Custom Spas And Hot Tubs, Coffee County GA

A Backyard Spa Built To Last Decades

Custom concrete spas designed for your property, your lifestyle, and Coffee County’s year-round outdoor season — no cookie-cutter shapes, no portable tub compromises.

No Subcontractors, Ever

Our certified crew handles every phase of your spa build — the same team from excavation to finish, so nothing gets lost between handoffs.

Concrete Construction Only

We build exclusively in reinforced concrete — not fiberglass, not vinyl. Your spa is engineered on-site for your specific yard and soil conditions.

30-Plus Years Of Hands-On Experience

The expertise behind every build spans three decades — including the soil quirks, drainage patterns, and permitting process specific to Coffee County.

Permits Handled Start To Finish

We coordinate every Coffee County department — building, environmental health, electrical — so you never have to chase down paperwork or worry about failed inspections.

Custom Concrete Spas, Coffee County

Not Every Spa Is Built The Same Way

There’s a real difference between a portable hot tub you order online and a custom inground spa built into your property from the ground up. One sits in your yard. The other becomes part of it — permanently, structurally, and in a way that actually adds to your home’s value. We design and build custom concrete spas for Coffee County homeowners who want something that fits their backyard, not someone else’s blueprint. Whether you’re planning a new pool and want a spillover hot tub built right alongside it, or you’re interested in a standalone soaking spa tucked into a corner of your property, we start with your space and build from there. Concrete gives us design freedom that fiberglass simply can’t match. Any shape, any depth, any configuration — and it’s built to last as long as the house itself.

Inground Spa Benefits, Coffee County GA

What You Actually Get With A Custom Spa

Beyond the aesthetics, a well-built inground spa changes how you use your backyard — and how much you enjoy being in it.

Integrated Pool Spas And Spillover Designs

The Right Spa Design For Your Setup

Most homeowners we talk to aren’t sure what type of spa they actually want — and that’s completely normal. The terminology alone is confusing. So here’s a plain-language breakdown of what we build and what each one means for your backyard. An integrated pool spa is built as part of your pool — same concrete shell, same equipment, connected water. It’s the most efficient option when you’re building a pool at the same time, and it creates a seamless look that feels intentional rather than added on. A spillover hot tub is elevated above the pool level, so water cascades from the spa down into the pool. It functions as a water feature and a spa simultaneously — one of the most visually striking designs we build, and a popular choice for Coffee County homeowners who want their backyard to feel like something more than just a pool. A standalone custom spa works independently from any pool. It has its own dedicated equipment, its own design, and its own footprint. This is the right call when there’s no pool involved, or when the spa is going in a completely separate area of the property. All three are built in concrete, on-site, to your specifications. None of them come from a catalog.

Custom Spa Construction Process, Coffee County GA

Built Into Your Property, Not Dropped On It

When we build a custom spa, we’re not dropping a pre-manufactured shell into a hole and calling it done. We excavate, set a reinforced steel framework engineered for your specific soil — and Coffee County’s soil can vary significantly from sandy loam near the surface to heavier clay underneath — then apply concrete over that structure. Every jet, every seat, every curve is placed according to the design we worked out with you beforehand. The plumbing is sized for the water pressure you want. The heating system is matched to the volume of water and how you plan to use the spa. If it’s attached to your pool, the equipment integration is planned from the start so both systems work efficiently together. This is also why building your spa during pool construction is the smartest financial move. The excavation equipment is already on-site. The plumbing runs are already being planned. Adding a spa at that stage costs a fraction of what it costs to come back later and do it as a separate project.

Spas & Hot Tubs FAQ

Common Questions About Our Service

What is the difference between a hot tub and a custom inground spa?
A portable hot tub is a manufactured unit — it comes out of a factory in a fixed shape and size, sits on your patio or deck, and leaves with you when you move. A custom inground spa is built on-site from reinforced concrete, designed specifically for your property, and becomes a permanent part of your home. The two aren’t really in the same category. A portable tub depreciates like an appliance. A custom concrete spa appraises as part of your home’s value, lasts indefinitely with proper maintenance, and can be designed to any shape, depth, or configuration you want. If you’re planning a pool, the comparison becomes even clearer — an inground spa integrates with your pool structure and equipment in a way a portable unit simply can’t.
Yes, it’s possible — but it’s worth understanding what’s involved before you decide to wait. Adding a spa to an existing pool means re-mobilizing excavation equipment, re-engineering the plumbing to integrate the new spa with your existing system, and pulling a fresh set of permits through Coffee County’s building and environmental health departments. We’ve done this process many times, and we know exactly how to navigate it locally. That said, the cost is meaningfully higher than building a spa during original pool construction, when the equipment is already on-site and the plumbing is still being planned. If you’re even considering a spa down the road, the best time to bring it up is before we break ground on your pool.
The honest range for a custom inground spa runs from around $7,000 to $20,000 or more for the spa itself, depending on size, design complexity, jet configuration, and finish materials. That figure doesn’t automatically include excavation, plumbing, electrical, equipment, or decking — all of which are part of the real project cost. When a spa is built as part of a new pool project, the integrated cost is typically more favorable because you’re not paying separately to mobilize equipment and crews. We don’t give vague estimates or hide costs until you’re already committed. When you talk to us, we walk through the full picture so you know what you’re actually looking at before you make any decisions.
A spillover hot tub is a spa that sits elevated above your pool, with water cascading over a spillway down into the pool below. It’s one of the most visually striking designs we build — it functions as both a water feature and a fully operational spa. Whether it’s right for your backyard depends on a few things: the slope and layout of your property, how you want the space to look, and your budget, since the raised structure adds some cost compared to a ground-level integrated spa. For Coffee County homeowners with larger lots and room to work with the grade of the land, a spillover design can completely transform how the backyard feels. It’s worth discussing during the design consultation so we can look at your specific property.
A properly built and maintained custom concrete spa doesn’t have a defined lifespan the way a fiberglass unit does. Fiberglass shells can fade, develop gel coat cracks, and eventually need resurfacing or replacement — typically within 15 to 25 years depending on use and maintenance. Concrete, by contrast, is a structural material. The spa becomes part of your property’s permanent infrastructure. The interior finish — plaster, pebble aggregate, or tile — will need to be refreshed over time, but the structure itself doesn’t degrade the way a manufactured shell does. With regular professional maintenance to keep water chemistry balanced and equipment running properly, a concrete spa built by an experienced crew is designed to last as long as the home around it.
Yes — and getting them right matters more than most people realize. In Coffee County, spa and pool construction requires coordination across multiple departments: the county building department for structural permits, environmental health for septic system proximity approvals, and electrical inspection for bonding and wiring compliance. If any of those steps are skipped or done out of order, it can delay your project or — worse — leave you with an unpermitted structure that creates problems when you go to sell the home. We handle every part of this process. We know which Coffee County department needs what, in what order, and how to keep things moving on schedule. You won’t be chasing down paperwork or sitting on hold with county offices. That’s our job, not yours.

Design Consultation And Site Review

We look at your property, talk through how you want to use the spa, and figure out which design fits your space and budget best.

Permits, Engineering, And Scheduling

We pull every required Coffee County permit, handle all department coordination, and give you a clear construction timeline before anything breaks ground.

Concrete Build And Final Walkthrough

Our crew excavates, sets the steel framework, applies concrete, installs all equipment, and walks you through everything before we consider the job done.