Pool Chemistry Reference Guide

Use this guide to see ideal ranges, what happens when levels drift, and which calculators to use for exact doses.

Quick reference

Parameter Ideal range Too low Too high
Chlorine 1–3 ppm Algae, bacteria Irritation, odor
pH 7.2–7.6 Corrosion, discomfort Weak sanitizer, scale
Total alkalinity 80–120 ppm pH swings Hard to lower pH
Calcium hardness 200–400 ppm Etching, pitting Scale, cloudy water
Cyanuric acid (CYA) 30–50 ppm Chlorine burns off fast Chlorine lock risk
Shock (raise) 10–30 ppm (temporary) Persistent organics Extended no-swim wait
Water temperature 78–82 °F typical swim Slow sanitizer action Faster chlorine use

Chlorine

Ideal: 1–3 ppm free chlorine for most swimming pools (3–5 ppm for hot tubs).

Too low: Bacteria and algae growth; cloudy or green water; combined chlorine may rise.

Too high: Eye and skin irritation; strong odor; longer wait before swimming.

Related:

pH

Ideal: 7.2–7.6 for most pools.

Too low: Metal corrosion, liner damage, swimmer discomfort, aggressive water.

Too high: Reduced chlorine effectiveness, scale formation, cloudy water, slippery feel.

Related:

Total Alkalinity

Ideal: 80–120 ppm (follow surface and sanitizer system guidance).

Too low: pH bounces when you add acid or base; unstable water balance.

Too high: pH tends to stay high; more acid needed to bring pH down.

Related:

Calcium Hardness

Ideal: Often 200–400 ppm for plaster and gunite; vinyl may run lower per manufacturer.

Too low: Water can leach calcium from plaster and grout (etching).

Too high: Scale on tile and equipment; cloudy water when paired with high pH.

Related:

Cyanuric Acid

Ideal: 30–50 ppm for outdoor chlorinated pools using stabilized products.

Too low: Chlorine lost quickly in sunlight; more frequent dosing.

Too high: Sanitizer may test high but work poorly (“chlorine lock”); harder to clear algae.

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Shock Treatment

Ideal: Routine swim range stays 1–3 ppm; shock raises to roughly 10–30 ppm temporarily per label and situation.

Too low (when shocking needed): Chloramines, algae, persistent cloudiness, heavy bather load not cleared.

Too high: Bleached liners, extended no-swim times, irritation; risk if pH is also out of range.

Related:

Water Temperature

Ideal: Many pools are comfortable at 78–82 °F; chemistry targets do not change, but consumption rates do.

Too low: Slower sanitizer activity; some algaecides less effective; shorter swim season comfort issues.

Too high: Faster chlorine demand; more frequent testing in hot tubs and heated pools.

Related:

Common mistakes

Last updated: April 2026