist
- Electrical System Maintenance Checklist
- Common Area & Turnover Cleaning Checklist
- Fair Housing Compliance Checklist
- Legal Compliance Checklist for New Properties
- Lease Agreement Checklist
- Tenant Screening Checklist
- New Tenant Move-In Checklist
- Real Estate Portfolio Review Checklist
- Fair Housing Compliance Audit
- Lease Renewal Checklist
- Tenant Screening Checklist
- Rental Rate Analysis Checklist
- Move-In/Move-Out Inspection Checklist
- Eviction Process Checklist
- Rental Property Inspection Checklist
- Property Maintenance Inspection Checklist
- Rent Collection Checklist
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