Quick answer
A complete weekly visit commonly includes water testing and balancing, skimming, brushing, baskets, routine debris removal, circulation observations, and service notes. The written agreement should define every task and exclusion.
Quick answer
A complete weekly visit commonly includes water testing and balancing, skimming, brushing, baskets, routine debris removal, circulation observations, and service notes. The written agreement should define every task and exclusion.
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.
Water testing should guide chemical additions
A technician should base routine dosing on current readings and pool conditions, not add the same amount every week. Sanitizer, pH, alkalinity, stabilizer, salt, and other values interact.
Ask what is tested each visit and how unusual results are documented.

Skimming removes floating debris before it sinks
Leaves, insects, pollen, and landscaping debris can consume sanitizer and settle on surfaces. Surface skimming is a basic part of routine care.
Wind, storms, and nearby trees may create more debris than one visit can remove, so homeowners may still need to skim between visits.
Brushing reaches areas circulation may miss
Walls, steps, benches, corners, tile lines, and shaded areas can collect film or early algae. Brushing disrupts buildup and helps treatment reach the surface.
The correct brush and frequency depend on the pool surface and condition.
Floor cleaning varies by equipment and plan
Some providers manually vacuum; others rely on an automatic cleaner, robotic cleaner, or a combination. Heavy debris may require a separate cleanup.
The service agreement should explain what floor cleaning is included and whether the homeowner supplies or maintains an automatic cleaner.
Baskets protect circulation
Skimmer and pump baskets collect debris before it reaches the pump and filter. Full baskets can reduce flow and strain equipment.
Routine emptying is important, but storms can fill baskets between visits.

Equipment observation can catch early problems
A weekly visit can identify unusual noise, leaks, air bubbles, low flow, high filter pressure, error codes, or a salt-system warning.
Observation is not the same as licensed repair. The provider should report the condition and obtain approval before separate work.
Filter cleaning is usually periodic
Filters do not need a full cleaning every week, but pressure and flow should be observed. Cleaning frequency depends on filter type and debris load.
Ask whether periodic filter service is included or billed separately.
Chemicals need a clear policy
A plan may include routine chlorine and balancing products while excluding specialty treatments, salt, stabilizer, stain treatments, or large recovery doses.
The policy should be written and easy to understand.
Service notes improve accountability
A visit report can document readings, tasks, chemicals, condition, photos, and recommendations. This is especially valuable for second homes and rental properties.
Choose a communication method that you will actually review.

What is normally not included
Parts, repairs, leak detection, equipment replacement, major storm cleanup, draining, surface restoration, and green-pool recovery are commonly separate.
A good company explains exclusions before they become an issue.
Homeowner checklist
Homeowner checklist
- Written visit task list
- Water values tested
- Floor-cleaning method
- Filter service schedule
- Chemical policy
- Repair approval process
- Visit-report format
Frequently asked questions
Questions pool owners often ask
Does weekly service include vacuuming?
It depends on the plan and equipment. Ask whether manual vacuuming, automatic-cleaner oversight, or spot cleaning is included.
Should the pool be perfect immediately after every visit?
Routine service should leave the pool clean and treated, but filtration, chemical mixing, weather, and existing conditions may require time or follow-up.
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.