Green Pool Remediation in Texas
Green pool remediation covers the structured process of restoring pool water that has turned green due to algae proliferation, suspended organic matter, or chemical imbalance. In Texas, the combination of high summer temperatures, intense UV radiation, and seasonal weather events accelerates the conditions that produce green water, making remediation one of the most frequently requested pool service interventions in the state. This page describes the scope of green pool remediation, how the process is structured, the scenarios that trigger it, and the professional and regulatory boundaries that govern this work.
Definition and scope
A pool is classified as "green" when visible algae growth or suspended particulate matter reduces water clarity to the point where the pool floor is partially or fully obscured. This condition typically corresponds to algae cell concentrations measurable in parts per billion, combined with a failure of the sanitization system — most commonly chlorine depletion, pH drift outside the 7.2–7.8 range, or filter system failure.
Green pool remediation is the remedial service category that addresses active algae bloom conditions, as distinct from routine pool algae treatment and prevention, which covers ongoing maintenance protocols. Remediation is a corrective service, not a preventive one.
In Texas, this service falls within the broader regulatory context for Texas pool services, which includes contractor licensing requirements enforced by the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR), chemical handling governed by state and federal environmental standards, and local health codes that apply specifically to commercial and semi-public pools.
Scope and coverage limitations: This page covers green pool remediation as practiced within Texas under Texas state law and TDLR licensing jurisdiction. It does not address remediation standards in other U.S. states, federal EPA regulatory enforcement actions, or remediation protocols for natural swimming ponds or water features that do not fall under the Texas pool contractor licensing framework. Commercial pools — including those operated by hotels, fitness facilities, and HOAs — are subject to additional Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) inspection requirements that are outside the scope of residential remediation services described here.
How it works
Green pool remediation follows a structured multi-phase process. The sequence below reflects standard industry practice across licensed pool service contractors operating in Texas:
-
Water testing and diagnosis — A certified technician measures pH, total alkalinity, chlorine demand (free and combined), cyanuric acid level, phosphate load, and turbidity. These readings determine the severity classification and drive the chemical treatment plan. Pool water testing is the foundational step that distinguishes a mild bloom from a severely degraded water condition.
-
Filter assessment and backwash — Filter media is inspected and backwashed or cleaned before chemical treatment begins. A compromised pool filter system will reintroduce contaminants and prevent the remediation from holding.
-
pH adjustment — Alkalinity and pH are corrected first. Chlorine efficacy drops significantly below pH 7.0 and above 8.0; at pH 8.5, only approximately 9% of added chlorine remains in the hypochlorous acid form that kills algae, compared to roughly 73% at pH 7.0, according to standard aquatic chemistry references.
-
Shock treatment (superchlorination) — Calcium hypochlorite or sodium dichloro shock is dosed to reach breakpoint chlorination — typically 10 times the combined chlorine reading. For heavily green pools, this may require 2–3 lbs of calcium hypochlorite per 10,000 gallons of pool water.
-
Algaecide application — A registered algaecide is applied to address residual algae and prevent regrowth. Algaecides registered with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) under FIFRA (Federal Insecticide, Fungicide, and Rodenticide Act) are required for use in residential pools.
-
Continuous filtration — The pump is run continuously — commonly 24 hours per day for 2–4 days — to filter out dead algae and particulate matter.
-
Brush and vacuum cycle — Pool surfaces are brushed to dislodge biofilm, followed by vacuuming to waste (bypassing the filter) to remove dead algae without recirculating it.
-
Water re-testing and clearance — Final water chemistry verification confirms free chlorine, pH, and turbidity are within acceptable ranges before the pool is cleared for use.
Common scenarios
Green pool conditions in Texas cluster around 4 recurring scenarios:
-
Post-storm contamination — Heavy rainfall dilutes sanitizer levels and introduces phosphates, nitrogen compounds, and organic debris. This is addressed in detail under pool service after storm or freeze.
-
Extended service gap — Pools that go 2 or more weeks without chemical maintenance during Texas summer months (June through September, when average daytime temperatures in Dallas, Houston, and San Antonio exceed 95°F) are high-risk for rapid algae proliferation.
-
Equipment failure — A failed pool pump or clogged filter halts circulation, creating stagnant conditions that accelerate algae growth within 48–72 hours in warm water.
-
Cyanuric acid overload — Cyanuric acid (CYA) concentrations above 100 ppm "lock" chlorine effectiveness, a condition sometimes called "chlorine lock." This is common in Texas pools that rely heavily on stabilized trichlor tablets and may require partial drain and refill to correct.
Decision boundaries
Not all green pool conditions are resolved by chemical treatment alone. Three threshold conditions determine whether remediation escalates beyond standard chemical service:
Drain vs. treat: When CYA exceeds 100–150 ppm, total dissolved solids (TDS) are above 3,000 ppm, or the pool has been green for more than 30 days with visible black algae (Cyanobacteria) colonization on plaster surfaces, a full or partial drain is typically required. Texas drought and water conservation regulations in some municipalities restrict drain-and-refill timing and volume, which affects scheduling.
Resurfacing threshold: If black algae has penetrated plaster, brushing and chemical treatment alone will not eradicate the root colonies. This triggers a pool resurfacing assessment rather than a remediation-only service call.
Licensed contractor requirement: Under TDLR rules, chemical treatment of pools for compensation requires appropriate licensing. Homeowners treating their own residential pools are exempt, but any paid service provider must hold a valid Texas pool contractor or technician license. Licensing requirements and classifications are covered under Texas pool contractor licensing requirements.
For a full overview of how pool services are organized and regulated across the state, the Texas Pool Authority index provides the reference landscape for this sector.
References
- Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation (TDLR) — Swimming Pool and Spa Contractors
- Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) — Public Swimming Pools and Spas
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) — FIFRA Pesticide Registration
- CDC Healthy Swimming — Pool Chemical Safety
- Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) — Water Conservation