Pool maintenance costs depend on pool size, type (in-ground vs. above-ground), and service frequency. In the US, expect to pay $100–$300 per month for weekly chemical and cleaning service; in the Netherlands, €80–€200/month; in Poland, PLN 400–1,200/month; and in Spain, €60–€180/month. One-time seasonal opening or closing runs $200–$500 in the US. Neglecting regular maintenance leads to expensive repairs — algae-damaged plaster can cost $3,000–$10,000 to resurface.
Average pool maintenance costs by service type
| Service | Typical cost (USD) |
|---|---|
| Weekly chemical & cleaning service | $100–$300/month |
| Seasonal pool opening | $200–$400 |
| Seasonal pool closing/winterization | $200–$500 |
| Green pool recovery (algae treatment) | $300–$800 |
| Filter cleaning/replacement | $75–$250 |
| Pump repair | $200–$600 |
| Heater repair | $300–$1,000 |
| Leak detection & repair | $250–$2,000 |
Sources: HomeAdvisor 2025, Thumbtack service data, pool industry average pricing.
Pool maintenance costs in the United States
US homeowners pay an average of $100–$300/month for weekly pool service, which includes skimming, vacuuming, brushing, chemical testing, and balancing. In Sun Belt states (Florida, Arizona, Texas, California), year-round service averages $125–$175/month. In seasonal markets (Northeast, Midwest), service runs May–September at similar monthly rates, plus $200–$400 for spring opening and $200–$500 for fall closing.
DIY pool owners spend $50–$100/month on chemicals alone. Many find the time investment (2–4 hours per week) makes professional service worthwhile, especially since incorrect chemical balance voids equipment warranties.
What affects the cost?
- Pool size — larger pools need more chemicals and longer service time
- Pool type — saltwater pools cost less for chemicals but more for cell replacement ($400–$800 every 3–5 years)
- Climate — year-round warm climates require 12-month service; seasonal climates may only need 6–8 months
- Trees and debris — heavy leaf cover means more skimming and filter cleaning
- Frequency — weekly service costs more than bi-weekly but keeps water chemistry stable
- Add-ons — automatic chemical feeders ($200–$600) reduce monthly service costs over time