Pool Drain and Refill Service: When It Is Required and How It Works
A pool drain and refill is one of the most disruptive—and sometimes unavoidable—maintenance events in a pool's service life. This page covers the definition of a drain and refill, the step-by-step process involved, the specific conditions that make it necessary, and the criteria that separate situations where draining is required from those where in-water treatment is sufficient. Understanding this distinction has direct consequences for water chemistry management, structural risk, local regulatory compliance, and service scheduling.
Definition and scope
A pool drain and refill service involves removing all or the majority of water from a swimming pool and replacing it with fresh water. The process differs from a partial drain (also called a dilution drain), in which only a portion of the pool's volume is removed to correct a specific imbalance, versus a full drain, which empties the vessel to the point where structural inspection or surface work becomes possible.
Scope varies significantly by pool type. For context on how drain and refill fits into the broader service framework, see Pool Service: A Conceptual Overview and the Pool Services Index. A residential gunite or plaster pool holding 20,000 gallons presents different draining risks than a 10,000-gallon vinyl liner pool. Fiberglass pools carry hydrostatic uplift risk—the shell can float or crack if groundwater pressure is not managed during the drain process. This risk is classified under structural failure modes in guidance published by the Association of Pool & Spa Professionals (APSP), now operating under PHTA (Pool & Hot Tub Alliance).
Regulatory scope also differs by jurisdiction. Water discharge from a pool drain may be subject to municipal stormwater ordinances or local wastewater authority rules. In California, for example, the State Water Resources Control Board has issued guidance requiring that pool discharge be dechlorinated before entering storm drains or surface water, under authority derived from the Clean Water Act (33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.).
How it works
A full drain and refill follows a structured sequence with six discrete phases:
- Pre-drain assessment — Water chemistry, groundwater table depth, and structural condition are evaluated. High groundwater table conditions may contraindicate a full drain for fiberglass shells.
- Chemical neutralization — Residual chlorine and other sanitizers are reduced to safe discharge levels, typically below 0.1 parts per million (ppm), before discharge begins.
- Water removal — A submersible pump or the pool's main drain line is used to evacuate water. Pump rates for residential pools typically range from 50 to 100 gallons per minute, depending on equipment.
- Surface inspection and repair window — With the pool empty, the plaster, tile, grout, fittings, and structural shell can be inspected. This is when resurfacing, crack repair, or equipment replacement is scheduled.
- Refill — Fresh water is introduced through the fill line. Water chemistry adjustment begins immediately, since fresh tap water introduces its own calcium hardness, alkalinity, and pH baseline values.
- Startup chemistry balance — The newly filled pool requires a full chemical startup sequence, including pH adjustment, alkalinity buffering, calcium hardness correction, and initial sanitizer dosing, before the pool returns to service.
For a detailed breakdown of water chemistry parameters relevant to this process, see Pool Water Chemistry Service Standards and Pool Service Chemical Dosing Reference.
Common scenarios
Four primary conditions drive a drain and refill decision:
Total dissolved solids (TDS) accumulation — TDS levels above 2,500 ppm in a chlorine pool (or above the pool equipment manufacturer's threshold) reduce sanitizer efficiency and cause surface scaling. Dilution through partial drains can address moderate TDS elevation, but TDS above 3,500–4,000 ppm in a heavily used pool typically requires full replacement.
Cyanuric acid (CYA) overload — Stabilizer (cyanuric acid) cannot be removed through chemical treatment; the only remediation is dilution or full drain. CYA levels above 100 ppm materially reduce free chlorine effectiveness, a relationship documented in research cited by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in their Healthy Swimming guidance.
Calcium hardness extremes — Calcium hardness above 1,000 ppm or persistent scaling that resists sequestrant treatment may require a full water change, particularly in arid climates where evaporation concentrates minerals.
Algae remediation and surface contamination — After severe black algae infestations or confirmed recreational water illness (RWI) contamination events, a drain, scrub, and refill may be required under local health department protocols. See Pool Algae Treatment as a Service for classification of algae types and treatment escalation logic.
Decision boundaries
The decision between a partial drain, a full drain, or an in-water chemical correction depends on three intersecting factors: parameter severity, pool construction type, and local regulatory constraints.
| Scenario | Partial Drain | Full Drain | In-Water Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| CYA 80–100 ppm | Yes | Rarely needed | No (not removable) |
| CYA > 150 ppm | Insufficient | Required | No |
| TDS 2,000–3,000 ppm | Yes | Rarely needed | Limited |
| TDS > 4,000 ppm | Insufficient | Required | No |
| Calcium hardness 500–800 ppm | Yes | Rarely needed | Sequestrant trial first |
| Black algae with plaster penetration | No | Required | Insufficient |
| Fiberglass pool, high water table | Contraindicated | Structural risk assessment required | Preferred |
For a broader view of regulatory and permitting considerations that affect drain decisions, consult the Regulatory Context for Pool Services reference. Permitting requirements for full drains vary by municipality; some jurisdictions require a discharge permit or advance notification to the local wastewater authority before water removal begins. Pool Service Safety Standards should be reviewed alongside any drain project, as confined-space and electrical hazard considerations apply when technicians work inside an empty pool shell.
The structural risk profile of a partial drain differs materially from that of a full drain. Vinyl liner pools risk liner shrinkage or wrinkling if left empty longer than 24–48 hours, depending on ambient temperature. Plaster pools can dehydrate and crack if exposed to direct sun for extended periods without moisture. PHTA technical guidelines identify these conditions under preventable service-related damage categories, reinforcing the need for pre-drain structural evaluation.
References
- Pool & Hot Tub Alliance (PHTA) — Industry standards body for pool and spa construction, service, and safety protocols.
- CDC Healthy Swimming Program — Public health guidance on recreational water illness, cyanuric acid thresholds, and disinfection efficacy.
- California State Water Resources Control Board — Stormwater Program — State-level authority on pool water discharge requirements and dechlorination standards.
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency — Clean Water Act Overview — Federal authority (33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq.) underlying local discharge regulations affecting pool drains.
- ANSI/APSP/ICC-1 2014: American National Standard for Public Swimming Pools — Structural and safety standards for pool construction and maintenance referenced in drain risk assessments.