You wake up, look outside, and your pool looks like someone poured a gallon of milk into it. It isn't green, so you know it isn't an active algae bloom. You test your chlorine, and the levels are perfectly normal. So why is the water completely opaque?
Cloudy water is one of the most frustrating problems for a pool owner, but it is highly predictable. It almost always boils down to one of three culprits: mechanical failure, suspended environmental particles, or a chemical "snowstorm."
Did you recently shock a green pool? When you successfully kill algae with high doses of chlorine, the algae turns gray or white. Those millions of dead microscopic plant cells remain suspended in the water.
Your filter is responsible for catching these dead cells. If your water stays cloudy days after a shock treatment, you likely have a mechanical issue:
Sometimes, the particles making your water cloudy are simply too small for your filter to catch. Sunscreen, body oils, pollen, and microscopic dust can pass right through the sand or paper pleats of a standard filter.
The Fix: You need a Clarifier or a Flocculant. These chemicals act like magnets. They bind the microscopic particles together into larger clumps so your filter can finally trap them, or so they sink to the floor for you to vacuum out.
This is the most misunderstood cause of cloudy water. If your filtration is perfect and you have no dead algae, your pool chemistry is likely out of balance.
Water can only hold a certain amount of dissolved calcium. This capacity is measured by the Langelier Saturation Index (LSI). If your pH, Alkalinity, and Calcium Hardness spike too high, the water becomes "oversaturated." It physically cannot hold the calcium anymore, and forces it out of solution into a visible, milky white dust. We call this a calcium precipitation snowstorm.
Use our Interactive LSI Visualizer below. Enter your current test results to see if your water is actively pushing calcium out of solution.
👉 Test Your LSI NowSlide the chemistry values below. Watch what happens to the pool water when the pH or Calcium Hardness gets too high!
If your LSI is high (above +0.3), your filter will never clear the pool because the water is actively generating new calcium dust. Lower your pH using Muriatic Acid to bring the LSI back into balance. Once the LSI is below +0.3, the calcium will dissolve back into the water, clearing it up almost instantly.
If your chemistry is perfectly balanced but the water is still milky, your filter is the bottleneck. Turn off the pump and chemically soak your cartridge pleats, or perform a heavy backwash on your sand filter.
If you have a pool party tomorrow and need the water clear tonight, use a chemical Flocculant. It binds all suspended particles together into heavy clumps that sink to the bottom overnight. The next morning, you must manually vacuum the clumps to "Waste" (bypassing the filter entirely). Note: Do not run your filter on normal settings while Flocculant is in the water, or it will gum up the plumbing!
If you have balanced the water and run the pump for days with no improvement, the internal components of your filter might be torn or broken. Connect with a local pro to inspect your equipment pad.
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