Pool Closing Cost: Service Prices vs DIY Winterization
DIY pool closing costs $50-$150 in chemicals and supplies. Professional pool closing services charge $150-$400 depending on your pool’s complexity and region. The price gap is moderate, but the decision hinges less on cost and more on whether you have the equipment (an air compressor or shop vac with a blow setting) and the confidence to clear your plumbing lines correctly. In freeze climates, a failed blowout can cost $500-$2,000 in pipe and equipment repairs.
For a complete overview of pool ownership costs, see our pool maintenance guide for beginners.
Is This Guide For You?
:
- You’re deciding whether to DIY or hire for fall pool closing
- You received a quote and want to know if it’s fair
- You want to understand what a professional closing actually does
This guide isn’t for you if:
- You want step-by-step winterizing instructions, see how to winterize your pool yourself
- You want spring pool opening costs, see what pool opening costs in spring
Note for mild climates: If you live in South Florida, Arizona, or coastal California where hard freezes are rare, full winterizing may not apply. Most of this guide is relevant to freeze-climate owners (Northeast, Midwest, Mid-Atlantic).
DIY Pool Closing Cost. Itemized
DIY pool closing costs $50-$150 in chemicals and supplies, according to the Pinch A Penny winterizing guide. That figure covers the chemical kit only, it assumes you already own a cover and have access to an air compressor or shop vac for the plumbing blowout.
| Item | Cost Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Shock (Cal-Hypo or liquid chlorine) | $20-$40 | Raise FC to 3-5 ppm the night before |
| Winter algaecide (polyquat 60) | $15-$25 | Pour around pool perimeter before covering |
| Metal sequestrant | $10-$20 | Prevents iron/copper staining over winter |
| Winter slow-release floater kit | $20-$35 | Under-cover chemical maintenance |
| pH/alkalinity adjusters | $10-$20 | Balance chemistry 1 week before closing |
| Non-toxic RV antifreeze (if needed) | $10-$20 | Only if full blowout isn’t possible |
| Air compressor rental | $40-$80/day | One-time. Most owners buy a $80-$150 shop vac |
| Pool cover (if replacing) | $30-$1,500 | Solid tarp to solid safety cover |
| Total (chemicals only) | $50-$150 | Assumes existing cover, existing tools |
Important: Non-toxic RV antifreeze is the only acceptable antifreeze for pool plumbing. Automotive antifreeze is toxic and must never be used in a pool system.
Subsequent years cost less because closing algaecide, sequestrant, and floater kits often partially carry over from one season to the next. Cover cost is separate from the chemical total, a new safety cover ($300-$1,500) is a significant one-time expense that provides 10-15 years of protection.
Before closing, balancing pool chemistry before closing is a required step, water that goes into winter with severely imbalanced pH or calcium hardness comes out in spring with staining and scale buildup.
According to the Pinch A Penny pool winterizing guide{:target=“_blank”}, the $50-$150 DIY range reflects the chemical kit cost only, excluding cover replacement and equipment.
Big difference.
Big difference.
Professional pool closing cost. what’s included
Most professional pool closing services charge $150-$400. That fee covers the labor and equipment for a proper blowout, the main thing you’re paying for is their commercial air compressor, which achieves higher air flow through the plumbing lines than a standard shop vac.
Standard professional closing ($150-$400):
- Full equipment blowout using a commercial air compressor
- Winterizing chemicals (typically a basic closing kit)
- Plugs and Gizzmos installed in skimmer and return lines
- Water level lowered 4-6 inches below skimmer (in freeze climates)
- Removable equipment removed and stored (ladders, boards)
- Cover installation if you already own a cover
What’s usually EXTRA:
- New pool cover purchase and installation (+$100-$1,500 depending on cover type)
- Filter cleaning (+$50-$150)
- Heater draining and winterizing (+$50-$100)
- Specialty antifreeze treatment if blowout isn’t fully feasible (+$30-$60)
Always clean your filter before closing, starting winter with a dirty filter leads to worse problems in spring when you restart the system.
Regional pricing reflects local conditions. Based on Angi pool closing service cost survey{:target=“_blank”} data and industry averages:
- Northeast (NY, MA, CT, NJ): $200-$400, complex plumbing, longer blowout process
- Midwest: $150-$300 typical
- Mid-Atlantic: $150-$250 typical
- Southeast and Southwest: $100-$200, simpler winterizing requirements
See HomeAdvisor pool winterizing cost data{:target=“_blank”} for localized national estimates.
