Hear from Our Customers
You didn’t put a pool in your backyard to spend Saturday mornings testing pH levels and vacuuming the bottom. You wanted a place where your kids could cool off after school, where you could float on a Sunday afternoon, where friends actually want to come over in the summer.
That’s what regular pool cleaning service gets you. Water that’s always clear. Chemicals that stay balanced. Equipment that works when it’s supposed to.
No more guessing if the chlorine level is right. No more scrubbing algae off the walls because you got busy for two weeks. No more canceling pool plans because the water looks questionable.
You get your weekends back. Your pool stays swim-ready. And when you walk outside with a towel, you can actually get in the water.
We’ve been handling pool maintenance in Douglas County since before most of the subdivisions in Bridgetown were built. We’ve cleaned pools through Georgia summers that hit 98 degrees for weeks straight. We’ve balanced water after storms dumped debris and threw off every chemical level.
We’re licensed, insured, and we’ve seen what happens when pools don’t get proper care. Pumps that fail early. Surfaces that stain. Water that turns green the moment you look away.
That’s why we show up every week, handle the work that keeps your pool functioning, and catch small problems before they cost you real money. Bridgetown homeowners call us when they’re tired of doing it themselves or when their current service keeps missing visits.
We show up on the same day each week, usually when you’re at work. First thing we do is test your water. Not just chlorine—we’re checking pH, alkalinity, calcium hardness, and stabilizer levels. Georgia heat and Bridgetown’s water chemistry mean those numbers shift constantly.
Then we skim the surface, vacuum the bottom, brush the walls and steps, and empty your skimmer baskets. We check your pump, filter, and any other equipment to make sure everything’s running right. If something looks off, we tell you before it breaks.
Before we leave, we add whatever chemicals your pool needs and make notes about what we did. You get a text when we’re done. You come home to clean water.
If you’re around when we’re there, we’ll answer questions. If you’re not, the pool’s ready when you are. Most customers don’t think about their pool maintenance anymore—they just use the pool.
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Every visit covers the same essentials: surface skimming, vacuuming, brushing, basket cleaning, water testing, and chemical adjustments. We’re using commercial-grade test kits and chemicals that actually work in Georgia’s climate, not the stuff you grab at a big box store that’s been sitting on a shelf for months.
Bridgetown’s water tends to run hard, which means calcium buildup is common if you’re not staying on top of it. We adjust for that. Summer storms are frequent here, and they dump phosphates into your pool that feed algae. We handle that too.
We also inspect your equipment during every visit. Your pump should sound a certain way. Your filter pressure should stay in a specific range. Your skimmer and return lines should have proper flow. When something’s starting to go wrong, we usually catch it during a routine visit, which saves you from emergency repair calls later.
You’re not just paying for someone to scoop leaves. You’re paying for someone who knows what a healthy pool looks like in Bridgetown and can keep yours that way without you having to think about it.
Once a week during swim season, which in Bridgetown runs from April through October. Some people try to stretch it to every other week to save money, but Georgia heat accelerates algae growth and chemical depletion faster than you’d expect.
Miss one week in July and you might come home to cloudy water. Miss two weeks and you’re looking at green walls and a shock treatment that costs more than just keeping up with regular service. Weekly visits keep your water consistently clear and your chemical levels stable.
In the off-season, you can usually drop to every other week or monthly maintenance, depending on whether you heat your pool and how much debris falls in. We adjust the schedule based on what your pool actually needs, not what sounds good on paper.
Chemicals are only part of it. You also need to physically remove debris, vacuum the bottom, brush the walls, and clean out your filtration system. Most people who try to DIY their pool care end up doing the easy parts—adding chlorine, skimming leaves—and skipping the labor-intensive stuff that actually prevents problems.
Brushing matters because algae starts on the walls before it takes over your water. Vacuuming matters because dirt and debris on the bottom cloud your water and clog your filter. Checking your equipment matters because a small leak or pressure issue turns into an expensive repair if you catch it too late.
The other difference is knowing what to add and when. Pool chemistry isn’t just dumping in chlorine. You’re balancing six different levels that all affect each other, and Georgia’s heat, rain, and hard water throw those levels off constantly. We test and adjust every week so your water stays balanced instead of swinging between too high and too low.
Your water should be clear enough to see the bottom drain from the deck. Your walls and steps shouldn’t feel slimy when you touch them. Your skimmer baskets shouldn’t be overflowing when you check them mid-week. And your service should be leaving notes or sending updates about what they did and what your chemical levels were.
If you’re constantly dealing with cloudy water, algae spots, or equipment issues, your service is either skipping steps or doesn’t know what they’re doing. A lot of companies in Douglas County send out undertrained techs who skim the surface, dump in some chlorine, and leave. That’s not maintenance—that’s just making it look like they showed up.
You should also be getting consistent visits on the same day each week. If your service keeps rescheduling, skipping weeks, or showing up randomly, they’re not taking your account seriously. Good pool maintenance is about routine and consistency, not just showing up when it’s convenient.
If your pool’s getting proper weekly maintenance, it shouldn’t turn green between visits unless something unusual happens—a major storm, someone leaving the pump off for days, or an equipment failure. Green water means algae has taken over, which happens when chlorine levels drop too low for too long.
We can shock it back to clear, but it’s not a quick fix. It usually takes 24 to 48 hours of treatment, extra chemicals, and running your pump continuously. If it keeps happening, something’s wrong with either your equipment or your maintenance routine.
Most of the green pool calls we get in Bridgetown are from people who’ve been trying to maintain their own pool or who hired a cheap service that’s not actually doing the work. Once we get them on a proper weekly schedule with correct chemical balancing, the green water stops. Algae can’t grow in a pool that’s being maintained right.
Yes. We clean and maintain pools regardless of who built them or what shape they’re in when we start. Most of our maintenance customers didn’t buy their pool from us—they bought their house with a pool already in the backyard, or they had another company install it years ago.
We’ve worked on every type of residential pool in Douglas County. Concrete, fiberglass, vinyl liner. Saltwater systems, traditional chlorine, mineral systems. Old single-speed pumps, new variable-speed pumps, cartridge filters, sand filters, DE filters. If it holds water and it’s in a Bridgetown backyard, we know how to maintain it.
When we take on a new maintenance account, we do a full assessment of your pool and equipment during the first visit. We’ll tell you what condition everything’s in, what needs attention soon, and what’s fine for now. Then we get you on a regular schedule and keep it running right.
Most residential pool cleaning in Bridgetown runs between $100 and $150 per month for weekly service, depending on your pool size and what’s included. That covers all the standard maintenance—skimming, vacuuming, brushing, testing, chemicals, and equipment checks.
If your pool needs extra work when we start—shock treatment for green water, acid wash for staining, equipment repairs—that’s separate. But once we get your pool stabilized and on a regular schedule, your monthly cost stays consistent.
Compare that to what you’d spend doing it yourself: test kits, chemicals, your time every weekend, and the risk of missing something that turns into a bigger problem. Or compare it to what you’d pay for one emergency service call when your pool turns green before a family gathering. Regular maintenance costs less than fixing problems after they happen, and it’s a lot less stressful than trying to keep up with it yourself.