Cloudy Pool Water: Why It Happens and How to Fix It
Four things make pool water cloudy: a dirty or underperforming filter, low chlorine, chemistry imbalance (high pH, alkalinity, or calcium), or early-stage algae. The fix depends on the cause. Here’s how to identify which problem you’re dealing with — and fix it.
For a broader look at algae and water clarity issues, our pool algae and water clarity hub is the starting point.
Video guide
Video: “How To Clear A Green Pool FAST” by Swim University
Is This Guide for You?
:
- Pool water is hazy, milky-white, or cloudy blue — unclear but not visibly green
- Water turned cloudy after a storm, heavy use, or shocking
- You’re seeing the “cloudy blue” look after algae treatment and want to know what’s happening
This guide isn’t for you if:
- Your pool is visibly green — that’s a full algae bloom and needs green pool water treatment first
- You see yellow sandy patches or black spots on surfaces — those are specific algae types covered under pool algae types and treatment
Special case: if your water turned cloudy blue after shocking, jump to the section below — that’s a different (and normal) situation.
Quick diagnosis — why is your pool cloudy?
Work through these four questions to identify your cause before picking a fix. Applying the wrong fix wastes time and chemicals.
Question 1: When did you last clean your filter? If it’s been more than 4 weeks, or your filter pressure gauge reads 8-10 PSI above its clean baseline, filtration is almost certainly your problem.
Question 2: What is your free chlorine level? Test with a reliable kit (not strips). If FC is below 1 ppm, low chlorine is the cause. Combined chlorine (CC) above 0.5 ppm signals chloramines — a related chlorine problem.
Question 3: What do your pH, alkalinity, and calcium hardness read? Target ranges to check against:
| Parameter | Target Range | Problem Level |
|---|---|---|
| Free Chlorine | 1-3 ppm | Below 1 ppm |
| pH | 7.4-7.6 | Above 7.8 |
| Total Alkalinity | 100-150 ppm | Above 150 ppm |
| Calcium Hardness | 175-225 ppm (vinyl) / 200-275 ppm (concrete) | Above 400 ppm |
| CYA | 30-50 ppm (chlorine) | Below 30 ppm |
Question 4: What happened just before the cloudiness appeared? Rain, a pool party, or a thunderstorm introduces phosphates, debris, and bather contaminants that spike chlorine demand and cause cloudiness. A faint green tint instead of white haze points toward early algae.
Cause 1: poor filtration (most common)
Cloudy water with balanced chemistry is almost always a filtration problem. The filter media is too dirty or too worn to trap the small particles that make water look hazy.
Signs this is your cause: Water stays cloudy even when chemistry tests correctly. Filter pressure is elevated; water was clear before a long stretch without filter cleaning.
Fix:
First, clean your filter by backwashing sand and DE filters thoroughly. For cartridge filters, remove them, rinse with a hose, then soak overnight in commercial cleaner. Next, empty skimmer and pump baskets to avoid reducing flow significantly. Then, increase the run time to 10-12 hours per day, eight hours is the minimum but aim higher when clearing cloudy water. Finally, check return jet aim by pointing jets downward at 45 degrees, all in the same rotational direction to maximize circulation through the whole pool.
Filter type affects how long clearing takes. DE filters are fastest. Cartridge filters run medium speed. Sand filters are the slowest — a clean sand filter can still take a week or more to clear cloudy water even after the root cause is resolved.
Skip it.
Skip it.
It works.
Schedule: clean filter sand every 5 years, replace cartridges every 2-3 years, inspect DE grids annually.
Cause 2: low chlorine
Without sufficient free chlorine, bacteria and organic debris accumulate. Cloudy water is the first warning sign — before visible algae growth begins.
Signs this is your cause: FC tests below 1 ppm. Combined chlorine (chloramines) above 0.5 ppm; water smells strongly of chlorine despite testing low.
