High pool pH is a silent efficiency killer. When pH climbs above 7.8, the chlorine in your pool becomes dramatically less effective as a sanitizer. By pH 8.0, roughly 3% of your chlorine is in the active hypochlorous acid (HOCl) form — the rest is hypochlorite ion, which is 80 times less effective at killing pathogens. You can't maintain a safe pool with chronically high pH, no matter how much chlorine you add.
Understanding the cause of high pH determines how you fix it permanently, not just temporarily:
Pool-grade muriatic acid is 31.45% HCl. It's the most cost-effective way to lower pH and the standard choice for professional service routes. Advantages: cheaper per unit of pH adjustment, no residual sulfate accumulation. Disadvantages: requires careful PPE, strong fumes, liquid handling.
Sold as "pH Down," "pH Decreaser," or "Lo 'N Slo" by brands like BioGuard and Clorox Pool&Spa. Easier to measure, safer to handle and store, and produces less fuming. Disadvantages: more expensive per unit of pH adjustment, adds sulfate ions to the water (sulfates accumulate over time with repeated dry acid use in hard water pools, contributing to scaling).
| Desired Change | Pool Volume | Muriatic Acid (31.45%) | Dry Acid |
|---|---|---|---|
| pH 8.0 → 7.6 | 10,000 gal | 12–16 oz | 1.3–1.6 lbs |
| pH 8.0 → 7.4 | 10,000 gal | 16–22 oz | 1.7–2.2 lbs |
| pH 7.8 → 7.4 | 10,000 gal | 8–12 oz | 0.9–1.3 lbs |
| pH 8.0 → 7.6 | 20,000 gal | 24–32 oz | 2.6–3.2 lbs |
These are estimates at TA of 100 ppm. Use PoolLens to calculate your exact dose based on actual water parameters.
Key insight: Higher total alkalinity means you need MORE acid for the same pH drop. The bicarbonate buffer resists acidification. If you're using double the expected dose to move pH and it keeps bouncing back, target the alkalinity first — lower it to 80–100 ppm and pH management becomes much easier.
Warning: Never add acid and chlorine at the same time or in rapid succession. Add acid with the pump running, wait 30–60 minutes, then add chlorine. Mixing these at pool-surface concentration produces irritating chlorine gas.
If you lower pH on Monday and it's back to 8.0 by Wednesday, your total alkalinity is almost certainly too high. The TA acts as a buffer, pushing pH back toward its "equilibrium" point. Lower TA to 80–100 ppm using the slug-dose acid technique (add acid with pump OFF, let it sit in a concentrated zone to react with TA, then run pump). This directly targets the bicarbonate buffer and makes pH management sustainable.
PoolLens calculates muriatic acid and dry acid doses for your pool's exact volume and water chemistry. Free, offline, instant.
Open PoolLens Free →Muriatic acid (hydrochloric acid) and dry acid (sodium bisulfate) are the two primary chemicals used to lower pool pH. Muriatic acid is more cost-effective; dry acid is safer to handle and store.
At pH above 7.8, hypochlorous acid (the active sanitizing form of chlorine) converts increasingly to hypochlorite ion, which is 80 times less effective. At pH 8.0, roughly 3% of chlorine is in the active HOCl form.
Approximately 16–22 oz of 31.45% muriatic acid per 10,000 gallons to drop pH from 8.0 to 7.4 at TA of 100 ppm. The required amount depends heavily on total alkalinity.
No. Never add acid and chlorine simultaneously. Add acid first, run the pump for 30–60 minutes, then add chlorine. Adding them together at the pool surface can produce irritating chlorine gas.
Chronic high pH is caused by high total alkalinity (which resists acidification), aeration (fountains, waterfalls, spillways), calcium hypochlorite shock, or high-pH source water.