Cloudy pools have different causes, and treating the wrong one wastes time and money. Quick diagnosis:
| Appearance | Likely Cause |
|---|---|
| Milky white, good chlorine level | High pH (above 7.8), high calcium hardness, or high alkalinity |
| Hazy green or teal tint | Early algae — low chlorine |
| White/grey haze after shocking | Dead algae particles clogging the filter |
| Cloudy after heavy rain | Diluted chemicals, phosphate influx, pH drop |
| Cloudy with good chemistry | Filter problem — dirty media or not running enough hours |
Cloudiness from chemistry imbalance will not clear with shock or filtration alone. Get your parameters right first:
Even if your chlorine is at maintenance levels, a shock treatment kills bacteria and algae that cause cloudiness and gives the filtration system something definitive to filter out. Use 1–2 lbs calcium hypochlorite per 10,000 gallons. Shock at night, run the pump all night.
If the cloudiness is dead algae after a previous shock, skip additional shock — just filter aggressively (Step 3).
This is where most people fail. You cannot filter a cloudy pool in 8 hours. Run the pump 24/7 until the pool is clear. Also:
Clarifier (cationic polymer) coagulates tiny particles into larger clumps the filter can catch. Add per label instructions, run the pump continuously, and clean the filter every 12–24 hours. Results in 24–72 hours for mild cloudiness.
Flocculant (aluminum sulfate) clumps particles into masses that sink to the pool floor within 8–24 hours. Then you vacuum them to waste. Only usable with sand filters (set to waste, bypass filter). Not compatible with cartridge or DE filters without disassembly.
Clean your filter every 12 hours while clearing a cloudy pool. The filter is capturing the cause of the cloudiness, and a clogged filter stops working. Backwash sand/DE filters; rinse cartridge filters. High pressure gauge = dirty filter = clear the pool is stalling.
Log your test results in PoolLens and get a diagnosis based on your chemistry readings. Know whether you're dealing with chemistry cloudiness, algae, or filtration failure — and what to do about each.
Open PoolLens Free →Causes include high pH causing calcium carbonate precipitation, low chlorine allowing algae/bacteria growth, dead algae particles after shocking, high calcium hardness, dirty filter media, or inadequate pump run time.
Pool flocculant clears water fastest — often within 8–24 hours by clumping particles that sink to the floor. You vacuum them to waste. Clarifier is slower (24–72 hours) but easier. Only use flocculant with a sand filter set to waste.
No. Cloudy water impairs visibility (drowning risk) and usually indicates chemical imbalance or microorganism growth. Do not swim until the pool is clear, free chlorine is 1–3 ppm, and pH is 7.2–7.8.
Mildly cloudy pools clear in 12–24 hours with correct treatment. Moderately cloudy: 24–48 hours. Severely cloudy (cannot see the bottom): 3–5 days of continuous filtering. Flocculant can accelerate this to 24 hours.
After shocking, cloudiness is often dead algae particles being filtered out. Run the pump 24/7, clean the filter every 12 hours, and add a clarifier. The pool should clear within 24–48 hours. If it does not, the issue may be chemistry-related — check pH and calcium hardness.