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Pool maintenance - What do you pay then pool guy?

Posted on 9/24/24 at 10:57 pm
Posted by xBirdx
Member since Sep 2018
1272 posts
Posted on 9/24/24 at 10:57 pm
Looking to get into the business … I think $30/week with client supplying chemicals sounds right.

What do you pay weekly, and what do they do?

Are there “one offs” you pay separately for!
Posted by jdavid1
Member since Jan 2014
2529 posts
Posted on 9/25/24 at 7:52 am to
My old guy charged 30 to come out plus chemicals he used. Ended up being anywhere from 75-150 weekly. They would brush and do basic cleaning.

I let them go after two months. Once I learned the chemicals and how easy it was I couldn't justify it. Good luck.
Posted by dtett
Jiggacity
Member since Oct 2018
553 posts
Posted on 9/25/24 at 7:52 am to
You shouldn't need to hire someone to manage your intex above ground pool.
Posted by Major Dutch Schaefer
Location: Classified
Member since Nov 2011
35621 posts
Posted on 9/25/24 at 9:55 am to
quote:

Once I learned the chemicals and how easy it was I couldn't justify it.


I would just bring a water sample to pool store and they would give me a printout of exactly what chemicals and how much to use.
Posted by Cage Fighter Trainee
Member since Aug 2024
137 posts
Posted on 9/25/24 at 11:47 am to
I'm in Mandeville and the going rate is about $200/month plus chemicals. I do mine myself and spend about an hour a week brushing, vacuuming and cleaning out the skimmers. I don't really mind it and I'd prefer to pocket the $200/month.
Posted by habz007
New Orleans
Member since Nov 2007
4361 posts
Posted on 9/25/24 at 12:43 pm to
You can make more money if you supply and charge for the chemicals. Pool guy told me that straight up that a lot of his money comes from that.

I do all my own upkeep and maintenance but I moved to new house and was unfamiliar with the equipment. He agreed to come walk me through it and diagnose a separate broken switch issue I was having.
Posted by notbilly
alter
Member since Sep 2015
6198 posts
Posted on 9/25/24 at 3:28 pm to
quote:

I would just bring a water sample to pool store and they would give me a printout of exactly what chemicals and how much to use.



Except you don't need most of that shite.
Posted by CAD703X
Liberty Island
Member since Jul 2008
87334 posts
Posted on 9/25/24 at 3:52 pm to
Usually 1-4 beers depending on the weather.

Man I don't miss a fricking pool. That's what the Y is for.
Posted by tigerfoot
Alexandria
Member since Sep 2006
59132 posts
Posted on 9/25/24 at 3:58 pm to
quote:

would just bring a water sample to pool store and they would give me a printout of exactly what chemicals and how much to use.


Except you don't need most of that shite.
And their shite is usually dirty and inaccurate. I take care of my own, it is max 15 minutes a week. Chemicals are not much. This year was 8 bags of salt, 8 gallons of liquid bleach, 12 gallons of acid, one granular shock and two 4lb bags of stabilizer. Throw in a new brush and new pool rake and my estimate is, 450 bucks for the year, and about 10 hours of work.
Posted by CAD703X
Liberty Island
Member since Jul 2008
87334 posts
Posted on 9/25/24 at 3:59 pm to
quote:

Except you don't need most of that shite.
baking soda and chlorine was all I ever used. I know if the ph starts going the other direction you might need muriatic acid or borax but other than those common, proven, simple chemicals you don't need anything else.

You start with florochloroalgecideboogaloo and that's when you get into trouble.

Go peep them baws on troublefreepool. Old man strength on that site and they will tell you to gfy with the quickness.

Seriously. Just listen to the grouchy old men with 1,000 hours of experience between them and a Corvette in their garage with 17 layers of wax and a diaper in the glovebox to wipe it down.
This post was edited on 9/25/24 at 4:01 pm
Posted by Dallaswho
Texas
Member since Dec 2023
2695 posts
Posted on 9/25/24 at 6:29 pm to
quote:

baking soda and chlorine was all I ever used


That was me until this year. Now my hands and feet are too dry and I need to keep CYA levels closer to 70 than 30 so they don’t crack on me when I spend 15 hr per week in there.
Posted by Will Cover
Davidson, NC
Member since Mar 2007
39534 posts
Posted on 9/25/24 at 8:17 pm to
quote:

Pool maintenance - What do you pay then pool guy?


$275 per month. They come weekly, however, they don't vacuum weekly. They used to, but cut that out. Now they vacuum every other week (and if that, honestly). Pricing using to be less than $200 per month.

I'm looking to switch, but I want someone or some company who is authorized to work on Pentair.
Posted by notbilly
alter
Member since Sep 2015
6198 posts
Posted on 9/26/24 at 10:22 am to
quote:

baking soda and chlorine was all I ever used.

