Pool Chemical Calculator

Calculate how much chlorine, pH balancer, alkalinity increaser, and shock treatment to add to your pool. Enter pool volume and current chemical levels for exact dosing.

gal
ppm
ppm
Liquid Chlorine Needed (12.5%)
Granular Chlorine Needed
Shock Treatment (Cal-Hypo)
Extended More scenarios, charts & detailed breakdown
Liquid Chlorine (fl oz)
Granular (lbs)
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$

Chemicals to Add

Liquid Chlorine Needed
Muriatic Acid Needed
Baking Soda for Alkalinity
Calcium Chloride Needed

Cost & Summary

Est. Weekly Treatment Cost
Summary

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your pool volume in gallons (use our Pool Volume Calculator if needed).
  2. Enter your current chlorine level from a test kit.
  3. Set your target chlorine level (1–3 ppm recommended).
  4. Results show liquid chlorine in fl oz and granular in lbs to add.
  5. Use pH Balance tab to calculate acid or soda ash needed.
  6. Use Full Chemical Checklist to review all 4 key parameters.

Formula

Liquid chlorine (fl oz) = ppm needed × (gallons ÷ 10,000) × 12

Granular chlorine (lbs) = ppm needed × (gallons ÷ 10,000) × 0.125

Example

Example: 15,000 gal pool, current Cl = 1.0, target = 3.0 ppm. Need to raise by 2.0 ppm. Liquid chlorine = 2.0 × 1.5 × 12 = 36 fl oz.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • To raise chlorine by 1 ppm in a 10,000 gallon pool, add about 12 fl oz of liquid chlorine (12.5%) or 0.125 lbs of granular chlorine (65%). Always test and adjust incrementally.
  • The ideal free chlorine level is 1–3 ppm. Below 1 ppm risks algae growth; above 4 ppm can irritate skin and eyes. Shock treatment raises chlorine to 10+ ppm briefly to kill bacteria.
  • Pool water should be between pH 7.2–7.6. Below 7.2 causes corrosion and eye irritation; above 7.8 reduces chlorine effectiveness and causes scale buildup.
  • Add shock (calcium hypochlorite or sodium dichlor) to raise chlorine to 10 ppm. For a 10,000 gallon pool, use about 1 lb of shock. Shock at dusk and run the pump overnight.
  • CYA is a chlorine stabilizer that protects chlorine from UV degradation. Ideal level is 30–50 ppm for outdoor pools. Too high (>80 ppm) reduces chlorine effectiveness even at normal levels.

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