Why Pool Chlorine Disappears Overnight
Quick Answer
If free chlorine drops to near-zero overnight, the pool has chlorine demand — usually caused by algae growth, high phosphates, dead organic matter, or insufficient cyanuric acid (CYA) allowing chlorine to gas off during the day. Solve it by shocking to breakpoint, clearing organic matter, and confirming CYA is 30–50 ppm.
- Overnight FC loss is almost always a chlorine demand issue, not a dosing problem
- Common causes: algae, high phosphates, insufficient CYA, organic debris
- The fix is a large breakpoint shock dose — not just topping up FC
- Check CYA levels; below 30 ppm outdoors loses FC rapidly to UV
When free chlorine disappears overnight, the water has a chlorine demand — reactive organic matter or algae is consuming FC faster than it can be maintained. Adding more chlorine without resolving the demand is ineffective.
How to diagnose overnight chlorine loss
Test FC at dusk, then again at dawn before the pump runs. A drop of more than 1 ppm overnight (with no bathers) strongly indicates active consumption. A drop of 3+ ppm suggests significant algae growth even if water looks clear.
Causes and fixes
| Cause | Signs | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Early algae (invisible) | FC at zero in AM, slightly green tint | Triple-dose shock + brush walls |
| High phosphates | FC drops despite regular dosing | Phosphate remover, then shock |
| CYA too low (<30 ppm) | FC fine in evening, gone by morning | Add stabilizer to 30–50 ppm |
| Heavy debris / organic load | Leaves, grass, sunscreen residue | Skim, vacuum, then shock |
| Chlorine demand from new fill | After refill or heavy dilution | Super-chlorinate to 10 ppm FC |
| High combined chlorine (CC) | Strong chlorine smell, irritation | Breakpoint shock to oxidize CC |
The breakpoint shock method
Breakpoint chlorination means raising FC high enough to oxidize all combined chlorine and organic demand at once. Typically you need to raise FC to 10× the combined chlorine reading. Use the shock calculator to determine the dose for your pool volume.
Preventive steps
- Test CYA monthly and maintain 30–50 ppm for outdoor pools.
- Remove organic debris before it sinks and consumes FC.
- Maintain FC at 2–3 ppm (not the bare minimum) during peak season.
- Run the filter for a full turnover cycle daily.
Calculator
Pool Shock Calculator · Full Chemical Calculator
Reference: Pool Chlorine Levels Chart
Related Pool Chemistry Guides
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- Green Pool How Much Chlorine
- High Chlorine How To Lower
- Shock for 10,000 gal pool
- Shock for 15,000 gal pool
- Shock for 20,000 gal pool
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Tools
Hub guide
- Typical range: 1–3 ppm chlorine
- Recommended pH: 7.2–7.6
- Test water regularly
WaterBalanceTools provides practical calculators and guides for pool and hot tub water chemistry. These tools are designed to help maintain safe chlorine, pH, and total alkalinity within a healthy water balance.
Last updated: April 2026