What Makes Pool Closing Cost More?
Several factors push closing cost above the standard range:
First, understand that complex plumbing systems with multiple return lines, attached spa, waterfall features, or a hot tub all add blowout time. Each line requires separate clearing. Next, consider the pool size, as larger pools necessitate more chemical volume for the closing kit due to increased plumbing footage. Then, factor in automation systems, which may require a separate technician and additional time for draining and winterizing automation controllers. After that, prepare for the heater service, noting that gas heater draining and inspection are billed separately from the standard closing fee. Once you’re informed about the cover condition, remember that repair or replacement will be charged separately if needed. Finally, in remote locations, be aware that service companies may apply travel fees or charge a minimum visit fee.
The cost of getting it wrong
In freeze climates, this is the section that justifies the professional closing fee. When plumbing lines aren’t blown out, water remains in the pipes over winter. Water expands when it freezes, and pool pipe fittings and pump housings aren’t designed to absorb that pressure.
Freeze damage repair costs:
- Cracked PVC plumbing lines: $500-$2,000 depending on depth and location
- Major main drain or return line damage: can exceed $3,000 for excavation and replacement
- Pump housing cracks: $200-$400 in parts alone, plus labor
- Filter housing splits: $150-$300 in parts, plus installation
The professional advantage here’s their commercial compressor. A standard shop vac on blow setting can clear most residential plumbing with 1-2 passes per line. But a commercial unit achieves higher pressure and air volume for deeper clearing. If you DIY with a shop vac, plan for 2-3 passes per line and verify no water returns to the line before installing plugs.
Common mistake.
DIY vs. Professional. Verdict
DIY is the better choice if:
- You have or can borrow a shop vac with a blow function (most $60+ models can do this)
- Your pool plumbing is relatively simple. 1-2 return lines, no attached spa
- You’ve done it before or have our how to winterize your pool yourself guide handy
- You want to save $100-$250 in service fees
Professional closing is the better choice if:
- You’ve never closed a pool before, especially in a freeze climate
- Your pool has complex plumbing, spa, waterfall, 4+ return lines
- You don’t have an air compressor or shop vac capable of blowout
- The $150-$400 cost is reasonable insurance against freeze damage risk
Our recommendation: in the first 1-2 years of pool ownership, pay for professional closing at least once to observe the process. We find this single investment pays for itself by teaching you what a proper blowout looks and sounds like. After that, confident DIY closers can handle it with the right equipment and checklist. For the full DIY procedure, see how to winterize your pool yourself.
For a full view of annual pool costs, see our full annual pool maintenance cost guide.
Worth checking.
FAQ
How much does it cost to close a pool for winter?
DIY pool closing costs $50-$150 in chemicals and supplies. Professional pool closing services charge $150-$400, with the higher end reflecting complex plumbing, Northeast locations, and add-ons like filter cleaning or heater draining. The $50-$150 DIY range covers the chemical kit only and assumes you already own a pool cover and have access to a shop vac for the blowout.
What happens if you don’t close a pool properly?
In freeze climates, water left in plumbing lines freezes and expands, cracking PVC fittings, pump housings, and filter bodies. Repair costs range from $500-$2,000 for typical pipe damage and can exceed $3,000 if the main drain or main return line needs excavation and replacement. Equipment freeze damage, pump housing, filter housing, adds $200-$800 in parts. The plumbing blowout is the single most important step in pool closing for freeze-climate owners.
Is it worth paying for professional pool closing?
Usually yes in a freeze climate, especially for first-time closers or pools with complex plumbing. A $200-$350 professional closing fee is straightforward insurance against a $500-$2,000 freeze damage repair. For experienced DIY closers with simple plumbing and proper equipment, the savings are real and the risk is manageable. We recommend watching a professional do it once before attempting DIY.
Do I need to close my pool if I live in a warm climate?
No, not in the traditional sense. In freeze-free zones like coastal South Florida, Southern California. The Gulf Coast, pool winterizing means a basic chemistry adjustment and installing a cover for winter aesthetics. Full equipment blowout and plumbing antifreeze aren’t necessary when temperatures stay above freezing year-round.
Can I close an above-ground pool myself?
Yes, and it’s typically simpler than an inground pool closing. Above-ground pools have more accessible plumbing, and the pool itself often be partially or fully disassembled and stored indoors for winter, eliminating freeze risk entirely. Use the same chemical closing kit ($50-$150) and follow the manufacturer’s winterizing instructions for your specific pool model.