Your pool filter is doing the hardest work in your backyard — quietly trapping debris, oils, dead algae, and contaminants every single hour your pump runs. But filters don’t clean themselves, and a clogged or dirty filter is one of the most common reasons pools go cloudy, lose circulation, or fight algae that just won’t quit.
The good news: cleaning your filter isn’t complicated. You just need to know your filter type, what to look for, and how often to do it. Here’s a straightforward guide for all three types — sand, cartridge, and diatomaceous earth (DE).
Before diving into the how-to, let’s talk about timing. There are two reliable signals your filter is due for service:
Don’t wait for visible water problems. By the time your pool water looks off, the filter has probably been struggling for days.
Sand filters are the most common type on residential pools. They use a tank of silica sand to trap particles as small as 20–40 microns. Cleaning is done through backwashing — reversing water flow through the tank to flush debris out the waste line.
How often: Most sand filters need backwashing every 1–4 weeks during swim season, depending on bather load and debris. Always go by your pressure gauge rather than a fixed calendar.
Deep cleaning: Once or twice a season, add a filter cleaner product to break down oils and biofilm that backwashing can’t remove. Sand itself should be replaced every 3–5 years.
Cartridge filters don’t backwash — you remove the cartridge element and rinse it manually. They filter finer particles than sand (down to about 10–15 microns) and are popular for above-ground pools and smaller in-ground setups.
How often: Rinse cartridges every 2–6 weeks during swim season. Do a full soak cleaning monthly or when pressure stays elevated after a rinse. Most cartridges last 1–3 seasons before needing replacement.
Pro tip: Keep a spare cartridge on hand. Swap in the clean one immediately after removal so your pool doesn’t sit with no filtration while you wait for the old cartridge to dry.
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Diatomaceous earth filters offer the finest filtration — they can trap particles as small as 2–5 microns. The trade-off is a bit more maintenance complexity. DE filters have internal grids coated with DE powder, which does the actual filtering work.
Once or twice a year, open the filter tank and manually clean the internal grids. Remove, rinse, and inspect each grid for tears or holes — even a small tear can let DE pass into your pool, causing fine white cloudiness. Soak grids in filter cleaner solution, rinse, reassemble, and recharge with fresh DE.
How often to backwash: Same rule — clean when pressure rises 8–10 PSI above baseline. DE filters often go longer between backwashes than sand filters because they hold more debris before pressure spikes.
Any time you backwash, rinse, or deep-clean a filter, you’re displacing water and can disrupt your chemical balance. After filter maintenance, always test and adjust:
Use the Pool Chemical Calculator to figure out exactly how much to add based on your pool size — no guesswork, no waste.
Yes. Cleaning too frequently can actually hurt filtration. A small amount of accumulated debris on filter media helps trap finer particles. Clean when your pressure rises 8–10 PSI above your baseline, not on a rigid daily or weekly schedule.
If pressure spikes quickly after a fresh backwash, the filter media is likely clogged with oils, sunscreen, or biofilm that won’t flush out with backwashing alone. Use a dedicated filter cleaner product for a deep chemical soak. For DE filters, also confirm you recharged with fresh DE powder after backwashing.
Filter housings typically last 10–15 years with proper care. The media needs more frequent replacement: sand every 3–5 years, cartridges every 1–3 seasons, and DE grids every 5–7 years (or sooner if torn).
This almost always means a torn grid or damaged filter element inside your DE filter. Turn off the pump, open the filter, and inspect every grid carefully. Even a pinhole will push fine DE powder back into your pool.
A few hours during a cartridge swap is manageable. More than 24 hours without filtration in warm weather risks algae growth and cloudiness — especially if your chlorine level is on the low side.
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