Fix:
First, shock the pool with cal-hypo to raise FC levels and kill bacteria effectively, even if there’s no visible algae. Consult our how to shock a pool guide for detailed instructions. Next, check your CYA level to ensure proper protection against UV degradation: aim for 30-50 ppm in chlorine pools and 60-90 ppm in saltwater pools. If the CYA is below 30 ppm, chlorine will burn off too quickly due to excessive sunlight exposure. Then, run the filter continuously day and night until the water clears.
The TroubleFreePool SLAM method{:target=“_blank”} offers the most rigorous approach to FC restoration — useful when standard shocking isn’t clearing the water after 24-48 hours.
Cause 3: chemistry imbalance
High pH, alkalinity, or calcium hardness causes dissolved minerals to precipitate out of solution as tiny particles — which look like cloudiness even though the water is technically clean.
Easy to miss.
High pH (above 7.8): Makes chlorine less effective AND clouds water. Fix with muriatic acid or pH decreaser. Add slowly around the pool perimeter, not in one spot.
High total alkalinity (above 150 ppm): Causes scale and cloudy water. Also fixed with muriatic acid, added slowly.
High calcium hardness (above 400 ppm): Calcium carbonate particles precipitate out and cloud water. No chemical will lower calcium hardness — the only fix is a partial drain and refill to dilute the concentration. This is the one cause that frustrates pool owners looking for a chemical shortcut.
Always balance in this sequence: pH first, then TA, then wait 24 hours and retest before adjusting again.
For precise dosing calculations, PoolMath{:target=“_blank”} will tell you exactly how much muriatic acid or any other chemical to add based on your pool volume and current readings.
Common one.
Our pool water balance guide covers the full chemistry correction process if you need detail on any of these parameters.
Cause 4: contaminants or early algae
Cloudiness that appeared after rain, a big swim session, or a thunderstorm has a different cause: organic debris and bather waste (sunscreen, body oils, nitrogen compounds) spiked chlorine demand and dropped FC below protective levels.
Signs this is your cause: Cloudiness appeared after a specific event. Faint greenish tint (early algae) is visible; FC was adequate before the event.
Fix:
- If you see a green tint: treat for algae first. Clarifier won’t help with living algae. See our pool algae types and treatment guide.
- If no green tint: shock at double dose, run filter continuously, then add clarifier after FC drops below 5 ppm.
Don’t add clarifier while shocking — high chlorine levels break down clarifier polymers before they can work. Wait until FC dissipates first.
The CDC swimming and water safety{:target=“_blank”} resource covers what contamination events like rainstorms and heavy bather load actually introduce into pool water.
Clarifier vs. flocculant: which to use?
Once you’ve addressed the root cause, you have two methods to physically clear the particles from the water.
Pool clarifier works by binding tiny negatively-charged particles into larger clumps that your filter can trap. It works with any filter type, takes 48-72 hours, and requires no manual vacuuming — just continuous filter operation. We recommend adding clarifier every other day until the water clears. See our full pool clarifier how it works guide.
Pool flocculant works faster (24-48 hours) but requires more effort. It causes particles to coagulate into heavy clumps that sink to the pool bottom. You must manually vacuum on the Waste setting to remove them — flocculant can’t be captured by the filter, and significant water is lost in the process. See our pool flocculant for faster clearing guide for the full procedure.
| Factor | Clarifier | Flocculant |
|---|---|---|
| Time to clear | 48-72 hours | 24-48 hours |
| Manual work | Minimal | Manual vacuuming required |
| Filter type | Works with any | Requires multiport Waste valve |
| Water loss | None | Significant |
| Best for | Mild cloudiness, routine use | Fast results, severe cloudiness |
Choose clarifier when time isn’t critical and you don’t want to lose water. Choose flocculant when you need the pool clear by a specific date, the cloudiness is severe, and you’re willing to vacuum.
Cloudy blue water after shocking: this is normal
If your water turned cloudy blue after a shock treatment or algae treatment, that’s exactly what success looks like.
