# Pool Opening Chemicals: What to Add First When You Open for the Season
Pool opening chemicals are easy to overdo because the water usually looks a little rough, the cover is dirty, and everyone wants the pool ready now. The mistake is dumping in shock, algaecide, pH increaser, clarifier, and whatever was left in the garage before you know what the water actually needs.
A better pool opening is boring in the best way: uncover, clean, circulate, test, adjust in the right order, then shock if the water calls for it.
Here’s the practical order to follow so you don’t waste chemicals or create a cloudy mess right at the start of the season.
## Start with cleanup before chemistry
Before adding chemicals, get the physical debris out. Leaves, worms, pollen, and cover water all consume chlorine. If you shock before cleaning, a lot of that chlorine gets wasted on junk you could have removed with a net or vacuum.
Do this first:
– Remove leaves and debris from the cover
– Pump dirty cover water away from the pool if possible
– Pull the cover carefully so dirty water does not dump in
– Skim the surface
– Brush walls, steps, ladders, and corners
– Empty skimmer and pump baskets
– Vacuum heavy debris if the pool floor is visible
If the pool is very dirty, do not expect chemicals to fix it instantly. Cleanup and filtration matter just as much as the first shock dose.
## Get the system running and check for leaks
Once the water level is high enough, start the pump and check the equipment pad. Look for leaks around pump unions, filter clamps, heater connections, chlorinator lids, drain plugs, and valves.
Let the pump run long enough to mix the water before taking a full test. If the pool has been sitting all winter, the top and bottom water may not match. Circulation gives you a more honest reading.
If the pump will not prime or return jets are weak, fix circulation before chasing chemistry. A pool cannot clear well if water is barely moving through the filter.
## Test the full water balance
A good opening test should include more than chlorine and pH:
– Free chlorine
– Combined chlorine
– pH
– Total alkalinity
– Calcium hardness
– CYA/stabilizer
– Salt, if it is a saltwater pool
– Metals, if you use well water or often get staining
Test strips are fine for a quick first look, but a drop kit is better when you are making real chemical decisions. Opening is when one wrong assumption can cost you several bags of shock or a weekend of cloudy water.
## Adjust pH and alkalinity before shocking
For most openings, get pH into a reasonable range before you shock. Chlorine works better when pH is controlled, and high pH can make a cloudy pool worse.
A useful target is usually around 7.2–7.6 before shocking. If pH is very low, raise it carefully. If pH is high, lower it with the correct dose of acid.
Total alkalinity matters because it affects how stable pH will be. If alkalinity is extremely high or low, pH may drift quickly after your first adjustment. Bring alkalinity into range gradually rather than trying to fix everything with one big chemical swing.
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## Check stabilizer before adding shock
CYA, also called stabilizer, changes the chlorine level needed to clean up the pool. If CYA is low, sunlight can burn off chlorine quickly. If CYA is high, normal shock doses may be too weak.
This is especially important if you closed with tablets in a floater, used trichlor heavily last year, or did not replace much water over winter.
Do not add stabilizer blindly. Once CYA is too high, lowering it usually requires water replacement. Test first, then adjust only if needed.
## Add chlorine or shock based on the water condition
If the water is clear and free chlorine is only a little low, you may not need a huge shock treatment. Bring chlorine into range and monitor overnight.
If the water is green, cloudy, smells bad, or shows high combined chlorine, a proper shock dose makes sense. Use your current CYA level and pool volume to dose accurately.
After shocking:
– Run the pump continuously
– Brush the pool daily
– Clean or backwash the filter when pressure rises
– Retest before adding more shock
– Keep swimmers out until chlorine and pH are safe and the bottom is visible
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## What about algaecide?
Algaecide can help in some openings, but it should not replace chlorine or brushing. If the pool is green, chlorine is the primary cleanup tool. Algaecide is more useful as prevention after the water is balanced, or in specific cases based on the product label.
Avoid copper-based algaecides if your pool has a history of staining or if you are not sure what metals are already in the water. Copper can create pretty blue water and ugly stains at the same time.
## Should you use clarifier at opening?
Clarifier is best for mild haze after chemistry is balanced and the filter is working. It is not the first chemical to add to a dirty opening pool.
If the water is cloudy because algae is still alive, clarifier will not solve the root problem. If the filter is dirty or the pump is not circulating well, clarifier may disappoint you. Balance, shock when needed, filter, and brush first.
## Balance calcium after the water clears
Calcium hardness protects plaster surfaces and helps prevent aggressive water, but it is not always the first opening adjustment unless it is extremely low or high.
For plaster pools, low calcium can contribute to surface damage. For vinyl and fiberglass pools, calcium targets may be lower, depending on manufacturer guidance. Test fill water too, especially if you added a lot of water during opening.
## A simple pool opening chemical order
For most pools, this order works well:
1. Clean debris and remove the cover carefully.
2. Fill water to the proper level.
3. Start circulation and check equipment.
4. Brush and skim.
5. Test full water chemistry.
6. Adjust pH and alkalinity.
7. Check CYA before choosing a chlorine dose.
8. Add chlorine or shock as needed.
9. Filter continuously until clear.
10. Fine-tune calcium, stabilizer, salt, and maintenance levels.
Use Pool Chemical Calculator after each full test so every adjustment matches your actual pool volume.
## FAQ
### What chemical should I add first when opening a pool?
After cleaning and circulation, test the water first. In many pools, pH and alkalinity should be adjusted before a major shock dose so chlorine can work more effectively.
### Should I shock my pool as soon as I open it?
Not always. If the water is clear and chlorine is only low, you may just need to raise chlorine into range. If the water is green, cloudy, or has high combined chlorine, shock is usually appropriate.
### Do I need stabilizer when opening a pool?
Outdoor pools usually need some stabilizer, but you should test CYA before adding more. Too much stabilizer makes chlorine less effective and is harder to fix.
### How long should the pump run after opening?
Run the pump continuously while clearing the pool after opening. Once the water is clean and balanced, you can return to a normal circulation schedule.
### Can I swim right after adding opening chemicals?
Wait until chlorine and pH are in the safe range and you can clearly see the bottom of the pool. Follow product label wait times, especially after shock or acid additions.
## Bottom line
A smooth pool opening is about order, not chemical overload. Clean first, circulate, test everything, adjust pH and alkalinity, then add chlorine or shock based on the actual water condition.
Pool Chemical Calculator makes that process easier by turning your test results into exact doses for your pool size.
Download Pool Chemical Calculator for iPhone or get Pool Chemical Calculator for Android.
