Pool Pump and Filter Service in Georgia

Pool pump and filter systems form the mechanical core of any swimming pool, driving circulation, chemical distribution, and debris removal. In Georgia, service and repair work on these systems intersects with contractor licensing standards, local permitting requirements, and public health rules enforced by state and county agencies. This page covers the service landscape for pool pumps and filters in Georgia — the professional categories involved, how systems function, the scenarios that trigger service or replacement, and the boundaries that determine when licensed intervention is required.

Definition and scope

Pool pump and filter service encompasses inspection, maintenance, repair, and replacement of the hydraulic and filtration components that keep pool water in circulation. The pump generates flow; the filter removes suspended particulate matter, biofilm precursors, and debris. Together they support the chemical treatment processes regulated under Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH) rules for public pools and under local building codes for residential installations.

Service work ranges from routine tasks — basket cleaning, O-ring replacement, pressure gauge checks — to full component replacement, which may require electrical disconnection, plumbing modification, and permit issuance depending on the scope and jurisdiction.

This page addresses pump and filter service within the state of Georgia. Federal standards such as the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act (VGB Act), enforced by the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC), apply nationally and are not replaced by Georgia-specific rules. Coverage here does not extend to pool construction (new builds), chemical dosing protocols beyond their relationship to circulation, or pools located outside Georgia. For the broader regulatory framework, see Regulatory Context for Georgia Pool Services.

Georgia's residential and commercial pools are subject to distinct regulatory tracks. Commercial pools — those at hotels, apartment complexes, health clubs, and similar facilities — fall directly under DPH Rules for Swimming Pools, Spas, and Recreational Water Parks (Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 511-3-5). Residential pools are governed primarily by local building and electrical codes, typically adopting the International Residential Code (IRC) and National Electrical Code (NEC) by reference.

How it works

Pool circulation follows a closed hydraulic loop. The pump draws water from the pool through skimmer baskets and main drains, forces it through the filter media, then returns it through return jets. Filter types define the mechanism of particulate removal:

  1. Sand filters — water passes through a bed of silica sand (typically graded to 20-grade); particles down to approximately 20–40 microns are captured. Backwashing reverses flow to purge accumulated debris.
  2. Diatomaceous earth (DE) filters — water passes through grids coated with DE powder, capturing particles as small as 3–5 microns. DE must be replenished after each backwash.
  3. Cartridge filters — water passes through a pleated polyester cartridge; no backwash is required, but cartridges must be removed and hosed down periodically, then replaced at end of service life.

Pump sizing is expressed in horsepower (HP) and gallons per minute (GPM), matched to the pool's volume and plumbing configuration. Georgia's Energy Code, which incorporates standards aligned with the International Energy Conservation Code (IECC), requires variable-speed pumps (VSPs) for new residential pool installations above a defined threshold — VSPs can reduce pump energy consumption by up to 90% compared with single-speed motors (U.S. Department of Energy, Energy Saver).

Common scenarios

Pump and filter service in Georgia is triggered by a recognizable set of operational failure modes and maintenance intervals:

For detailed cost structures associated with these repair categories, Georgia Pool Service Costs and Pricing Factors provides a structured breakdown of labor and parts benchmarks.

Decision boundaries

Not all pump and filter work falls within the same licensing or permitting track. The following distinctions govern how service work is classified in Georgia:

Licensed contractor vs. owner-performed work — Georgia does not impose a statewide residential swimming pool contractor license for maintenance and repair (as distinct from construction). However, any work involving the electrical supply to the pump — panel connections, conduit runs, GFCI replacement — must be performed by a licensed electrical contractor under Georgia State Board of Electrical Contractors requirements. Plumbing modifications that alter the pool's recirculation system may similarly require a licensed plumber depending on the county jurisdiction.

Commercial pools — Any mechanical system work on a DPH-regulated commercial pool that affects circulation rates, filtration capacity, or drain configuration requires documentation and may trigger a plan review or inspection under Ga. Comp. R. & Regs. r. 511-3-5. Operators holding a Georgia Commercial Pool Operator Certification are expected to understand these thresholds.

Permit triggers — Replacing a pump motor in-kind (same HP, same pad location) is generally a non-permit activity in most Georgia counties. Installing a new pump system, changing pipe diameter, or upgrading to a VSP that requires new wiring typically triggers an electrical permit. County-level building departments hold final authority; Fulton, Gwinnett, DeKalb, and Cobb counties each publish their own schedule of permit fee structures and inspection requirements.

VGB Act compliance — When pump replacement involves the main drain or suction outlet, the CPSC's VGB Act mandates that drain covers meet ANSI/APSP-16 entrapment protection standards. This is a federal floor; Georgia DPH rules for commercial pools reinforce it at the state level. See Georgia Pool Drain Safety Requirements for the entrapment protection framework.

Filter media disposal — Spent DE is classified as an inert solid waste in Georgia, but local disposal rules vary. Spent sand and cartridges follow standard solid waste disposal pathways under Georgia Environmental Protection Division (EPD) guidelines.

The full landscape of Georgia pool services — including how pump and filter work fits within the broader service sector — is indexed at Georgia Pool Authority.

References

📜 2 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 25, 2026  ·  View update log

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