The orientation of a Florida pool to the sun determines how much UV hits it, how much it evaporates, and how aggressively chlorine breaks down. A west-facing pool gets the most intense afternoon sun of any orientation; an east-facing one gets gentle morning sun that fades by noon. The service cadence, chemistry targets, and cover recommendations all shift with orientation.
The four orientation patterns
- West-facing— most intense UV exposure; receives direct afternoon sun when temperature is highest. Highest chlorine breakdown rate.
- South-facing— most consistent sun exposure throughout the day; highest total daily UV dose.
- East-facing— morning sun only; significantly less UV exposure and chlorine breakdown.
- North-facing— least direct sun; cooler water; less evaporation. Also less natural warming.
West-facing specifically — Florida's harshest orientation
A west-facing pool in Florida sees:
- 4–6 hours of intense direct afternoon sun at the hottest part of the day.
- Water temperatures 3–5°F higher than east-facing equivalents.
- Chlorine breakdown 25–40% faster than east-facing pools.
- Equipment-pad sun exposure if the pad is on the west side — accelerated aging of every plastic component.
Service adjustments by orientation
| Orientation | CYA target | FC target | Special notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| West-facing | 50–70 ppm | 3–4 ppm | Extra pump runtime; consider solar cover |
| South-facing | 40–60 ppm | 2–3 ppm | Consistent highest UV; monitor CYA drift |
| East-facing | 30–50 ppm | 2–3 ppm | Easier on chemistry; less frequent chlorine additions |
| North-facing | 30–40 ppm | 2–3 ppm | Lower evaporation, watch algae in shade |
Sun exposure and algae pressure
Counterintuitively, high-sun pools sometimes have MORE algae pressure, not less:
- UV-degraded chlorine means low FC periods that allow algae to establish.
- Warmer water accelerates algae growth once FC drops.
- Phosphate concentration from evaporation concentrates nutrient loads.
The CYA/FC balance is what protects against this. West and south-facing pools need tighter chemistry management, not looser.
Equipment placement for sun exposure
- Equipment pad shading— if the pad is on the west or south side of the house, a small shade structure extends equipment life significantly.
- Salt cell and automation— UV degrades sensors and displays. Shade preferred.
- PVC plumbing— above-grade PVC in direct sun chalks and cracks in 2–4 years. Paint or wrap in UV sleeving.
Solar gain advantages
Intense sun isn't all bad:
- West and south-facing pools heat naturally to 82–88°F in summer without a heater.
- Solar heater panels on the pool roof produce more output on west-facing homes.
- Comfortable swimming season extends 1–2 months longer at each end of summer on high-sun pools.
Evaporation by orientation
West-facing pools evaporate 30–50% more than equivalent north-facing pools in a Florida summer. For a 15,000-gallon pool:
- West-facing: 150–200 gallons/day loss in July.
- North-facing: 80–120 gallons/day loss in July.
The difference is chemistry consequence (higher TDS/CH concentration on west-facing) and utility cost (water bills and heating compensate differently).
Sun orientation is a hidden service variable. Two neighbors' pools with identical equipment can behave completely differently because of which direction they face. Diagnose it once, adjust the service plan, and the pool becomes predictable again.