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# Pool Pump Won’t Prime? A Step-by-Step Fix for Air, Leaks, and Low Flow
A pool pump that won’t prime can make the whole pool feel broken. The motor may run, but the pump basket never fills completely, return jets stay weak, and bubbles keep showing up in the pool. If you let it run that way too long, the pump can overheat or lose circulation when the water needs it most.
The good news is that a pump that will not prime is often not a dead pump. Most priming problems come from low water level, air leaks, blocked baskets, valve settings, clogged suction lines, or a lid seal that is not doing its job.
Here is the troubleshooting order to use before you start pricing a new pump.
## What it means when a pool pump will not prime
A primed pump is full of water and moving water steadily from the pool, through the filter, and back to the returns. When it will not prime, the pump is pulling air, not enough water, or both.
Common signs include:
– Pump basket has a large air pocket
– Pump basket never fills with water
– Return jets are weak or not flowing
– Bubbles come out of the return jets
– Filter pressure is lower than normal
– Pump sounds louder, rougher, or hollow
– Pump loses prime after shutting off
Do not ignore these signs. A pump depends on moving water for cooling and lubrication. Running dry can damage seals and shorten pump life.
## Start with the pool water level
Low pool water level is the easiest fix and one of the most common causes. If the water sits below the middle of the skimmer opening, the skimmer can pull air. Once air enters the suction line, the pump may struggle to prime.
Raise the water to about halfway up the skimmer mouth. Then restart the pump and watch the basket. It should fill, purge most air, and settle into steady flow.
If the water level drops again quickly, look for leaks, heavy splash-out, backwash waste, or an autofill problem.
## Empty the skimmer and pump baskets
A packed basket restricts water before it reaches the pump. Leaves, pine needles, seed pods, hair, and small toys can all starve the pump.
Turn the pump off before opening the pump lid. Empty the skimmer baskets first, then open and clean the pump basket. Make sure the pump basket sits correctly before closing the lid. If it is crooked, water flow can stay restricted.
After cleaning baskets, fill the pump pot with water before restarting. This gives the pump a better chance to grab prime.
## Inspect the pump lid and o-ring
The pump lid is a common air leak point. A lid can look closed but still pull air if the o-ring is dry, cracked, flattened, dirty, or out of its groove.
Check the o-ring carefully:
– Wipe away dirt and grit
– Look for cracks or flat spots
– Make sure it sits evenly in the groove
– Use pool-safe silicone lubricant if needed
– Tighten the lid by hand, not with a tool
Do not use petroleum jelly on pool o-rings. It can damage some rubber materials and make the problem worse over time.
Download Pool Chemical Calculator for iPhone | Get Pool Chemical Calculator for Android
## Check the pump drain plugs
Pump drain plugs are small, but they can cause big priming headaches. If a drain plug is loose, missing, cracked, or has a bad o-ring, the pump can pull air instead of water.
With the pump off, inspect the plugs on the pump housing. Tighten them gently and check the plug o-rings. Replace damaged o-rings rather than overtightening the plug.
This is especially common after winterizing or opening the pool for the season.
## Make sure valves are set correctly
A closed or partly closed suction valve can stop the pump from getting enough water. Check the valves before the pump. On many pools, these control the skimmer, main drain, vacuum line, or spa suction.
If you are not sure what each valve does, take a picture before moving anything. Open one suction line at a time and watch the pump basket. If one line causes the pump to lose prime, that line may be blocked or pulling air.
Also check return-side valves. They usually do not stop priming by themselves, but a closed return path can create pressure problems after the pump catches prime.
Clean Water Pools may earn from qualifying Amazon purchases.
## Look for suction-side air leaks
Air leaks before the pump are a classic reason a pump will not prime. The pump is trying to pull water from the pool, but air is sneaking in through a bad seal, fitting, or valve.
Common leak points include:
– Pump lid o-ring
– Pump drain plugs
– Union fittings before the pump
– Cracked suction valves
– Loose threaded fittings
– Skimmer line leaks
– Stuck skimmer weir door
– Low water vortexing in the skimmer
Sometimes you can hear a hiss or see bubbles under the pump lid. Other times, the only clue is that the pump will not stay full.
## Check the filter pressure
Filter pressure gives you clues. If pressure is very low while the pump is running, the pump may not be moving enough water. That points to suction restriction, air leak, clogged impeller, or a pump problem.
If pressure is very high after the pump primes, the filter may be dirty or a return valve may be restricted. Clean or backwash the filter if pressure is 20–25% above clean starting pressure.
A broken pressure gauge can mislead you, so replace it if it is stuck, cracked, or never returns to zero when the pump is off.
## Could the impeller be clogged?
A clogged impeller can make the pump act weak even when baskets are clean. Small debris can slip past the pump basket and lodge in the impeller vanes.
Signs include low flow, low pressure, and a pump basket that may fill but still does not move water well. Turn power off before inspecting the pump. If you are not comfortable working around the impeller, call a pool tech. It is not worth getting hurt.
## When the pump itself may be the problem
If water level is correct, baskets are clean, lid and plugs seal well, valves are open, the suction line is clear, and the pump still cannot prime, the pump may have a mechanical issue.
Possible pump-side problems include:
– Bad shaft seal
– Warped pump lid
– Cracked pump housing
– Worn diffuser or impeller
– Motor speed too low on a variable-speed pump
– Plumbing leak at the pump inlet
A variable-speed pump running at a very low RPM may not prime well. Many systems need a higher startup speed before dropping to an energy-saving speed.
## What to do after prime is restored
Once the pump primes, do not stop there. Run the system long enough to turn over and filter the water. Brush the pool, empty baskets again, and retest water chemistry. Poor circulation can let chlorine fall behind, especially in warm weather.
Use Pool Chemical Calculator to calculate any chlorine, pH, alkalinity, calcium, or stabilizer adjustments after circulation is restored.
## FAQ
### Why does my pool pump lose prime overnight?
A pump that loses prime overnight usually has an air leak, a bad check valve, a leaking pump lid or drain plug, low water level, or a suction-side plumbing issue that lets water drain back toward the pool.
### Can I run a pool pump that will not prime?
No. Do not run it for long without water moving through it. A dry or partially dry pump can overheat, damage seals, and shorten the motor’s life.
### How long should a pool pump take to prime?
Many pumps prime within a couple of minutes when everything is working correctly. Long plumbing runs, elevated equipment pads, or recent service may take longer, but the pump should not run dry for extended periods.
### Why are bubbles coming from my return jets?
Bubbles usually mean air is entering the system before the pump. Check water level, pump lid o-ring, drain plugs, suction valves, skimmer operation, and unions before the pump.
### Does a dirty filter stop a pump from priming?
A dirty filter usually affects pressure after the pump is already moving water. Priming problems are more often caused by suction-side restrictions or air leaks, but a severely restricted system should still be cleaned and checked.
## Bottom line
When a pool pump will not prime, start simple: water level, baskets, pump lid o-ring, drain plugs, valves, and air leaks. Most priming problems live on the suction side, not inside the motor.
After the pump is moving water again, test and balance the pool so the circulation problem does not turn into cloudy water or algae.
Download Pool Chemical Calculator for iPhone or get Pool Chemical Calculator for Android.
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