In the past 12 months this is what I've used on my pool...

55 gallons of liquid Chlorine
1 gallon of muriatic acid.
50lbs of calcium hardness
maybe 20 tablets to raise CYA. In 4 years I've only bought 2 buckets of this so I don't really keep count.

Roughly $500 total.

quote:

Go peep them baws on troublefreepool. Old man strength on that site and they will tell you to gfy with the quickness.


These guys have saved me so much time and money. I spend less than 15 minutes a week on my pool. My pool water is crystal clear. Every time I go to someone else's pool, I become silently judgemental of their water clarity.
Posted by tigerfoot
Alexandria
Member since Sep 2006
59132 posts
Posted on 9/26/24 at 10:44 am to
quote:

Every time I go to someone else's pool, I become silently judgemental of their water clarity.
it’s a sickness.

I do it too. My pool eats acid.

Do you find the tablets help w the CYA equivalent to adding stabilizer. I don’t know if my SWG is undersized but in hot clear summer I have to add a little chlorine and if I could drop a tablet in there it may knock out two birds.
Posted by Tigerlaff
FIGHTING out of the Carencro Sonic
Member since Jan 2010
21563 posts
Posted on 9/26/24 at 10:44 am to
quote:

These guys have saved me so much time and money. I spend less than 15 minutes a week on my pool. My pool water is crystal clear. Every time I go to someone else's pool, I become silently judgemental of their water clarity.


Trouble Free Pool is the objectively correct and easiest way to manage your water. You only need to monitor 5 things:

Free chlorine (bleach and the occasional trichlor tablet if I'm out of town or need to raise stabilizer level)
pH (muriatic acid)
Total Alkalinity (baking soda)
CYA/stabilizer (trichlor tablets for me, but you can use pure CYA)
Calcium hardness (50lb bucket of calcium carbonate)

You don't need to measure anything else unless there is a problem (total chlorine, phospates,etc.), and there never is a problem if you just follow the procedure. The entire pool service industry is based on making you think it is way more complicated than it actually is. The pool stores don't even test your water for all the appropriate parameters and they do test for all kinds of nonsense to sell you things (phosphate remover). The kids that work there and perform the water tests don't have any idea what it even means. Ask them to explain total alkalinity to you.

In the 5 years I have owned my pool, I have shocked it ONCE after Hurricane Ida. My pure white pebble plaster is pristine with zero stains. My water is always crystal clear 365 days per year.

Just buy the Taylor 2006 test kit and stop paying for shitty expensive management and green water.
Posted by Tigerlaff
FIGHTING out of the Carencro Sonic
Member since Jan 2010
21563 posts
Posted on 9/26/24 at 10:48 am to
quote:

Do you find the tablets help w the CYA equivalent to adding stabilizer. I don’t know if my SWG is undersized but in hot clear summer I have to add a little chlorine and if I could drop a tablet in there it may knock out two birds.


Yes. I start the season with tablets in order to gradually raise stabilizer level as the weather gets warmer and sun becomes more direct. Around mid April I begin using tablets only until my stablizer level is correct. Then I stop and switch to bleach at night, using tablets only situationally and not as a main sanitizer source. Prevents chlorine lock and is one of the most common problems I see people have (overuse of the trichlor tablets).

ETA: for those who don't know, the tablets contain stabilizer/CYA. I have a Google Note in my phone that I just text to newbies that gives you fool proof instructions for an in-ground gunite pool in the Gulf South. If anyone wants it, I'll post it here and you can stop paying your pool guy.
This post was edited on 9/26/24 at 10:56 am
Posted by PerplenGold
TX
Member since Nov 2021
1926 posts
Posted on 9/26/24 at 11:09 am to
Another Trouble Free Pool user. Super simple to figure out and way cheaper than alternatives.

I only add bleach and muriatic acid. CYA is a bit high due to getting lazy using the 3” tabs. pH always drifts up from aeration caused by spa spillway. Easy enough to pour a little in 2-3 times a week.

Get the test kit (not strips!). After a short while you’ll learn what your pool needs and won’t have to test it very often. TFP even has an app so you can log test results and track what chemicals you’re adding. TFP forums are always available as a resource if something is acting up. In 8 years i’ve never had to shock it.
Posted by tigerfoot
Alexandria
Member since Sep 2006
59132 posts
Posted on 9/26/24 at 11:54 am to
Thanks. That is good info, I started with TFP when i installed pool and the only issue I have is Cl consumption due to cya drops
Posted by billjamin
Houston
Member since Jun 2019
15148 posts
Posted on 9/26/24 at 12:47 pm to
$130 a month. He comes weekly and that includes chemicals.
Posted by Ziggy
Member since Oct 2007
21883 posts
Posted on 9/26/24 at 1:06 pm to
Post it please.
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