Why Poolside Drainage Matters
New sod and irrigation can saturate soil beside the pool. Verify sprinkler direction, grading, and discharge before watering heavily, especially near recent excavation or disturbed backfill.
Heavy downpours can overwhelm informal landscaping. Water moving through loose material can wash supporting soil from beside a pool, reach disturbed backfill, damage buried plumbing, or collect around a shell. Risk can increase while pool water is lowered.
Acceptable Planning Paths
- Grade the finished surface so water moves away from the pool to an approved location.
- Use a properly designed drainage pipe only when it has filter fabric/appropriate aggregate where required and a verified safe discharge point.
- Where gravity drainage is impossible, use a correctly sized catch basin and water-extraction pump with an overflow and maintenance plan.
- Use a quality retaining or containment wall when needed. The wall may also require drainage behind it and a safe outlet.
Before Digging
Locate utilities and pool plumbing. Confirm drainage discharge rules, easements, permits, setbacks, wall requirements, electrical safety, and manufacturer instructions. Do not discharge water onto neighboring property, toward buildings, or back beside the pool.
Safety & Accuracy
This tool provides planning estimates, not a structural, drainage, geotechnical, electrical, or code design. Soil, groundwater, pool construction, outlet elevation, rainfall intensity, and local requirements vary. Have a qualified drainage, pool, or retaining-wall professional evaluate uncertain conditions, visible settlement, washout, voids, a lowered pool, or concentrated stormwater.