Calcium Hardness in Pools Explained

Quick Answer

Calcium hardness (CH) measures how much dissolved calcium is in pool water. Target 200–400 ppm. Water with very low CH is "hungry" and dissolves plaster, grout, and metal surfaces. Water with very high CH deposits scale on the heater, tile, and plumbing.

What Is Calcium Hardness

Calcium hardness (CH) measures the concentration of dissolved calcium ions (Ca²⁺) in pool water. Calcium is an essential mineral component of pool water balance. Along with pH and total alkalinity, calcium hardness is one of three major factors in the Langelier Saturation Index (LSI) — the calculation that determines whether pool water is corrosive (dissolving surfaces) or scale-forming (depositing minerals). Calcium chloride (CaCl₂) is the standard product used to raise pool calcium hardness.

Why It Matters

Pool water naturally seeks mineral equilibrium. Water with insufficient calcium (below 150 ppm) is chemically "hungry" — it will extract calcium from plaster, grout, concrete, tile grout, and metal equipment to satisfy its demand, causing pitting, etching, and corrosion. Water with excess calcium (above 500 ppm) combined with high pH and alkalinity deposits calcium carbonate scale on pool surfaces, heater elements, and plumbing, reducing equipment efficiency and lifespan.

Ideal Range

ParameterValueNotes
Calcium Hardness (pools)200–400 ppmVinyl liner pools can go lower (175–225 ppm)
Calcium Hardness (hot tubs)150–250 ppmLower range preferred; high CH in spas causes scale faster
Calcium Hardness (fiberglass)200–350 ppmFiberglass is more tolerant of low CH than plaster

Symptoms When Too Low

SymptomWhat It MeansFix
Pitting or etching of plaster surfaceAggressive low-CH water dissolves calcium from surfacesRaise CH to 200–400 ppm with calcium chloride
Corrosion of metal componentsWater leaching minerals from ladder rails and fittingsAdd calcium chloride; inspect metal for damage; use sequestrant
Foaming in hot tubsSoft water (low CH) creates stable foam bubblesRaise CH to 150–250 ppm; drain and refill if severely soft

Symptoms When Too High

SymptomWhat It MeansFix
White scale on tile and waterlineCalcium carbonate deposits in supersaturated waterLower pH to 7.2; use scale inhibitor; acid wash deposits
Cloudy waterMicro-scale particles suspended in high-CH waterTest full chemistry; lower pH and TA; run filter with clarifier
Reduced heater efficiencyScale coats heater elements, reducing heat transferDrain 20–30% and refill with softer water; acid clean heater

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is calcium hardness in pools?

Calcium hardness (CH) measures the concentration of dissolved calcium ions in pool water. It is one of three key parameters (with pH and total alkalinity) that determine water balance. Properly balanced calcium hardness prevents both corrosive water (which attacks surfaces) and scale-forming water (which deposits white mineral deposits on equipment and surfaces).

How do I raise calcium hardness?

Add calcium chloride (CaCl₂) — sold as a pool chemical or as ice melt. About 12 ounces (340g) per 10,000 gallons raises CH by approximately 10 ppm. Pre-dissolve in a bucket of water before adding, and pour slowly near a return jet with the pump running. Calcium chloride dissolves exothermically (gets hot) — always add chemical to water, not water to chemical.

Can I lower calcium hardness?

The primary way to lower CH is dilution — drain 20–30% of the pool water and replace with lower-hardness water. Chemical sequestrants (chelating agents) bind calcium ions and keep them in suspension, preventing scale, but don't actually reduce the CH test reading. If your fill water is naturally high in calcium (above 400 ppm), consider a water softener for refill water.

What does low calcium hardness do to a pool?

Water with low calcium (below 150 ppm) is chemically unsatisfied and will extract calcium from plaster, grout, tile, and metal fittings — causing pitting, etching, and corrosion. Fiberglass pools are more tolerant of low CH, but plaster, shotcrete, and concrete pools develop visible surface damage within months if CH is chronically low.

What is the ideal calcium hardness for hot tubs?

Hot tubs should maintain 150–250 ppm — slightly lower than pools because the smaller water volume and higher temperatures (100–104°F) make chemistry shifts more intense. Low CH in hot tubs commonly causes foam (soft water creates more stable bubbles), and high CH combined with high spa temperatures promotes rapid scale formation on heater elements.

Does calcium hardness affect chlorine?

Calcium hardness doesn't directly affect chlorine chemistry, but it's a critical factor in the Langelier Saturation Index (LSI), which determines overall water balance. Proper CH combined with correct pH, alkalinity, and temperature creates balanced water that protects equipment and surfaces — creating the stable environment where chlorine performs most effectively and predictably.

WaterBalanceTools provides practical calculators and guides for pool and hot tub water chemistry.

Published by Water Balance Tools · Operated by Albor Digital LLC

Last updated: April 2026