Calculate the cost to fill and maintain a swimming pool. Estimate initial fill cost plus annual water expenses for top-offs and maintenance.
Swimming pools use a surprising amount of water — a standard 20,000-gallon pool costs $60–$200 to fill depending on local water rates, and annual evaporation and maintenance can add thousands of gallons and hundreds of dollars. Understanding these costs helps pool owners budget accurately and take steps to minimize water loss.
This calculator estimates both the one-time fill cost and the ongoing annual water expenses. The initial fill is straightforward: pool volume multiplied by your water rate. Annual costs include evaporation replacement (pools lose 0.25–0.5 inches per day in hot climates), splash-out, filter backwashing, and winterizing. The total can surprise even experienced pool owners.
Use this tool whether you're considering building a new pool, evaluating operating costs on an existing pool, or comparing water costs of different pool sizes. The results help you justify investments in pool covers, which can reduce evaporation by 90–95%.
Understanding this metric in precise terms allows energy managers to evaluate investment options, forecast savings, and build compelling business cases for efficiency upgrades and retrofits.
Pool water costs are often overlooked when budgeting for pool ownership. This calculator separates the one-time fill cost from annual maintenance water costs so you can plan and minimize expenses. Having accurate metrics readily available streamlines utility bill analysis, budget forecasting, and investment planning for energy efficiency projects and renewable energy installations.
Fill Cost = Volume (gal) × Rate Annual Evap = Surface (sq ft) × evap_in/day × 0.623 × 365 Annual Cost = (Evap + Maintenance) × Rate
Result: $385/year
Fill cost = 20,000 × $0.005 = $100. Annual evaporation = 500 × 0.25 × 0.623 × 365 = 28,478 gal. Plus 2,000 gal maintenance = 30,478 gal. Annual cost = 30.478 × $5 = $152 + sewer charges.
Pool owners often underestimate water costs. Beyond the initial fill, annual evaporation alone can add $100–$300 to the water bill in warm climates. Add backwash water, splash-out, and occasional draining for repairs, and the total can exceed $400 per year.
A quality pool cover costs $50–$300 and pays for itself within one season through water savings, reduced chemical use, and lower heating costs. Automatic covers cost more ($5,000–$15,000) but add safety and convenience.
Beyond covers, keep water at the optimal level, fix leaks immediately, use a cartridge filter (no backwashing needed), plant windbreaks around the pool, and avoid unnecessary draining. Each step contributes to cumulative savings.
A standard residential in-ground pool holds 15,000–30,000 gallons. Above-ground pools hold 3,000–10,000 gallons. Lap pools and spas vary widely. Measure length × width × avg depth × 7.5 for rectangular pools.
In hot, dry climates, pools lose 0.25–0.5 inches per day through evaporation. In humid climates, this drops to 0.1–0.2 inches. An uncovered pool can lose 25,000–50,000 gallons per year.
Yes. Pool covers reduce evaporation by 90–95%. For a pool losing 30,000 gallons per year, a cover saves 27,000 gallons — worth $135+ per year at $5/1,000 gallons, plus reduced chemical and heating costs.
Usually yes, unless you have a separate irrigation meter. Pool fill water goes through your main meter, and sewer charges are calculated based on consumption. Some utilities offer sewer credits for pool fills with advance notice.
Use the bucket test: fill a bucket and place it on the pool step. Mark both water levels. After 24 hours, if the pool level drops more than the bucket level, you likely have a leak.
Yes, but well water may have high mineral content, iron, or low pH that requires additional chemical treatment. Have your well water tested before filling. Flow rate may also limit the fill speed.