Chemical Lab

Pool Chemistry Tool

Pool Water Chemistry Calculator 2.0

Enter your pool size and chemistry readings to calculate dosing guidance for pH, chlorine, alkalinity, calcium hardness, cyanuric acid, salt, shock treatment, tabs vs liquid chlorine, and a print-ready service sheet.

Recommended Target Ranges

pH
7.4 – 7.6
Free Chlorine
1 – 3 ppm
Total Alkalinity
80 – 120 ppm
CYA
30 – 50 ppm
Calcium Hardness
175 – 225 ppm
Salt
2700 – 3400 ppm

Pool & Chemistry Inputs

Quick Guidance

Suggested Order

  • Fix alkalinity first if it is way off.
  • Then correct pH.
  • Then raise sanitizer.
  • Then fine-tune CYA, calcium, and salt.
  • Circulate and retest before adding more.

Chemistry Results

pH Adjustment

Status
Soda Ash to Raise pH
Muriatic Acid to Lower pH
pH Note
Approximate demand

Free Chlorine

Status
Liquid Chlorine Needed
Gallons
Fluid Ounces
Uses selected chlorine strength

Total Alkalinity

Status
Baking Soda to Raise TA
Muriatic Acid to Lower TA
TA Note

Calcium Hardness

Status
Calcium Increaser Needed
If CH Is Too High
CH Note

Cyanuric Acid (Stabilizer)

Status
Stabilizer Needed
If CYA Is Too High
CYA Note

Salt

Status
Pool Salt to Add
If Salt Is Too High
Salt Note

Shock Calculator

Shock Target FC
Liquid Shock Needed
1-Inch Tabs Equivalent
3-Inch Tabs Equivalent

Tabs vs Liquid Chlorine

Liquid Chlorine for Target FC
Approx. 1-Inch Tabs Needed
Approx. 3-Inch Tabs Needed
Tabs Warning

LSI / Water Balance Estimate

Estimated LSI
Balance Condition
Scaling / Corrosion Risk
LSI Note

Overall Summary

Pool Volume
Surface Type
Biggest Priority
Retest ReminderRun pump, circulate, retest

Service Call Sheet Builder

Service Sheet Preview

Pool Chemistry Service Sheet

Field chemistry results and treatment recommendations

Customer
Service Date
Service Address
Chemistry Item
Recommendation
pH Adjustment
Free Chlorine
Total Alkalinity
Calcium Hardness
Cyanuric Acid
Salt
Shock Recommendation
Estimated LSI
No technician notes added yet.
Pool Tech Reference Guide

Pool Chemistry Calculator Instruction Sheet

Use this guide to understand every input, abbreviation, target value, and chemical recommendation used in the pool chemistry calculator. Designed to help pool techs enter accurate data and interpret results quickly in the field.

Recommended Target Ranges

pH
7.4 – 7.6
Free Chlorine
1 – 3 ppm
Total Alkalinity
80 – 120 ppm
CYA
30 – 50 ppm
Calcium Hardness
175 – 225 / 200 – 275
Salt
2700 – 3400 ppm

Calcium hardness targets vary by pool surface. Vinyl and fiberglass pools generally use the lower range. Plaster and concrete pools generally use the higher range.

Important Abbreviations

pH

Measure of how acidic or basic the pool water is.

FC

Free Chlorine. The active sanitizer available to disinfect the water.

TA

Total Alkalinity. The water’s buffering capacity against fast pH changes.

CH

Calcium Hardness. The amount of dissolved calcium in the water.

CYA

Cyanuric Acid, also called stabilizer or conditioner. Helps protect chlorine from sunlight.

LSI

Langelier Saturation Index. A field estimate used to judge whether water is balanced, corrosive, or scale-forming.

ppm

Parts per million. Standard concentration unit used for most pool chemistry readings.

How to Use the Calculator

1

Enter the pool gallons. Almost every chemical recommendation depends on correct water volume.

2

Choose the correct pool surface because that affects calcium hardness targets.

3

Enter the current test results exactly as measured for pH, FC, TA, CH, CYA, and salt if applicable.

4

Use the recommended targets or enter your own target values if your service approach is different.

5

Calculate chemistry, add chemicals carefully, circulate the water, and retest before adding more.

