Hot tubs are not just small pools. The physics of hot water, high aeration, and concentrated bather load per gallon creates chemistry dynamics that demand a completely different approach. Apply pool chemistry rules to a hot tub and you will end up with chronically wrong pH, burned-through chlorine, foaming, and microbial growth in the jet plumbing. Here is what actually changes at high temperature and how to manage it.
Water temperature affects pool chemistry in three fundamental ways:
| Parameter | Hot Tub Target | Pool Target |
|---|---|---|
| Free Chlorine | 3–5 ppm | 1–3 ppm |
| pH | 7.2–7.6 (lower end preferred) | 7.2–7.8 |
| Total Alkalinity | 80–120 ppm | 80–120 ppm |
| Calcium Hardness | 150–250 ppm (lower than pool) | 200–400 ppm |
| CYA | 0–30 ppm (most avoid entirely) | 30–80 ppm |
| TDS | Change water above 1,500 ppm over fill water | monitor; drain at 1,500+ ppm over fresh |
Hot tub calcium hardness targets are lower than pools because the higher operating temperature makes scale formation more likely at the same calcium level. Keep CH at 150–250 ppm rather than the residential pool target of 200–400 ppm.
A 500-gallon hot tub with 4 people soaking has 1 person per 125 gallons of water. A 20,000-gallon residential pool with the same 4 people has 1 person per 5,000 gallons. The hot tub is experiencing 40 times more bather contamination per gallon. Sweat, body oils, sunscreen, and nitrogen waste accumulate rapidly. This is why hot tub water must be replaced every 3–4 months (or more frequently in high-use facilities) and why chlorine demand in a hot tub on a busy day can be surprisingly high.
Sodium dichloro-s-triazinetrione (dichlor) is the most commonly used chlorine form for hot tubs. It dissolves readily, has a neutral pH impact, and contains CYA — which is useful for outdoor hot tubs but can accumulate to high levels in indoor or heavily used tubs where the water is not regularly exchanged. Maintain CYA below 30 ppm in hot tubs.
Bromine is more thermally stable than chlorine at high temperatures, making it a popular choice for hot tubs. It remains effective up to about 104°F where free chlorine is already degrading quickly. Bromine is dosed as sodium bromide (the bromine bank) activated with an oxidizer (typically non-chlorine shock or small amounts of chlorine). Unlike chlorine, bromine cannot be stabilized with CYA.
Potassium monopersulfate (MPS) is a chlorine-free oxidizer used to destroy organic waste without adding chlorine. It is commonly used in hot tubs after each use session to oxidize bather waste before the next use. MPS does not contribute to combined chlorine (chloramine) formation and does not affect CYA levels.
Hot tub jets and internal plumbing are high-risk zones for biofilm — colonies of bacteria and other microorganisms encased in a protective matrix that adheres to pipe surfaces. Biofilm protects bacteria from normal sanitizer levels and is the underlying cause of persistent odor, foam, and apparent chemical resistance. Standard protocol: perform a hot tub purge (use a biofilm-eliminating product like AhSome or similar) every time the water is changed, then drain, rinse, and refill.
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Open PoolLens Free →Aeration from the jets causes CO2 to outgas from the water faster than it can equilibrate with the atmosphere. Since CO2 forms carbonic acid (which buffers pH downward), losing CO2 causes pH to rise rapidly. Hot tubs with active jet use can climb from 7.4 to 7.8+ within hours of use.
You can use the same chemical types but the dosing is completely different due to the small water volume and high temperature. Many hot tub operators use dichloro (no CYA concern in small, frequently changed water) or bromine as the primary sanitizer.
The standard recommendation is to replace hot tub water every 3–4 months, or using the formula: hot tub volume (gallons) ÷ (number of daily users × 3) = days until water change. High-use hot tubs accumulate TDS and combined nitrogen compounds faster than chemistry alone can control.
Bromine is more stable at high temperatures (above 80°F), making it a common choice for hot tubs. It also creates less harsh byproducts at high pH than chlorine. The trade-off is cost (bromine is 2–3x the cost of chlorine) and the inability to use CYA to extend bromine's life.