Even if chemistry is correct, cloudy water poses a safety risk beyond pathogens:
You cannot see a drowning swimmer. In water with visibility under 3 feet, a swimmer on the pool floor is invisible to a lifeguard or parent at the deck. The CDC and most state health codes require that the main drain be continuously visible from the deck — if cloudiness prevents this, the pool should not be occupied.
This is why pools at hotels, water parks, and public facilities must close during any significant cloudiness event — regardless of chemistry. Apply the same standard at home if children are swimming.
The health code rule of thumb: if you cannot clearly see the main drain at the bottom of the deep end from the pool deck, the pool is too cloudy for safe swimming. This is not just a chemical safety standard — it's a drowning prevention standard that applies even when chemistry is within range.
| Water Appearance | Likely Cause | Safe to Swim? |
|---|---|---|
| Green or teal cloudy | Algae bloom, very low chlorine | No — treat immediately |
| White/grey cloudy, improving | Dead algae post-shock | Only if FC 1–3 ppm and improving |
| White persistent cloudiness | Calcium precipitation or poor filtration | Test chemistry first |
| Light hazy blue | Fine debris/pollen, minor filtration lag | If FC 1–3 ppm and pH correct, usually OK |
| Milky white, clearing when pump off | Air in plumbing (bubbles) | Generally safe if chemistry is correct |
If you're unsure whether a cloudy pool is safe:
Both conditions must be met before swimming in any pool with noticeable cloudiness.
PoolLens logs water clarity observations alongside chemistry readings — so you can correlate cloudiness events with chemical causes and address them faster the next time.
Open PoolLens Free →A cloudy pool with low chlorine can harbor E. coli, Pseudomonas (causes swimmer's ear), giardia, cryptosporidium, and viruses. Cloudy water also masks drowning hazards — if you can't see the pool floor, the pool should be closed regardless of chemistry.
No. Green or algae-cloudy water indicates severely depleted chlorine — the same conditions that allow algae allow bacterial and pathogen growth. Do not swim until the pool is treated, clear, and chlorine is stable at 1–3 ppm.
Test: free chlorine must be 1–5 ppm, pH must be 7.2–7.8, no green color, and you must be able to see the pool drain from the deck. All four conditions must be met. Chemistry test alone is not sufficient — visibility is a separate safety standard.
Possible causes when chlorine is adequate: clogged or under-run filter (poor filtration), fine debris or pollen, calcium precipitation from high pH and hardness, or high bather load leaving oil and fine particles that take time to filter out. These are usually cosmetic issues — but address them quickly so they don't become sanitation problems.
Yes — if the cloudiness reflects low chlorine or active microbial growth. Reported illnesses from recreational water exposure include swimmer's ear, E. coli infection, giardiasis, cryptosporidiosis, and skin rashes from Pseudomonas. The risk is proportional to how far below 1 ppm free chlorine is and how long the pool has been in that state.