Input Field Explanations

Input
What It Means
Pool Gallons
Total volume of water in the pool. All dosing depends on this value being accurate.
Pool Surface
Select vinyl/fiberglass or plaster/concrete. This mainly affects calcium hardness targets.
Water Temp (°F)
Current water temperature. Used in the LSI / water balance estimate.
Liquid Chlorine %
Select the strength of the liquid chlorine being used, such as 6%, 10%, or 12.5%.
Current pH
The present pH reading from your test kit or meter.
Target pH
The pH level you want to reach, commonly 7.5.
Current FC
The present free chlorine reading from the water test.
Target FC
The normal free chlorine goal after treatment, commonly around 3 ppm.
Current TA
The measured total alkalinity level in ppm.
Target TA
The desired alkalinity target, commonly around 100 ppm.
Current CH
The measured calcium hardness level in ppm.
Target CH
The desired calcium hardness based on the pool surface type.
Current CYA
The measured stabilizer level in ppm.
Target CYA
The desired stabilizer level, commonly around 40 ppm for many residential pools.
Current Salt
The measured salt concentration for saltwater pools.
Target Salt
The desired operating salt level, commonly around 3200 ppm.

What Each Chemistry Item Means

pH

Controls swimmer comfort, sanitizer efficiency, corrosion tendency, and scaling tendency. High pH can reduce chlorine efficiency. Low pH can make water aggressive.

Free Chlorine

The active sanitizer in the water. Low FC can allow algae and unsafe conditions. FC should be maintained in the proper range for normal operation.

Total Alkalinity

Acts like a pH buffer. Low TA can let pH swing too fast. High TA can push pH upward and encourage scaling.

Calcium Hardness

Important for balance and surface protection, especially in plaster pools. Too low can be aggressive. Too high can cause scale.

Cyanuric Acid

Protects chlorine from sunlight. Too little means chlorine burns off quickly. Too much can weaken chlorine performance.

Salt

Needed for salt chlorine generator pools. If it is too low or too high, the salt system may not operate correctly.

Chemicals Referenced by the Calculator

Soda Ash

Used to raise pH.

Muriatic Acid

Used to lower pH and can also be used in alkalinity reduction procedures.

Baking Soda

Used to raise total alkalinity.

Calcium Increaser

Used to raise calcium hardness.

Stabilizer / Conditioner

Used to raise cyanuric acid.

Pool Salt

Used to raise salt concentration in salt pools.

Liquid Chlorine

Used to raise free chlorine and for shock dosing.

Tabs

Convenient chlorine source, but they usually add stabilizer over time, so use with care if CYA is already high.

How to Interpret Result Sections

Result Section
How To Read It
pH Adjustment
Shows whether pH is low, high, or in range, then estimates soda ash to raise pH or muriatic acid to lower it.
Free Chlorine
Shows current sanitizer status and estimates how much liquid chlorine is needed to reach target FC.
Total Alkalinity
Shows whether TA is low or high and estimates baking soda to raise it or acid guidance to lower it.
Calcium Hardness
Shows CH status, how much calcium increaser to add if low, or estimated drain/refill percentage if too high.
Cyanuric Acid
Shows CYA status, stabilizer to add if low, or estimated drain/refill guidance if too high.
Salt
Shows salt status, pool salt needed if low, or estimated water replacement if too high.
Shock Calculator
Estimates a higher chlorine target and how much sanitizer may be needed for shock treatment.
Tabs vs Liquid
Helps compare chlorine tablets and liquid chlorine. Tabs can also increase stabilizer over time.
LSI / Water Balance
Provides a field estimate of whether water is balanced, aggressive, or scale-forming.

LSI Meanings

Balanced

Water is in a generally acceptable balance range and is less likely to scale or corrode.

Aggressive / Corrosive

Water may be too aggressive and may pull minerals from plaster, grout, or other surfaces.

Scale Forming

Water may deposit calcium scale on surfaces, heaters, salt cells, and other equipment.

Important Note

The LSI shown in the calculator is a field estimate and should be treated as guidance, not lab-grade analysis.

Best Practices for Pool Techs

1

Always trust a good test result first. The calculator is only as accurate as the numbers entered.

2

Correct chemistry in a smart order. A good working order is usually TA, then pH, then sanitizer, then CYA, CH, and salt.

3

Do not overcorrect. Large chemical additions are often better added in stages.

4

Circulate and retest after treatment before deciding whether more chemical is needed.

5

If CH, CYA, or salt are too high, the proper answer is often partial drain and refill rather than adding another product.

6

Tabs are convenient, but they can keep increasing CYA. Watch stabilizer levels closely when relying on tabs.

Simple Field Example

A pool tech tests a 20,000-gallon pool and gets these readings:

pH 7.9 FC 0.5 ppm TA 70 ppm CH 150 ppm CYA 20 ppm Salt 2400 ppm

That tells the tech the pool likely needs:

Acid for high pH Chlorine for low FC Baking soda for low TA Calcium increaser if needed Stabilizer for low CYA Pool salt for low salt

The calculator then gives estimated starting doses, but the tech should still circulate and retest before additional treatment.

Scroll to Top