How Much Chlorine Do You Need to Fix a Green Pool?

To fix a green pool, you typically need shock treatment with about 2–3× normal chlorine levels. In most pools, you temporarily hold free chlorine above 5 ppm while running filtration until the water clears.

To fix a green pool, you typically need shock treatment with about 2–3× normal chlorine levels. In most pools, you temporarily hold free chlorine above 5 ppm while running filtration until the water clears. Test first

Use the calculators

Open primary calculator

Related calculator

Steps

What This Means

Green water usually means algae. Chlorine and filtration work together—you need enough sanitizer and enough circulation time.

Recommended Levels

What to do next

Shock the pool, brush walls, run the pump continuously, clean or backwash the filter, and re-test daily until water is clear and chlorine is back in a safe swim range.

Common Questions

How much chlorine to fix a green pool?

Severe algae often needs shock-level chlorine and continuous filtration—use the shock calculator and follow label limits.

Can I swim in a green pool?

No—treat and clear the water first. Follow label wait times after shocking.

How long until a green pool clears?

Often 24–72 hours with proper shock, filtration, and cleaning. Severe cases may take longer.

Do I need algaecide every time?

Not always—many cases resolve with shock, brushing, and filtration. Follow product guidance for your situation.

Why did my pool turn green after rain?

Rain can introduce nutrients and dilute chemistry—test and adjust sanitizer and filtration after storms.

Go deeper

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.

Published by Water Balance Tools · Operated by Albor Digital LLC