Hear from Our Customers
You didn’t buy a pool to spend your weekends testing pH levels and scrubbing walls. You wanted a place to cool off after work, let the kids burn energy, and host without stress.
But pools don’t stay clean on their own. Miss a week and you’re looking at cloudy water. Miss two and you’re dealing with algae. Fall behind on chemical balancing and you’re risking equipment damage that costs more than a year of professional service.
That’s what weekly pool maintenance actually prevents. Not just dirty water—but the expensive consequences of inconsistent care. When your pool gets regular attention from someone who knows what they’re doing, the water stays clear, the equipment lasts longer, and you’re not scrambling to get it swim-ready every time the temperature hits 80.
You get your weekends back. The pool’s always ready. And you’re not second-guessing whether you added too much chlorine or not enough.
We serve Holt and the surrounding Douglas County area with one focus: keeping residential pools in shape year-round. We’re not a landscaping company that also cleans pools. We’re not selling you a hot tub on the side.
We show up every week, test your water, balance your chemicals, brush your walls, vacuum your floor, and check your equipment. If something’s off, we tell you before it becomes a problem.
Our techs are CPO certified, which means they’ve been trained in proper pool chemistry and maintenance standards. We carry full liability insurance. And we don’t lock you into long-term contracts—you stay because the work’s solid, not because you’re stuck.
Holt’s climate means your pool can be used nearly year-round, but it also means debris, pollen, and fluctuating temperatures that throw off your water balance. We adjust for that every visit.
First visit, we assess your pool’s current condition—water chemistry, equipment function, surface condition. We’ll test for pH, chlorine, alkalinity, and calcium hardness. Then we get it where it needs to be.
After that, it’s consistent weekly service. We skim the surface, brush the walls and steps, vacuum the floor, empty your skimmer and pump baskets, and backwash or clean your filter as needed. We test and adjust your chemicals on-site so your water stays balanced.
We also inspect your equipment during every visit. Pump running louder than usual? Pressure gauge reading high? Filter looking worn? We catch it early and let you know what’s going on before it turns into a breakdown.
After each service, you get a report with your water test results and photos of your pool. No surprises. No guessing whether we showed up. You’ll know exactly what was done and what your pool looks like.
If you need something outside the weekly schedule—acid wash, equipment repair, one-time cleaning before a party—we handle that too. But the weekly visits are what keep you from needing emergency calls in the first place.
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Every visit covers surface skimming, wall and step brushing, floor vacuuming, basket cleaning, and filter maintenance. We’re also testing and adjusting your water chemistry to keep pH, chlorine, alkalinity, and calcium levels where they should be.
Georgia’s heat and humidity create the perfect environment for algae and bacteria growth. Add in pollen from pine trees, debris from storms, and the occasional stretch of heavy rain, and your pool’s working overtime to stay balanced. Our job is to stay ahead of it.
In Holt, most pools can run nearly year-round, which is great for swimming but means your maintenance can’t take a break either. Water doesn’t stop evaporating. Chemicals don’t stop breaking down. Equipment doesn’t stop running. Consistent care is what prevents the bigger problems—and the bigger bills.
We also keep an eye on your pool’s equipment. A small leak today becomes a flooded equipment pad tomorrow. A clogged filter today becomes a burned-out pump next month. Catching these things early saves you money and keeps your pool running.
You’re not just paying for cleaning. You’re paying for someone to notice what’s wrong before you do.
Weekly service is the standard, and it’s not arbitrary. Pools in Georgia deal with heat, humidity, pollen, and debris nearly year-round, all of which affect water chemistry and cleanliness.
If you skip a week, you’re not just looking at a dirtier pool—you’re looking at imbalanced water that can damage your equipment and surfaces. Chlorine breaks down faster in heat and sunlight. Algae grows quickly in warm water. Debris clogs your filter and puts strain on your pump.
Most pool equipment manufacturers recommend weekly maintenance to keep warranties valid and extend the life of your system. The cost of weekly service is a fraction of what you’ll pay to replace a pump, resurface a pool, or treat a serious algae bloom. It’s preventive, not optional.
