Looking into starting up my own pool cleaning business in my neighborhood, very small scale, looking for maybe ten pools a week, im wondering what I can expect monthly expenditures to be on chemicals (CYA, pH, Chlorine, Shock).
Up,Looking into starting up my own pool cleaning business in my neighborhood, very small scale, looking for maybe ten pools a week, im wondering what I can expect monthly expenditures to be on chemicals (CYA, pH, Chlorine, Shock).
Thanks Chris, this was very insightful. I am looking to service at least twice. My hope is that with a smaller number of pools to service I will be able to make more than one weekly visit per pool. Also most of the pools I hope to service aren’t very far from me so I’m not too worried about travel costs. My main concern will be quoting clients and keeping monthly chemical expenses in an adequate range and maintaining a profit without charging clients too much.Up,
That depends on how you plan to treat, how old the pool is, and what type of pool it is. Let's say on average you're looking at a 10000 gal gunite pool with fully cured plaster. Using TFP methods is the lowest cost to treat and requires no shock and no tabs. We use liquid chlorine and acid primarily. You can assume 3.7 ppm FC loss due to sun and disinfection daily. That's .3 gal./day for 12% LC and if you're adjusting pH .2 pH units per week you'll need .05 gal per week. There are a lot of variables but this is pretty typical for hotter months. Of course in winter this is reduced a lot since algae doesn't grow below 60 deg. Here's the problem though, it's really impossible to treat a pool adequately by visiting once per week unless you way over-chlorinate and supplement with tablets. Even then it's almost impossible to adequately treat this way during hot months. So you really need to visit twice per week at least for the hot months at least. If you try to use tabs you're going to have similar problems maintaining the FC level with once per week visits and you'll also need to drain water frequently due to buildup of CYA. What about shock? Problem is that it doesn't really work, that's why we don't recommend it. Also, you're going to need to figure out how to brush twice per week without visiting. Maybe robot? Be sure to use the cost of mileage ($.625/mi is reasonable fully depreciated cost) and your labor on the expense side. Not sure your customers will pay for this plus a reasonable profit for you because most services seem to try to do it this way and eventually they get algae infestation. I think the reality for this business is there's so many people that try this there's competition that's always starting then eventually getting out of it that it's hard to compete with real long term solutions that work and a lot of this is because customers really focus on cost not knowing what minimal requirements are to keep their pool safe and crystal clear. I'd recommend you check into this very carefully before you invest time and money.
I hope this is helpful.
Chris
Wow ! Down here in Dallas it's like $100 per MONTH for a pool service guy.I do my own pool maintenance but in my area they charge 80-100 dollars a week.
Just curious but do you know what services that includes/chemicals used? I feel like New Orleans (where I’m based) and Dallas have a bit more similar weather. Just trying to get an accurate idea of what I can expect to charge and spendWow ! Down here in Dallas it's like $100 per MONTH for a pool service guy.
Yes, each week they empty the baskets, skim the pool, check the chemistry, and add chemicals as necessary. Every other week also includes brushing the walls and using an electric pool vac to clean the floors.Just curious but do you know what services that includes/chemicals used? I feel like New Orleans (where I’m based) and Dallas have a bit more similar weather. Just trying to get an accurate idea of what I can expect to charge and spend
Wow. That seems cheap for those services. Do you happen to know if that rate includes the cost of chemicals per month? Or do they charge per month for chemicals as a separate fee?Yes, each week they empty the baskets, skim the pool, check the chemistry, and add chemicals as necessary. Every other week also includes brushing the walls and using an electric pool vac to clean the floors.
Pool service with swg.
1. Show up
2. Look at pool.
3. Empty skimmers
4. Leave
Maybe youll test the water and add some acid on occasion![]()
No customers will want to pay for the daily care their pool deserves, or at least a couple of visits a week.Maybe because that's not a profitable way to run a pool business.
It'd also be fair for the pool servicer so they didn't get hit with some customers needing more than they were paying for. Everyone wins.You should separately charge for your services and actual chemicals used in a pool.
That does cause you more record keeping, invoicing, and billing but is fairer to all your customers some who may need few chemicals and some who may need a lot.