| Severity | Appearance | Recommended Method | DIY or Pro? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Light | Thin white film, wipes with finger | Tile cleaner + nylon brush | DIY |
| Moderate | Rough white band, won't wipe off | Pumice stone + calcium tile spray | DIY |
| Heavy | Thick white/grey crust, hard to chip | Diluted muriatic acid + pumice | DIY with caution |
| Severe | Thick stalagmite-like deposits, covers tile | Professional bead blast or acid wash | Professional |
A pool pumice stone is a safe, effective abrasive for calcium deposits on ceramic and glass tile. It removes calcium without scratching when used wet and with proper technique.
Do not use pumice stones on painted surfaces, vinyl liners, or fiberglass — only on ceramic, porcelain, or glass tile.
Muriatic acid is highly effective on calcium scale. Always dilute properly and use full PPE.
Never use metal wire brushes, steel wool, or metal scrapers on pool tile. Metal tools scratch ceramic tile glazing and create microscopic pits where calcium deposits anchor more aggressively. Use only pumice stones, nylon brushes, or plastic scrapers rated for pool tile use.
Glass bead blasting propels fine glass beads at tile surfaces using compressed air, physically removing calcium without damaging tile. It is the most effective non-chemical method for heavy deposits. Requires draining to the tile line. Cost: $200–$800 depending on pool size and scale severity.
A professional-grade acid wash uses muriatic acid at higher concentrations, applied methodically around the pool with precise neutralization. It removes calcium from both tile and plaster surfaces. Always paired with a full pool drain. Cost: $400–$1,200 depending on pool surface area and scale severity.
Calcium deposits recur when the underlying chemistry isn't addressed:
PoolLens logs calcium hardness and pH over time — so you can see when the combination is trending toward scale territory before deposits form. Prevention is far cheaper than removal.
Open PoolLens Free →High pH (above 7.8) combined with high calcium hardness (above 400 ppm) causes calcium carbonate to precipitate out of solution and deposit on surfaces. Evaporation concentrates minerals at the waterline. Keeping pH at 7.2–7.4 and calcium at 200–400 ppm prevents new deposits.
White vinegar works on light calcium scale above the waterline. Apply undiluted, let it dwell 5–10 minutes, then scrub. It's not strong enough for moderate or heavy buildup. For serious scale, use a commercial pool tile calcium remover or diluted muriatic acid.
Yes — diluted muriatic acid (10:1 water to acid) is the most effective DIY solution for moderate to heavy calcium. Apply to dry tile, allow 2–3 minutes, scrub with nylon brush, rinse thoroughly. Always wear acid-resistant gloves and eye protection.
Bead blasting uses compressed air to propel fine glass beads at tile, physically removing calcium without chemicals or tile damage. Effective for heavy deposits. Requires a partial drain. Professional service, typically $200–$800 depending on pool size.
Keep pH at 7.2–7.4, calcium hardness at 200–400 ppm, and alkalinity at 80–120 ppm. Add a monthly sequestrant to keep calcium in solution. If your fill water is naturally hard, blend with softened water or use more aggressive sequestrant maintenance.