Pool equipment pad full service

Pool Equipment Annual Service Checklist: What Pros Do Every Year

📅 April 14, 2026⏱ 7 min read

Weekly chemical service keeps the water safe. Annual equipment service keeps the machinery alive. These are two entirely different jobs, and conflating them is how expensive equipment fails mid-season. An annual service is a methodical, every-component inspection and tune-up that takes 2–3 hours but prevents the majority of in-season breakdowns. Here is the complete checklist professionals follow.

Pump

Filter

Heater

Salt Chlorinator (if present)

Automation and Controls

Plumbing and Valves

Document every item with pass/fail status in PoolLens. This creates a service record that protects you legally, reminds you what was marginal and needs rechecking, and gives clients confidence that their equipment was properly reviewed.

End-of-Service Report

After completing the checklist, present the client with a written summary of findings: items that are in good shape, items that are marginal and should be watched, and items that need immediate attention. This is how a $250 annual service call becomes the starting point for $800 in justified equipment repairs — not because you are upselling, but because a thorough inspection actually finds real problems before they become emergencies.

Run the Annual Checklist in PoolLens

PoolLens tracks every checklist item per account, flags overdue service, and keeps a full history of every visit. Take it on the road — works fully offline. Free for pool service pros.

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Frequently Asked Questions

When is the best time to do an annual pool equipment service?

Spring opening is the ideal time — before the season begins, before any warranty service issues arise, and while the equipment has had all winter to show its weaknesses. Some techs also do a mid-season check in late summer and a closing inspection in fall.

What gets missed most often in a pool equipment service?

The three most-skipped items are: lubricating all o-rings (not just the pump lid), checking automation controller firmware, and inspecting the heater heat exchanger for scale buildup. These all cause expensive failures when neglected.

How long does a thorough annual equipment service take?

A full service on a typical residential equipment pad with pump, filter, heater, and basic automation takes 2–3 hours. A commercial pad or multi-pump system takes 4–6 hours. Never rush it — missing one item can mean a callback at the worst possible time.

Should I charge separately for annual equipment service?

Yes. Annual equipment service is a distinct deliverable from weekly chemical service. It requires more time, expertise, and often parts. Many service companies charge $150–$300 for a residential annual service, separate from the maintenance contract.