Walk into any pool store and you will be offered a phosphate remover sooner or later. The pitch goes something like this: "Phosphates feed algae. Remove the phosphates, starve the algae, no more algae problem." It sounds logical. Pool techs need to understand whether the chemistry actually supports this claim — or whether phosphate removers are a profitable upsell that distracts from the real issue.
Phosphates (orthophosphates, polyphosphates) are compounds containing phosphorus that enter pool water from multiple sources:
Phosphate is measured in parts per billion (ppb). Levels of 200–500 ppb are common in maintained pools. Pools with heavy organic loading, adjacent landscaping, or high-phosphate fill water can reach 2,000–5,000 ppb.
Phosphorus is an essential macronutrient for algae growth — this is true. Algae cannot grow without it. In natural ecosystems, phosphorus is often the "limiting nutrient" — the one that controls how much algae can grow. Reducing phosphate in a lake or pond genuinely reduces algae bloom intensity.
But pools are not lakes. The critical difference: pools use biocides (chlorine) to control algae. In a properly chlorinated pool, algae don't get the chance to grow to a density where nutrient limitation matters. The chlorine kills them at the cellular level before the population can establish.
Despite the skepticism, there are scenarios where phosphate removal provides real operational benefit:
Very high phosphate levels (above 2,000 ppb) can increase organic loading in the pool, which increases chlorine demand. A pool requiring unusually high chlorine doses to maintain target FC may benefit from phosphate reduction — it can reduce the chlorine demand and lower ongoing chemical costs.
After a SLAM treatment, the dead algae cells release significant phosphates into the water. This creates a nutrient-rich environment that can fuel rapid re-growth if chlorine drops temporarily. Phosphate removal after SLAM completion (before dropping back to maintenance FC) can reduce the risk of quick algae return.
Pools surrounded by heavily fertilized lawns or with lots of organic debris input may genuinely benefit from regular phosphate maintenance — especially if the tech cannot visit frequently enough to always catch FC drops before algae establishes.
Some SWG manufacturers recommend keeping phosphates below 500 ppb to prevent scale and biofilm formation on titanium cell plates. This is a legitimate equipment protection reason for phosphate management, separate from algae prevention.
| Product | Active Ingredient | Dose (per 10K gal) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Natural Chemistry PHOSfree | Lanthanum carbonate | 1 qt per 900 ppb reduction | Most widely used; works via filtration |
| SeaKlear Phosphate Remover | Lanthanum chloride solution | Per label chart | Liquid; must be filtered aggressively after |
| BioGuard Pool Tonic | Lanthanum-based | Per label chart | Combined with enzyme for organic loading |
| Orenda PR-10,000 | Lanthanum chloride (10%) | Per chart — very concentrated | Professional only; extremely effective but clouds water |
Phosphate removers are not scams — they do what they claim. Lanthanum compounds do bind and remove phosphates from pool water. But the marketing claim that "lower phosphates = no algae" overstates the case significantly in a pool that is properly chlorinated.
The hierarchy of algae prevention:
PoolLens lets you log phosphate readings alongside all other chemistry parameters for each account. Track which pools are high-phosphate environments and schedule remover treatments proactively. Free and offline.
Open PoolLens Free →Phosphate removers do not reliably prevent algae by themselves. While phosphates are a nutrient algae uses, algae growth in pools is primarily controlled by chlorine — not by limiting phosphates. Proper chlorine levels kill algae regardless of phosphate content. Phosphate removal provides secondary value when chlorine management is already excellent.
Most pool professionals consider phosphate levels above 500 ppb worth addressing, and levels above 1,000 ppb as high. However, a pool maintained at proper chlorine levels will stay algae-free at 2,000+ ppb phosphates — which is why phosphate testing is not on the standard chemistry checklist for most service companies.
Phosphate removers work by binding phosphates to a precipitate that sinks or becomes trapped by the filter. Common products include Natural Chemistry's PHOSfree, SeaKlear Phosphate Remover, and BioGuard Pool Tonic. After treatment, filter carefully and backwash or clean the filter to remove the phosphate precipitate.
Algae in a properly chlorinated pool is almost always caused by high CYA reducing effective chlorine, flow or circulation dead spots where chlorine doesn't reach, brushing failures on surfaces with established biofilm, or a green algae strain with partial chlorine resistance. Phosphates are rarely the primary cause in a well-maintained pool.