Every great-looking pool on your block has one thing in common: someone runs a consistent weekly routine on it. Not heroics. Not fancy chemistry rescues. Just the same 15-minute routine, every week, without skipping.
This pillar is that routine — broken into its component parts. Each guide covers one task, why it matters, how often to do it, and the mistakes that turn a 15-minute job into a 2-hour recovery.
The weekly cleaning rhythm
| Task | Frequency | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Skim debris | Every 1–3 days | 2 min |
| Empty skimmer and pump baskets | Weekly | 1 min |
| Brush walls, steps, waterline | Weekly | 5 min |
| Vacuum | Weekly (or let robot handle) | 15 min manual |
| Test and balance chemistry | Twice weekly (FL summer) | 5 min |
| Check filter pressure | Weekly | 30 sec |
| Clean/backwash filter | Monthly (or by pressure) | 10–30 min |
Why brushing is the most under-rated task
Algae doesn't grow in open water — it grows on surfaces. Every week you skip brushing, you're giving algae a head start. Brushing disrupts the biofilm, exposes it to sanitizer, and lets chlorine do its job. Most pool owners underestimate this by an order of magnitude.
Filters: the forgotten half of water quality
Chemistry sanitizes. The filter removes. You need both. A dirty filter cripples flow, which starves the heater and pump, which then fail prematurely. Watch your pressure gauge — when it rises 8–10 psi above the clean baseline, it's time to service.