When chlorine kills algae or burns off contaminants, the dead particles suspend in the water. Combined with the water’s natural blue tint, the result is a milky-blue haze. The algae is dead — the filter just hasn’t caught the particles yet.
What to do:
First, ensure the filter operates continuously day and night. Next, add a pool clarifier to enhance particle removal efficiency. However, wait until the free chlorine (FC) level drops below 5 ppm before doing so. After that, test the water thoroughly once it has become fully clear to confirm it’s safe for swimming.
Common one.
What NOT to do: don’t add another dose of shock, don’t add more chemicals, and don’t assume the treatment failed. Let the filter do its job.
How to Prevent Cloudy Pool Water
Most cloudiness is preventable with consistent maintenance:
- Run the pump 8-12 hours daily during swim season. Cutting run time to save on electricity is the most common cause of recurring cloudiness.
- Clean the filter on schedule. Backwash or clean when PSI rises 8-10 above the clean baseline, not on a calendar schedule — pressure tells you when it’s actually needed.
- Test water at least twice per week during peak season. Adjust FC, pH, and TA before they drift out of range.
- Never add shock directly through the skimmer. This concentrates chemicals and can damage plumbing, causing localized chemical reactions that cloud water.
- Shock after heavy use or rainstorms. Rain dilutes chemistry and introduces phosphates. A party adds bather load. Test and adjust within 24 hours of either event.
- Rinse off before swimming. Sunscreen, sweat, and cosmetics create chlorine demand that shows up as cloudiness within hours.
How we wrote this guide
PoolCareHelp doesn’t republish pool-store talking points. Each guide is cross-referenced against primary chemistry and equipment sources before publishing. For this article we consulted:
- TroubleFreePool cloudy-water diagnostic threads, source for the filtration-first diagnostic order
- Pentair filter pressure-delta documentation, source for the runtime/pressure correlation
- PHTA cloudy water troubleshooting reference, source for the calcium-hardness-induced cloudiness threshold
Editorial decisions we made for this guide:
- We diagnose filtration first before recommending clarifier or flocculant, most cloudy-water cases resolve with 24-48 hour filter runtime and a backwash, no chemicals needed
- We recommend clarifier for daily-life cloudiness (sunscreen, dust) and flocculant only when the pool needs a hard reset with a manual vacuum to waste, they’re not interchangeable
- We treat post-shock cloudiness as expected and self-resolving (12-48 hours) rather than a problem to chase with more chemicals
Last reviewed by Tom Hill on 2026-05-28. If you find an error or a newer source we should reference, see About for how we issue corrections.
FAQ
How long does it take to clear a cloudy pool?
Depends on the cause. With clarifier: 48-72 hours with the filter running 24/7. With flocculant: 24-48 hours plus vacuuming time. If the cause was filtration or chemistry, fixing the root problem and running the filter can clear mild haze in 12-24 hours. Sand filters are the slowest; DE filters clear fastest.
Can you swim in a cloudy pool?
We recommend against it. Cloudy water reduces underwater visibility — a drowning risk if someone goes under and can’t be seen. Cloudiness also signals a chemistry or contamination problem that should be fixed before swimming resumes.
Will shock clear a cloudy pool?
Only if low chlorine or contaminants are the cause. Shock won’t fix a filtration problem or chemistry imbalance. If cloudiness persists after shocking, check your filter pressure and test your full water chemistry before adding more chemicals.
Why does my pool get cloudy after rain?
Rain introduces phosphates, nitrogen compounds, and organic debris that create chlorine demand. Rain also dilutes pool water, lowering chemistry levels. Test and adjust after every significant rainstorm — generally anything over 1 inch of rainfall.
Can too much algaecide make a pool cloudy?
Yes. Copper-based algaecides at high doses can cause cloudy water and permanent surface staining. If you’ve overdosed copper algaecide, add a metal sequestrant to bind the copper ions before they precipitate. Stick to copper-free, polyquat-based algaecides for routine use.