Pool Filter System Types and Maintenance in Texas
Pool filtration is the mechanical backbone of water clarity and sanitation in any Texas swimming pool, operating in direct coordination with chemical treatment and circulation systems. This page covers the three primary filter technologies deployed across Texas residential and commercial pools, the maintenance protocols associated with each, and the regulatory and professional context governing filter service in the state. Selecting and maintaining the correct filter type has direct implications for water quality compliance, equipment longevity, and public health outcomes — particularly at commercial facilities regulated by the Texas Department of State Health Services.
Definition and scope
A pool filter system removes suspended particulate matter — including dirt, debris, algae, and biological contaminants — from recirculating pool water. Filtration is one component of a broader water quality framework that also includes pool chemical treatment standards and pump-driven circulation. Without adequate filtration, chemical treatment cannot maintain safe water clarity or disinfection efficacy.
Texas pools fall under the oversight of multiple regulatory bodies depending on facility type. The Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) regulates public swimming pools under 25 Texas Administrative Code (TAC) Chapter 265, which sets minimum standards for filtration turnover rates, backwash procedures, and equipment specifications at public facilities. Residential pools are subject to local municipal codes, which vary by jurisdiction.
Scope and coverage limitations: This page covers filtration systems used in Texas-state swimming pools. Federal EPA regulations governing pool chemical discharge and Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) rules on backwash water disposal apply as parallel frameworks but are not fully addressed here. Portable spa filtration and water feature filtration are adjacent topics covered at spa and hot tub service and pool water features and add-ons respectively. Jurisdiction-specific municipal permit requirements are not covered on this page.
How it works
All three major filter types operate on the same hydraulic principle: pool water is drawn by the pump through a filter medium that physically traps particulates before returning clean water to the pool. The filtration rate — expressed in gallons per minute (GPM) — must be calibrated to achieve at least one full turnover of the pool's total volume within a code-specified period. Under 25 TAC §265.184, public pools must achieve a minimum turnover rate of 6 hours for conventional pools.
The three primary filter classifications are:
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Sand filters — use a bed of #20 silica sand, typically 19–24 inches deep, to trap particles as small as 20–40 microns. Water flows top-down through the sand bed and exits through lateral collectors at the bottom. Sand filters require backwashing — reversing flow to flush trapped debris — typically when pressure rises 8–10 PSI above the clean operating baseline. Sand media requires replacement approximately every 5–7 years under normal residential use.
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Cartridge filters — use a pleated polyester element to capture particles in the 10–15 micron range, which is finer than sand filtration. They do not require backwashing; the cartridge is removed and hosed down when pressure differential rises approximately 8 PSI above baseline. Cartridge elements typically require replacement every 1–3 years depending on pool load and filtration hours.
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Diatomaceous earth (DE) filters — use a powder made from fossilized diatom skeletons coated on internal grids to achieve filtration down to 3–5 microns, the finest of the three types. DE filters require recharging with fresh DE powder after each backwash. Spent DE backwash water carries disposal considerations under TCEQ regulations regarding discharge to storm drains or municipal sewer systems.
The pool pump selection and service context is inseparable from filter sizing — an undersized or oversized pump relative to filter capacity degrades both filtration efficiency and equipment lifespan.
Common scenarios
Texas pool professionals encounter filtration issues across predictable patterns driven by climate, bather load, and deferred maintenance:
- High-debris load after storm events — Fine particulate from cedar, oak, and mesquite pollen, combined with windblown debris common across Central and North Texas, clogs cartridge elements and DE grids significantly faster than in lower-pollen climates. Post-storm service protocols are addressed at pool service after storm or freeze.
- Algae-compromised filtration — Algae blooms increase turbidity and particulate load beyond normal filter capacity. Green pool remediation involves extended filtration run times and may require DE filter recharging or cartridge replacement mid-remediation.
- Scale and calcium buildup on filter media — Texas groundwater hardness, particularly in the Hill Country and West Texas regions, accelerates calcium carbonate deposition on cartridge pleats and DE grids, reducing effective filtration area and flow rates.
- Backwash water disposal compliance — Commercial pool operators must verify that backwash water disposal complies with municipal utility agreements and TCEQ guidance. Diatomaceous earth residue is specifically flagged in TCEQ guidance as requiring proper disposal and cannot be directed to storm drainage in most municipal jurisdictions.
Commercial pool operations face additional filtration documentation requirements. For the full regulatory structure applicable to commercial facilities, the regulatory context for Texas pool services provides an overview of state and local compliance frameworks.
Decision boundaries
Choosing between sand, cartridge, and DE filtration involves trade-offs across four dimensions:
| Factor | Sand | Cartridge | DE |
|---|---|---|---|
| Filtration fineness | 20–40 microns | 10–15 microns | 3–5 microns |
| Water usage (backwash) | High | None | Moderate |
| Maintenance frequency | Quarterly backwash | 2–4x per year cleaning | After each backwash |
| Regulatory fit for public pools | Acceptable | Acceptable | Acceptable with DE disposal plan |
For Texas pools subject to TCEQ water conservation rules or operating under municipal water restrictions — a recurring condition during drought cycles — cartridge filters carry an operational advantage because they eliminate backwash water waste. Drought-related pool service considerations are covered at drought and water conservation for Texas pools.
DE filters are typically specified for competition pools, high-bather-load commercial pools, and pools where water clarity to below 5 microns is operationally required. Sand filters remain the most widely installed residential technology due to lower upfront cost and simpler maintenance, though their filtration ceiling is the coarsest of the three types.
Pool service professionals operating in Texas should hold licensing appropriate to the scope of work. Filter system repair and replacement intersects with pool equipment repair and replacement and may require compliance with local permit requirements depending on the jurisdiction. The broader Texas pool services sector, including how contractors are classified and licensed, is covered at the Texas Pool Authority index.
References
- Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) — Public Swimming Pools
- 25 Texas Administrative Code Chapter 265 — Public Swimming Pools and Spas
- Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) — Water Quality
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency — Pool and Spa Water Quality
- NSF International — NSF/ANSI 50: Equipment for Swimming Pools, Spas, Hot Tubs and Other Recreational Water Facilities