Pool Service Glossary: Terms Every Consumer Should Know
Pool service involves a distinct technical vocabulary that affects how consumers read contracts, interpret invoices, and evaluate provider claims. This page defines core terms used across pool cleaning, chemical treatment, equipment repair, permitting, and inspection contexts. Understanding this language helps consumers identify what they are purchasing, what standards apply, and where red flags may appear in service agreements.
Definition and scope
A pool service glossary covers the terminology used by licensed technicians, equipment manufacturers, health codes, and regulatory agencies to describe pool construction, maintenance, chemistry, and safety. The scope spans residential and commercial pools, above-ground and inground installations, and chlorinated and saltwater pool systems.
Key regulatory bodies that define or govern pool-related terminology include:
- ANSI/APSP — The American National Standards Institute and the Association of Pool & Spa Professionals jointly publish standards such as ANSI/APSP-11 (residential pools) and ANSI/APSP-15 (residential and commercial suction entrapment avoidance), which define structural and safety terms used in construction and inspection.
- CDC Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC) — Published by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the MAHC provides model definitions for disinfection, recirculation, and water quality parameters used by state and local health departments.
- OSHA — The Occupational Safety and Health Administration sets definitions for chemical handling hazards, including those relevant to chlorine and muriatic acid used in pool service.
- NSF International — Certifies pool chemicals and equipment components against defined performance standards (NSF/ANSI 50 covers circulation, filtration, and disinfection equipment for pools).
Terms in the glossary fall into four classification categories: water chemistry, equipment and mechanical, construction and surface, and regulatory and safety.
How it works
Pool service language operates as a shared reference system between consumers, technicians, and inspectors. When a technician records a "combined chlorine" reading or invoices for "backwashing," those terms correspond to specific measurable actions and chemical states — not descriptive shorthand.
Water chemistry terms — core definitions:
- Free Chlorine (FC): The active disinfectant available in pool water. The CDC MAHC recommends a minimum free chlorine concentration of 1 part per million (ppm) for pools, with a target range of 2–4 ppm in most residential applications.
- Combined Chlorine (CC): Chloramines formed when free chlorine bonds with ammonia or nitrogen compounds. Combined chlorine above 0.4 ppm (CDC MAHC Chapter 5) signals inadequate sanitization and causes the characteristic "chlorine smell."
- Total Chlorine (TC): The sum of free and combined chlorine. Formula: TC = FC + CC.
- Cyanuric Acid (CYA): A stabilizer that shields free chlorine from UV degradation. NSF/ANSI 50 and state codes typically cap CYA at 100 ppm; elevated CYA reduces chlorine efficacy proportionally.
- pH: The measure of water acidity or alkalinity on a scale of 0–14. ANSI/APSP-11 specifies a target range of 7.2–7.8 for pool water.
- Total Alkalinity (TA): Buffering capacity that stabilizes pH, typically targeted between 80–120 ppm.
- Calcium Hardness (CH): Dissolved calcium content. Low CH causes surface etching; high CH causes scaling. Target range is 200–400 ppm for plaster pools (Pool & Hot Tub Alliance water chemistry guidelines).
- Saturation Index (Langelier Index): A calculated value using pH, TA, CH, and water temperature to predict whether water will corrode or deposit scale on surfaces.
Equipment and mechanical terms:
- Turnover Rate: The time required to cycle the entire pool volume through the filter once. A standard residential turnover is 6–8 hours per cycle.
- Backwash: Reversing water flow through a sand or DE filter to expel trapped debris. Most manufacturers recommend backwashing when filter pressure rises 8–10 psi above the clean baseline. See pool filter cleaning service for procedural context.
- TDS (Total Dissolved Solids): Accumulated dissolved material in pool water. Levels above 1,500 ppm over the fill-water baseline typically indicate water dilution is needed.
- Variable Speed Pump (VSP): A pump with an electronically commutated motor (ECM) capable of operating at multiple RPM settings. The U.S. Department of Energy's pool pump energy efficiency standards (effective January 2021) mandate that most newly sold residential pool pumps with a capacity of 1 horsepower or greater meet VSP performance criteria.
Common scenarios
Consumers encounter pool service terminology in three primary contexts: service invoices, water test reports, and permit or inspection documents.
On an invoice for a pool chemical service, a technician might note "shocked pool — added 2 lbs calcium hypochlorite (65% available chlorine) to address CC > 0.5 ppm." This records a superchlorination event triggered by a measurable combined chlorine exceedance. Consumers who understand "available chlorine percentage" can verify that the product applied was appropriate for the dose recorded.
On water test reports, results may appear as a full chemistry panel with columns for FC, CC, pH, TA, CH, and CYA. The pool water testing service guide covers how these results are typically formatted and what action thresholds apply.
On permit and inspection documents, terminology shifts toward construction and safety codes. Terms such as Virginia Graeme Baker (VGB) compliance (referencing the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act, Public Law 110-140) indicate drain cover anti-entrapment requirements. Bonding and grounding refers to electrical continuity requirements under NFPA 70 (National Electrical Code, 2023 edition), Article 680, which governs all electrical installations within 5 feet of the pool water edge.
Decision boundaries
Glossary term type comparison — chemistry vs. mechanical:
| Category | Defined By | Measured How | Action Trigger |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free Chlorine | CDC MAHC, ANSI/APSP-11 | Colorimetric test kit or digital photometer | Below 1 ppm (CDC minimum) |
| Backwash Need | Equipment manufacturer specs | Filter pressure gauge | 8–10 psi over clean baseline |
| TDS | NSF/ANSI 50, state codes | Conductivity meter | >1,500 ppm over fill water |
| Turnover Rate | ANSI/APSP-15, local health codes | Flow meter calculation | Non-compliant if >8 hrs residential |
Understanding which category a term belongs to determines who controls its standard. Water chemistry parameters are set by health agencies and national standards bodies. Equipment performance parameters are set by manufacturers and validated by NSF certification. Construction safety parameters originate in building codes (IRC, IBC) and federal safety acts.
For consumers reviewing pool service contracts, identifying whether a term is a regulatory threshold or a manufacturer recommendation matters because it determines what obligation a provider bears. A technician who fails to maintain free chlorine above the MAHC minimum is departing from a public health standard, not just a service preference. Reviewing pool service licensing and certification requirements in a given state clarifies what training and testing licensed providers must have passed regarding these standards.
When evaluating provider documentation, the pool service red flags resource identifies patterns such as vague chemistry entries, absent test results, or non-standard terminology that may indicate substandard recordkeeping or service delivery.
References
- CDC Model Aquatic Health Code (MAHC) — U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
- ANSI/APSP-11 American National Standard for Residential Inground Swimming Pools — Pool & Hot Tub Alliance (PHTA) / ANSI
- NSF/ANSI 50 — Equipment for Pools, Spas, Hot Tubs and Other Recreational Water Facilities — NSF International
- Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act, Public Law 110-140 — U.S. Government Publishing Office
- NFPA 70, National Electrical Code (2023 edition), Article 680 — Swimming Pools, Fountains, and Similar Installations — National Fire Protection Association
- U.S. DOE Energy Conservation Standards for Pumps (Pool Pump Rule) — U.S. Department of Energy
- Pool & Hot Tub Alliance (PHTA) Water Chemistry Resources — Industry standards reference