Quick answer
Green algae commonly clouds water or coats surfaces; mustard algae often looks like yellow-brown dust in shaded areas; black algae appears as stubborn dark spots on porous surfaces. Color alone is not proof, so diagnose before treating.
Quick answer
Green algae commonly clouds water or coats surfaces; mustard algae often looks like yellow-brown dust in shaded areas; black algae appears as stubborn dark spots on porous surfaces. Color alone is not proof, so diagnose before treating.
The exact response depends on the pool, equipment, water readings, weather, recent use, and service history. A local evaluation is more reliable than applying one rule to every pool.
Green algae
Green growth can range from light haze to opaque water and slippery surfaces.
It often follows low sanitizer, poor circulation, debris, or equipment downtime.

Mustard algae
Yellow or brown dusty patches may collect in shade and return after ordinary treatment.
Affected accessories may need cleaning as part of control.
Black algae
Dark spots can root into porous plaster and resist brushing.
Treatment may require repeated focused work and careful surface protection.
Stains can imitate algae
Metals, leaves, fertilizer, scale, and surface damage create colored marks.
Test response before aggressive treatment.
Water testing
Sanitizer, pH, stabilizer, and circulation determine whether treatment can work.
High stabilizer can make chlorine management difficult.

Brushing
Mechanical disruption exposes growth to sanitizer.
Use a brush compatible with the pool surface.
Filter and circulation
Dead material must be removed from the water.
Clean filters as they load.
Safety and label directions
Pool chemicals can be hazardous and should never be mixed.
Use protective practices and wait until water is safe before swimming.

Preventing recurrence
Maintain sanitizer, brush, keep flow working, and respond quickly after storms or high use.
Document recurring areas to improve circulation or cleaning.
Homeowner checklist
Homeowner checklist
- Confirm it is growth, not stain
- Test water
- Use compatible brush
- Restore sanitizer
- Run circulation
- Clean filter
- Address accessories
Frequently asked questions
Questions pool owners often ask
Can mustard algae look like sand?
Yes. It can appear as yellow or brown dust, often in shaded areas, but real sand, pollen, and metal staining can look similar.
Is black algae dangerous?
Any uncontrolled growth indicates poor pool conditions. Keep swimmers out if water quality or visibility is not appropriate and treat the condition promptly.
When should I call a pool professional?
Request help when water remains cloudy or green, circulation stops, equipment leaks or trips power, visibility is poor, or you are unsure how to handle chemicals safely.
References and further reading
Manufacturer instructions, product labels, current public-health guidance, and equipment manuals control the final service decision. These resources provide useful background.