Advice from your local pool service company
Compare the complete service—not just the monthly price
A pool-service proposal should explain what happens at each visit, what is checked periodically, which chemicals are included, how filter cleaning is handled, and what work requires separate authorization.
Communication matters as much as cleaning. Ask how missed visits, storms, equipment failures, vacation-rental concerns, and unsafe water conditions are reported. Confirm who owns the relationship and who will visit the property.
For equipment repair, structural work, substantial draining, electrical work, or other regulated scopes, verify the appropriate Florida license or qualified trade involvement. Do not rely on vague claims.
Items to compare
- Visit frequency and routine task list
- Chemical and filter-service policy
- Photos, notes, and communication
- Repair approval and emergency process
- Insurance, licensing where applicable, and written terms
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Frequently asked questions
Should a pool company provide visit reports?
A report or other consistent communication is helpful, especially for second homes and rentals. The exact format should be defined.
What should be separate from routine maintenance?
Parts, repairs, specialty chemicals, major cleanups, leak detection, draining, and equipment replacement are commonly separate. The agreement should be clear.
