Recurring pool service typically runs $100–$350/mo, common repairs range from a few hundred dollars to several thousand, and a new in-ground pool usually costs $35,000–$120,000+ depending on whether it's vinyl, fiberglass, or gunite. Those are three separate budgets, so here's how each one breaks down, with the cost drivers that actually matter.
Recurring service, repairs, and new construction are separate budgets. These are planning ranges — local labor, pool size, and access change the real number.
| Work | Typical low | Typical high | What moves it |
|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly service | ~$100/mo | ~$350/mo | Pool size, chemicals included, season |
| Common repair | $200–$500 | $1,500–$3,000+ | Pump, filter, heater, liner |
| Vinyl-liner pool | ~$35,000 | ~$65,000 | Size, decking; liner replaced later |
| Fiberglass pool | ~$45,000 | ~$85,000 | Shell size, crane/access, decking |
| Gunite / concrete pool | ~$60,000 | $120,000+ | Custom shape, features, finishes |
Typical 2026 U.S. ranges; confirm against local bids and your specific site conditions.
"How much does a pool cost?" is really three questions: what it costs to keep one clean every month, what it costs when something breaks, and what it costs to put one in the ground. The recurring side is steady and predictable; the build side swings on the type of pool more than anything else. Here's the honest version of each.
Routine residential pool service typically runs $100 to $350 per month. Where you land depends on a few things:
For operators, the math that matters is route density and time per stop, not just the headline monthly rate — chemicals are a real pass-through cost that should be priced in, not absorbed. See how to manage recurring stops and billing on our pool service page.
Repairs are the least predictable line because they depend entirely on what failed. As a guide:
The honest framing for homeowners: a single equipment failure can cost more than a full year of routine service, which is exactly why steady maintenance pays off — it catches small problems before they become pump-or-heater problems.
A new in-ground pool typically runs $35,000 to $120,000+, and the type of pool is the biggest single factor.
Usually the lowest up-front cost. A steel or polymer wall structure with a vinyl liner. The catch is honest to state: the liner wears and needs periodic replacement down the road, so factor that recurring future cost into the lifetime number.
A pre-molded shell dropped into the excavation. Fast installation and low maintenance, but you're limited to the manufacturer's fixed shapes and sizes, and getting the shell to the backyard sometimes needs a crane, which adds cost on tight lots.
Sprayed concrete over rebar, then plastered or finished. The most expensive and the most customizable — any shape, size, depth, or built-in feature. It also takes the longest to build. This is the path when design flexibility matters more than budget. Operators building new pools can see scope and proposal tools on our pool builder page.
Whichever type, the sticker number rarely includes everything: decking, fencing (often code-required), heaters, automation, water features, and landscaping are frequently separate line items that can add five figures.
For a build, get itemized bids that separate the pool shell from decking, equipment, and fencing — that's the only way to compare quotes honestly. For service, compare what's actually included (chemicals, frequency, equipment checks) rather than the monthly headline alone.
Schedule weekly stops, auto-charge monthly service, and send itemized build proposals from one place. Claver Pro is free forever; paid tiers start at $19/mo, month-to-month.