Pool maintenance
How to shock a pool: step-by-step guide (2026)
Shocking means raising free chlorine to roughly 10 times your CYA level so it kills algae, bacteria, and combined chloramines. For most pools that is 1 pound of cal-hypo per 10,000 gallons or a gallon of 12.5 percent liquid chlorine per 10,000 gallons, added at dusk with the pump running.
2 min read · Updated
When to shock
Shock when one of these is true:
- Free chlorine is at or near zero
- The pool smells strongly like chlorine (that smell is combined chloramines, not free chlorine)
- The water is cloudy and not clearing with normal chlorine
- After heavy rain, a storm, or a big party
- Anytime algae is visible
You do not need to shock weekly as a habit. That is an old recommendation that wastes money and over-stabilizes the water if you use cal-hypo or dichlor.
What to use
| Shock type | Pros | Cons |
|---|---|---|
| Liquid chlorine (12.5%) | Fast, no CYA added, no calcium added | Heavy to carry, short shelf life |
| Cal-hypo (calcium hypochlorite) | Strong, cheap | Adds calcium, can cloud water |
| Dichlor | Easy to dose | Adds CYA every time |
| Non-chlorine (MPS) | Swim sooner | Will not kill algae |
For most owners, liquid chlorine is the right answer. For vinyl liner pools, always pre-dissolve cal-hypo in a bucket first.
Step-by-step
- Test your water. You need to know your CYA level.
- Calculate the target. SLAM (shock level and maintain) is roughly 10x CYA. So 30 ppm CYA = 30 ppm free chlorine target.
- Balance pH first. Get pH between 7.2 and 7.4 before you shock. High pH cuts chlorine effectiveness.
- Add the shock at dusk with the pump running.
- Brush the walls and floor.
- Run the pump for 24 hours minimum.
- Retest in the morning. Repeat until chlorine holds overnight (loses less than 1 ppm) and water is clear.
How much for my pool size
For a 20,000 gallon pool with CYA around 30 ppm:
- Liquid chlorine (12.5 percent): about 2 gallons
- Cal-hypo (65 to 73 percent): about 2 pounds
- Dichlor: about 1.5 pounds (only if you have room for more CYA)
Use a calculator like Pool Math (the Trouble Free Pool app) for exact doses.
Common shocking mistakes
- Shocking with high CYA. If your CYA is 100, you need 100 ppm chlorine to actually shock. At that point, drain water first.
- Shocking at noon. UV burns off most of it before it works.
- Shocking and immediately adding tablets. Tablets keep raising CYA and you fight the same battle next week.
- Adding shock through the skimmer with a tablet feeder downstream. You will damage the feeder.
When to call a pro
If you cannot hold chlorine overnight after three rounds of shock, or if the water has a yellow or pink tint that will not clear, you may have mustard algae, pink slime, or a high phosphate problem. A pool pro can drop in the right algaecide and save you days.
Frequently asked questions
- Can I swim after shocking?
- Wait until free chlorine drops back below 5 ppm. With the pump running that is usually 8 to 24 hours. Test before anyone gets in.
- How often should I shock my pool?
- Only when needed: zero chlorine, visible algae, after storms, after parties, or if the pool smells strongly like chlorine. A well-balanced pool with a working chlorine source does not need a weekly shock.
- What is the difference between liquid chlorine and bleach?
- Pool liquid chlorine is 10 to 12.5 percent sodium hypochlorite. Household bleach is 6 to 8.25 percent. Same chemical, different concentration. Plain unscented household bleach works in a pinch, you just need more of it.
- Why is my pool still cloudy after shocking?
- Three usual reasons: pH is too high, your filter is dirty or undersized, or you did not run the pump long enough. Clean the filter, check pH, run the pump 24 hours.
- Should I shock at night?
- Yes. Sunlight destroys chlorine fast. Adding shock at dusk gives it all night to work before UV cuts in.
- Can I shock a saltwater pool?
- Yes, the same way. The salt cell makes chlorine for daily use, but it cannot keep up with a real demand. Shock with liquid chlorine or cal-hypo just like any other pool.
- Do I need to brush after shocking?
- Yes. Brushing the walls and floor knocks dead algae into suspension so the filter can grab it. Skipping this step is the most common reason a shocked pool stays cloudy.
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Written by the PRNM team
Pool Rental Near Me operates the largest peer-to-peer pool rental marketplace in the US, with 2,200+ host pools across 40+ states. Our editorial team works with hosts and licensed pool pros to keep these guides current.