The filter pressure gauge is the pool system's health monitor. When it reads lower than normal with the pump running at full speed, something is preventing the pump from generating its rated head pressure. The causes fall into four categories: air ingestion, suction restriction, internal pump failure, and valve issues. This guide works through each one in diagnostic order.
You cannot diagnose low pressure without knowing what "normal" is. For every pool you service, record the operating pressure on a clean filter at the beginning of the season. Write it on a piece of tape stuck to the filter body. If you do not have a baseline, start by cleaning the filter and noting the pressure afterward — that becomes your new reference.
Filter pressure that is 8–10 PSI above baseline = dirty filter. Pressure that is more than 5 PSI below baseline = pump underperforming. These are opposite problems that look similar (water not moving well) but have completely different fixes.
Air ingestion is the most common cause of low pressure. A pump pulling air instead of water generates almost no usable head pressure. Look for air bubbles visible in the pump basket through the clear lid. The basket housing should be completely full of water with the pump running — any air pocket indicates an air entry point.
Common air entry sources in order of frequency: lid o-ring, suction union o-ring, cracked suction pipe fitting, water level below skimmer, and a weeping pump shaft seal. Address these first before looking for more obscure causes.
A partially blocked suction side starves the impeller of water. The impeller spins at full speed but cannot pull enough volume to generate rated pressure. Causes: clogged pump basket, clogged skimmer basket, a partially closed suction valve, or debris packed at a suction fitting in the pool (main drain cover packed with leaves, for example). Check and clear all suction-side blockages, then recheck pressure.
When the basket is clean, suction valves are open, and there is no visible air — but pressure is still low — suspect a clogged impeller. A single leaf, rubber band, or debris fragment lodged between impeller vanes reduces flow significantly without making any noise (unlike a debris-chewing impeller, which rattles). Turn off the pump, disconnect power, remove the basket, and probe the impeller throat with a thin screwdriver or wire. Clear any debris and retest.
A suction-side valve that is partially closed creates restriction that shows up as low pressure. Check every valve: main drain valve, skimmer valve, and any other inlet valves. A valve that looks open but has an internal failure (broken gate, collapsed ball) can look correct externally while restricting flow internally. Test by fully opening each valve one at a time and observing pressure response.
After ruling out all external causes, the problem may be internal:
These require opening the pump wet end and inspecting components directly. Compare impeller condition to manufacturer specifications or a new impeller for reference. A worn impeller typically shows smooth, rounded vanes where new ones are sharp and well-defined.
| Symptom | Most Likely Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Air in basket, very low pressure | Air ingestion | Find and fix air entry point |
| No air, low pressure | Clogged impeller or valve | Clear impeller; open valves |
| Pressure normal at start, drops | Building suction blockage | Check basket, lid o-ring |
| All external checks pass, low pressure | Impeller wear or diffuser crack | Open wet end; inspect components |
Record clean operating pressure at season start, note any pressure anomalies, and track repairs. PoolLens stores every pool's service history offline. Free for pool service professionals.
Open PoolLens Free →Normal operating pressure varies by system — a typical residential pool runs 10–20 PSI on a clean filter. The key is the baseline: record the pressure on a clean filter and use that as your reference. 8–10 PSI above baseline means the filter needs cleaning. Significantly below baseline means the pump is underperforming.
Yes. Impeller vanes erode over years of operation, especially when pumping water with sand or debris. A worn impeller generates less head pressure and lower flow than a new one at the same RPM. If all other causes are ruled out, impeller wear is the remaining explanation for chronically low pressure.
The diffuser is the internal component that converts impeller velocity into pressure. A cracked or damaged diffuser allows water to bypass the pressure conversion step, resulting in high flow velocity but low pressure. Inspect the diffuser when the impeller is removed — cracks are usually visible.
Yes. A VSP at low speed intentionally runs at lower pressure and flow. Ensure you are reading pressure at the same speed setting each time you compare. If pressure is lower than expected at a specific programmed speed, the diagnosis applies the same way as for a single-speed pump.