Texas Pool Drain and Refill Services
Pool drain and refill services involve the complete or partial removal of water from a swimming pool, followed by controlled restoration to operational water levels. In Texas, this process intersects with municipal water regulations, drought-period restrictions, and chemical balance requirements that distinguish it from a simple maintenance task. The scope of this page covers the structural definition of drain-and-refill operations, the phases of execution, the conditions that trigger them, and the regulatory and practical thresholds that determine when and how the work may proceed.
Definition and scope
A pool drain and refill is the deliberate evacuation of pool water — either fully or to a defined partial depth — and the subsequent reintroduction of fresh water to restore chemical baseline, facilitate structural repairs, or address contamination conditions that cannot be corrected through standard treatment.
The operation divides into two primary categories:
- Full drain: Complete removal of all water, typically required for replastering, structural crack repair, severe contamination (cyanuric acid lock, for example), or major equipment work at the floor level.
- Partial drain (dilution drain): Removal of 25–50% of pool volume to reduce dissolved solids, correct elevated cyanuric acid concentrations, or adjust total dissolved solids (TDS) that have exceeded approximately 1,500–2,000 parts per million above the fill water baseline.
The scope of this page is limited to residential and commercial pool operations within Texas. Regulations cited apply to Texas jurisdictions and relevant state-level agencies. Federal EPA water discharge rules may apply in specific cases but fall outside the primary scope of this page. Municipal code variations — such as those in Austin, San Antonio, Houston, or Dallas — represent localized extensions of state frameworks and are not individually catalogued here. For broader regulatory framing, the regulatory context for Texas pool services provides the applicable statutory and agency landscape.
How it works
A professionally executed drain-and-refill follows a structured sequence. Deviations from this sequence — particularly skipping hydrostatic testing or bypass steps — account for a significant share of structural failures during draining operations.
- Pre-drain assessment: The contractor evaluates water chemistry, structural condition, and the presence of a hydrostatic relief valve. Pools without functioning relief valves on high-water-table sites risk "floating" (hydrostatic uplift) during a full drain.
- Discharge planning: Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) guidelines and local municipal utility district (MUD) rules govern where pool water may be discharged. Highly chlorinated water must be dechlorinated before entering storm drains or natural waterways (TCEQ, Chapter 26, Texas Water Code).
- Pump-down: Submersible pumps or the existing waste/backwash line evacuate water at controlled flow rates. Full drains on a standard 20,000-gallon residential pool typically take 8–14 hours depending on pump capacity.
- Structural inspection window: Once drained, the shell is inspected for cracks, delamination, or surface degradation. Work such as pool resurfacing and replastering or pool leak detection and repair occurs during this phase.
- Refill: Fresh water is introduced through the fill line. Refill rates for a 20,000-gallon pool vary based on municipal supply pressure — typical residential supply lines deliver 5–10 gallons per minute, producing a refill window of 33–66 hours.
- Chemical startup: New water requires full chemical balancing, including pH adjustment (target 7.4–7.6), total alkalinity correction (target 80–120 ppm), and calcium hardness adjustment (target 200–400 ppm for plaster pools), per standards published by the Association of Pool & Spa Professionals (APSP/ANSI/APSP-11).
Common scenarios
The conditions that require a drain-and-refill fall into recognizable categories within Texas's climate and water chemistry environment.
Cyanuric acid (CYA) overload: Stabilized chlorine products accumulate CYA over time. Levels above 100 ppm significantly depress chlorine efficacy. Because CYA cannot be removed through chemical treatment, dilution by partial drain is the standard correction method. This is among the most frequent triggers for partial drains in Texas, particularly after extended use of trichlor or dichlor tablets.
Total dissolved solids (TDS) accumulation: Texas municipal water sources carry varying mineral loads. In areas served by hard groundwater — including much of Central Texas — TDS can exceed actionable thresholds within 2–4 years of continuous operation without dilution.
Algae remediation: Severe or recurring algae infestations, particularly black algae penetrating plaster surfaces, often require a full drain to allow direct brushing and acid washing of the shell. This intersects with pool algae treatment and prevention protocols.
Post-freeze recovery: Following hard freezes, cracked or compromised plumbing may require a full drain before repairs can be made. The Texas pool service after storm or freeze framework addresses the inspection and repair sequence.
Pre-renovation staging: Structural renovations including pool coping and tile repair or equipment pad upgrades require drained access to the affected surfaces.
Decision boundaries
The choice between a full drain and a partial drain depends on quantifiable thresholds and structural conditions, not contractor preference alone.
| Condition | Partial Drain Threshold | Full Drain Indicated |
|---|---|---|
| CYA concentration | >80–100 ppm | >150 ppm with recurring algae |
| TDS level | >2,000 ppm above fill water baseline | Rarely required for TDS alone |
| Surface repair scope | No | Plaster, tile, or structural work |
| Algae type | Green/yellow algae (chemical treatment preferred) | Black algae in plaster |
| Water age | 5–7 years (partial dilution) | 10+ years without any dilution |
Texas drought conditions impose an additional constraint layer. During active Stage 2 or Stage 3 water restrictions — declared by municipalities under Texas Water Development Board (TWDB) frameworks — full drains may be prohibited without a variance. Partial drains may require documentation of necessity. The drought and water conservation for Texas pools reference covers these restriction tiers in detail.
Permitting thresholds vary: a standalone drain-and-refill on an existing pool generally does not require a building permit in Texas. However, if the drain is associated with structural repair or equipment replacement that requires inspection, permit requirements apply through the local authority having jurisdiction (AHJ). Commercial pools governed under commercial pool service requirements face additional documentation standards from the Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) under 25 TAC Chapter 265.
For the full range of service categories touching pool water chemistry and maintenance, the Texas Pool Authority index provides the structured reference map across service types.
References
- Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) — Texas Water Code, Chapter 26
- Texas Water Development Board (TWDB) — Water Conservation and Drought Planning
- Texas Department of State Health Services (DSHS) — Public Swimming Pools and Spas, 25 TAC Chapter 265
- Association of Pool & Spa Professionals (APSP) — ANSI/APSP-11 Standard for Water Quality in Public Pools and Spas
- Texas Legislature Online — Texas Water Code