Advice from your local pool service company
Why weekly service is often the more stable choice in Florida
Florida pools can change quickly because of sunlight, warm water, rain, windblown debris, long swimming seasons, and heavy landscaping. A two-week interval creates more time for a small chemistry or circulation issue to become visible.
Biweekly service may work only when the homeowner reliably tests, cleans, empties baskets, and responds to weather between professional visits. It should not be treated as “half of weekly service” without defining who handles the missing week.
The best schedule considers pool size, sanitation system, filter, use, trees, screen enclosure, rental activity, and the owner’s involvement. We generally recommend the schedule that creates the most predictable water care.
Items to compare
- Florida weather and sanitizer demand
- Homeowner tasks between visits
- Vacation-rental and second-home needs
- Filter and circulation capacity
- Communication and response to storms or equipment problems
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Frequently asked questions
Is biweekly pool service enough in St. Augustine?
It can be for some lightly used pools when a knowledgeable homeowner handles the alternate week, but weekly service is usually more dependable for consistent professional oversight.
Can service frequency change seasonally?
Possibly, but Florida pools remain active year-round. Any change should be based on actual water conditions and homeowner involvement, not the calendar alone.
