Ask a homeowner what "alkalinity" means in their pool, and most will say "it's related to pH." They are not wrong — but they are missing the crucial distinction that makes total alkalinity one of the most important parameters a pool tech manages. Getting alkalinity right unlocks stable pH, predictable dosing, and reduced chemical costs. Getting it wrong means fighting pH constantly, burning through acid, and never quite getting the pool balanced.
This is the foundational concept. pH and total alkalinity are related but distinct measurements:
Think of alkalinity as a buffer between pH and the world. A pool with high alkalinity will barely move its pH when acid rain falls, bathers add organic waste, or you add a dose of chlorine. A pool with low alkalinity will swing dramatically in response to the same inputs.
| Pool Type | Ideal TA Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard chlorine pool | 80–120 ppm | Center target ~100 ppm for easiest pH management |
| Salt water pool (SWG) | 80–120 ppm | Same range; SWG output slightly acidic — higher TA helps |
| Pools with high CYA (above 50 ppm) | 70–90 ppm | CYA contributes cyanurate alkalinity; standard tests overread TA |
| Vinyl liner pools | 100–150 ppm | Slightly higher TA protects liner from pH swings |
| Commercial / bather-heavy pools | 80–100 ppm | High bather load adds alkalinity naturally via body fluids |
When TA is too low, pH becomes unstable and prone to "bouncing" — large swings in response to small inputs. Specific symptoms:
Extremely low alkalinity (below 40 ppm) can lead to corrosive water that etches plaster, dissolves grout, pits concrete, and damages metal equipment. Pool water below pH 7.0 combined with low TA is actively destructive.
When TA is too high, pH becomes "locked" — resistant to adjustment in either direction. It also tends to push pH upward naturally, because the excess bicarbonate equilibrium drives carbonate formation and CO₂ off-gassing, which raises pH. Symptoms:
Sodium bicarbonate (baking soda, NaHCO₃) is the standard treatment. It raises TA with minimal pH impact at normal doses.
| Pool Volume | To raise TA 10 ppm | To raise TA 30 ppm |
|---|---|---|
| 10,000 gal | 1.5 lb | 4.5 lb |
| 15,000 gal | 2.2 lb | 6.6 lb |
| 20,000 gal | 3.0 lb | 9.0 lb |
| 30,000 gal | 4.5 lb | 13.5 lb |
Add sodium bicarbonate by broadcasting around the perimeter of the pool with the pump running. It dissolves quickly and distributes evenly. Large doses (above 10 ppm adjustment) can temporarily cloud water — this clears within 24 hours.
This is where most techs make their biggest alkalinity mistake. When muriatic acid is broadcast across the whole pool, it reduces both pH and TA proportionally. This is useful for lowering pH — but not for specifically targeting high TA without dropping pH below the desired range.
The professional technique for lowering TA while maintaining target pH uses a two-step approach:
Add the full acid dose in one concentrated location — not broadcast across the pool. Pour it into a single spot in the deep end with the pump temporarily turned off or flowing minimally. The concentrated dose acts on carbonate alkalinity preferentially, destroying more TA per unit of acid than broadcasting does.
After the acid has dispersed (allow 30 minutes), run all jets, waterfalls, and aerators. Turn on the spa spillover if available. Use a leaf blower to agitate the water surface if needed. Aeration drives dissolved CO₂ out of the water. As CO₂ leaves, pH rises naturally without any chemical input — and without raising TA. Repeat the test and compare pH and TA after 2–4 hours of aeration.
Standard alkalinity tests (including the Taylor K-2006 using R-0007 and R-0008) measure total alkalinity including cyanurate alkalinity from CYA. At high CYA levels (above 50 ppm), the test will overread true carbonate alkalinity by approximately 1/3 of the CYA level.
For example, if CYA is at 90 ppm and the test reads 120 ppm TA, the actual carbonate alkalinity is approximately 120 - (90/3) = 90 ppm. This is why pools with high CYA often need to target a lower apparent TA (70–90 ppm) to achieve the same carbonate buffering as a pool with 100 ppm TA and low CYA.
PoolLens logs TA readings with timestamps, notes, and history — so you can see if a pool is chronically trending high or low and catch it before it causes pH management problems. Free, offline, and built for working techs.
Open PoolLens Free →Total alkalinity (TA) is the water's buffering capacity — its ability to resist pH change. A pool with proper TA (80–120 ppm) holds pH stable between acid additions and chlorine dosing. Low TA causes pH bounce. High TA makes pH hard to adjust and tends to push pH upward over time.
pH measures how acidic or basic the water is right now. Total alkalinity measures the water's capacity to resist pH change. A pool can have correct pH but low alkalinity, meaning pH will swing wildly with small inputs. Or it can have high alkalinity and normal pH but pH will be hard to adjust when needed.
Lower TA using the slug-dose aeration method: add the full muriatic acid dose in one concentrated area of the pool, which drives down TA more than pH. Then run jets and aeration to drive CO₂ out of the water, which raises pH back to target without raising TA. Repeat as needed.
Low alkalinity causes pH bounce — large, rapid pH swings in response to small inputs like rain, bather waste, or chemical additions. pH can drop dramatically after a rainstorm in a low-alkalinity pool, making water corrosive to surfaces and equipment.