Why is my pool green (and how to fix it fast)

A green pool is almost always an algae bloom caused by too little chlorine. The fix is a big, sustained dose of chlorine — shock to the right level and hold it there — plus good circulation and filtering. Most pools clear in 1–3 days.

Step by step

  1. Test and lower pH firstBring pH down to about 7.2 so chlorine works at full strength, and note your CYA — it sets how much chlorine you’ll need.
  2. Shock to ~40% of your CYARaise free chlorine to shock level (e.g. CYA 40 → about 16 ppm) and hold it. Use our shock calculator for the exact amount.
  3. Brush and run the pump 24/7Brush walls and floor daily and keep the filter running continuously to clear dead algae.
  4. Re-test and re-dose every few hoursChlorine gets consumed fast fighting algae. Top it back up to shock level until it holds overnight.
  5. Confirm it’s clearWhen overnight free-chlorine loss is under 1 ppm, the water is clear, and combined chlorine is below 0.5 ppm, you’re done. Let chlorine drift back to normal before swimming.

FAQ

How long does it take to clear a green pool?

Usually 1–3 days if you hold shock level, brush, and keep the filter running continuously. Severe blooms take longer.

Can I swim in a green pool?

No — wait until it’s clear and free chlorine has returned to the normal 1–3 ppm range.

Related

Stop guessing — get the exact fix

DoseMyPool turns your test numbers into the precise doses and the safe order to add them. Free on the App Store.