Preparing Your Pool for Freezing Weather

Preparing Your Pool for Freezing Weather

Written by Fielding P.
January 23 2026

We want to give you a quick heads-up as parts of the central and southern U.S. — including South and Central Texas — are expected to experience freezing temperatures, potential ice, and extended cold overnight conditions.

Pools in warmer climates aren’t always built or winterized for hard freezes, which means a few proactive steps now can help prevent cracked pipes, broken pumps, and expensive repairs.

If You Have Power During Freezing Temperatures

Keep water moving at all times

  • Run your pool pump continuously (24/7) during the freeze.

  • Moving water is far less likely to freeze than standing water.

  • If you have variable-speed pumps, even a low-speed circulation is effective.

Use freeze protection settings (if equipped)

  • Many modern pool controllers automatically turn equipment on when temperatures drop.

  • Double-check that freeze protection is enabled and functioning.

Consider raising the water temperature

  • If you have a heater and expect no power interruptions, raising the water temperature slightly can help protect plumbing and equipment.

  • Even a small temperature increase can help stabilize exposed lines.

Keep valves open

  • Ensure all return lines, spa lines, and water features remain open so water continues circulating everywhere.

⚠️ If You Expect or Experience a Power Outage

Freezes + no circulation = the highest risk scenario.

If power is lost for more than ~60 minutes:

  • Shut off all breakers to pool equipment immediately

  • Drain water from:

    • Pump housing

    • Filter tank

    • Heater

    • Chlorinator

  • Open all drain plugs and air relief valves

  • Remove pump lids and store them indoors if possible

This allows any remaining water to expand safely instead of cracking expensive components.

Even a small amount of trapped water can cause serious damage once it freezes.

Extra Tips for Southern Pools

  • Do not rely on pool covers alone — covers help reduce heat loss but do not prevent plumbing from freezing

  • Protect exposed equipment by wrapping pumps and pipes with towels, insulation blankets, or freeze covers

  • Water features and deck plumbing (sheer descents, fountains, cleaners) are often the first to freeze — keep them circulating or fully drained

  • Salt systems should remain flowing; stagnant saltwater can freeze faster than expected

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