You can do it—plenty of people do. But most underestimate how much time it takes and how easy it is to make costly mistakes.
Pool chemistry isn’t guesswork. Add too much acid and you’ll lower your pH so much that your water becomes corrosive, eating away at your pool’s surface and equipment. Add too little chlorine and you’re inviting algae and bacteria. Forget to backwash your filter and your pump works harder, wears out faster, and eventually fails.
The average pool owner spends three to five hours per week on maintenance when they’re doing it right. That’s testing, balancing chemicals, brushing, vacuuming, and cleaning equipment. And if something goes wrong—green water, broken pump, cracked tile—you’re troubleshooting on your own or paying even more for emergency repairs.
Professional service costs less than most people think, especially when you factor in the time saved and the mistakes avoided. It’s not about whether you’re capable—it’s about whether it’s worth your time and risk.
Year-round. Holt’s climate means your pool doesn’t really go dormant the way it would up north.
Even in the cooler months, your water still needs to be balanced, your filter still needs to run, and debris still needs to be removed. Letting your pool sit untreated for months leads to staining, algae growth, and equipment issues that are expensive to reverse.
A lot of people think they can shut the pool down in November and open it back up in April. What they find is green water, clogged filters, and a hefty bill to get everything back to swimmable condition. Keeping up with basic maintenance through the off-season prevents that.
We adjust service frequency based on usage and season, but we don’t disappear for half the year. Your pool’s health depends on consistent care, not seasonal attention.
There are usually signs before something completely dies. Your pump might start making a louder humming or grinding noise. Your filter pressure might read higher than normal, meaning it’s clogged or struggling. You might notice leaks around the pump or filter, or your water level dropping faster than usual.
Sometimes the signs are subtler—your pool’s not staying as clear as it used to, even though you’re adding chemicals. That often points to a filtration problem or circulation issue.
During our weekly visits, we’re checking for these things. We’ll notice if your pump’s running hot, if your pressure gauge is creeping up, or if your skimmer’s not pulling like it should. Catching it early usually means a repair instead of a replacement.
Most pool equipment lasts 8 to 12 years with proper maintenance. But if it’s neglected—running dry, clogged with debris, or dealing with unbalanced water—it’ll fail a lot sooner. Regular service extends that lifespan and gives you a heads-up before you’re dealing with a dead pump on a Saturday afternoon.
DIY looks cheaper until you factor in your time, the chemicals, the equipment, and the mistakes. A basic chemical kit runs $30 to $50 a month. A good test kit is another $50 to $100. Brushes, nets, vacuum heads—it adds up.
Then there’s your time. Three to five hours a week, every week. That’s 150 to 250 hours a year spent maintaining your pool instead of using it.
And if you make a mistake—over-chlorinate and damage your liner, let algae take over and need an acid wash, burn out your pump because your filter was clogged—you’re looking at repair bills that dwarf a year of professional service. A pump replacement runs $800 to $1,500. Resurfacing a pool can hit $5,000 or more.
Professional service typically costs $125 to $150 per month for weekly maintenance. That includes chemicals, labor, and expertise. You’re not just paying for someone to skim your pool—you’re paying for someone to keep your $30,000 investment in working order and catch problems before they cost you thousands.
Most of our clients tried doing it themselves first. They switched because the time and stress weren’t worth the savings.
Yes. Green pools, cloudy water, algae blooms, equipment failures—we handle all of it.
If your pool’s already in rough shape, we’ll start with an assessment to figure out what’s going on. Usually it’s a combination of things: unbalanced water, clogged filter, failing pump, or lack of circulation. We’ll shock the water, clean or backwash the filter, brush and vacuum the surfaces, and get your chemistry back in range.
Depending on how bad it is, it might take a few days to clear up. Severe cases might need an acid wash or drain and refill, but that’s rare.
Once it’s back to normal, weekly service keeps it from happening again. Most pool problems aren’t sudden—they’re the result of weeks or months of neglect. Consistent maintenance prevents the cycle of crisis and recovery.
If your pool’s been sitting for a while or you’ve been struggling to keep it clear, call us. We’ll get it back to swimmable and keep it that way.