CYA and Sun Protection: Keeping Chlorine Stable in Melbourne’s UV Climate

UV protection for chlorine CYA (stabiliser) · Melbourne focus

Melbourne’s summer days can flip from cloudy to extreme UV in a few hours. That sunlight is great for poolside afternoons, but it is brutal on unstabilised chlorine. In full sun, an outdoor pool with no stabiliser can lose the majority of its free chlorine in just a couple of hours – even if you dosed correctly in the morning.

The chemical that shields chlorine from sunlight is cyanuric acid (CYA), also called stabiliser or conditioner. The right amount makes your chlorine last, smooths out daily swings and keeps pool chemistry more predictable. The wrong amount – especially too much – makes it hard to sanitise at all.

How Melbourne’s UV “burns off” chlorine

Free chlorine in the water naturally exists as hypochlorous acid and hypochlorite. These are strong oxidisers – exactly what you want for killing algae and bacteria. Under intense UV, however, they break down into chloride and oxygen. You still read “chlorine” on a basic test, but the truly active part keeps disappearing faster than you expect.

  • Clear summer days in Melbourne often reach very high UV index by late morning.
  • Outdoor pools with no CYA can lose 50–80% of their free chlorine on a typical sunny day.
  • Owners respond by “throwing more chlorine in”, but this becomes expensive and still unstable.

CYA forms weak, reversible bonds with chlorine, shielding a significant portion of it from UV while still leaving enough active to sanitise.

Key balance: enough CYA to protect chlorine from Melbourne UV, but not so much that you “lock” chlorine and struggle to clear algae or high bather load.
“Most backyard pools that chew through chlorine in January aren’t ‘bad salt chlorinators’. They’re under-stabilised for the UV we see here.” — Service manager, residential pool fleet, south-east Melbourne
Example: chlorine remaining after 4 hours in full sun

Approximate daytime loss in a typical Melbourne summer scenario, assuming no additional dosing and moderate bather load.

No CYA (0 ppm)
≈20%
Low CYA (20 ppm)
≈40%
Optimal CYA (40 ppm)
≈65%
High CYA (80 ppm+)
≈75%
“Stabiliser is like sunscreen for your chlorine. In Melbourne’s UV, you don’t skip sunscreen at the beach – your pool shouldn’t, either.” — Commercial operator, inner-west aquatic facility

Target CYA ranges for Melbourne backyard pools

Melbourne does not have a single mandated CYA level for backyard pools, but experienced operators tend to converge on similar ranges that balance UV protection with practical sanitation.

Recommended CYA ranges for typical Melbourne pools
Pool type / system Suggested CYA range Comments
Outdoor salt chlorinator 40 – 60 ppm Helps keep output efficient and stable on hot, bright days.
Outdoor liquid/granular chlorine 30 – 50 ppm Enough UV protection without needing very high free chlorine targets.
Heavily used family pool 40 – 60 ppm Gives extra buffer through busy afternoons and top-ups.
Indoor pool 0 – 20 ppm Little UV exposure; stabiliser often unnecessary or kept low.
Commercial / public pools See local guidelines Rules may restrict or prohibit CYA in some public facilities.

Under-stabilised vs over-stabilised: both create problems

CYA does not evaporate. Once it is in the water, it leaves only through dilution (backwashing, splash-out, rain overflow) or a major water replacement. That is why Melbourne pools can slowly drift into “over-stabilised” territory after seasons of using stabilised chlorine products.

Under-stabilised pool (low CYA)

  • Chlorine demand spikes on clear days, especially late morning to mid-afternoon.
  • You see “good” readings at 8 am and almost nothing by 4 pm.
  • Owners often overcompensate with large, irregular doses.
  • Result: wasted chlorine, occasional algae and strong odours after shock.

Over-stabilised pool (high CYA)

  • Algae becomes hard to clear even with “high” chlorine readings.
  • Shocking the pool appears to do little, or takes much longer than expected.
  • Required free chlorine level to stay safe rises with CYA.
  • In extreme cases, a partial drain and refill is the only solution.
If your pool has used only stabilised tablets for years, assume CYA may be high and test before adding any more stabiliser.
Common symptoms of incorrect CYA levels
What you notice Likely CYA situation First checks
Chlorine disappears daily in sunshine CYA too low or near zero. Confirm CYA 30–50 ppm target for outdoor pools.
Algae persists despite “high” chlorine CYA too high (over-stabilised). Test CYA and compare to range; check how long stabilised products have been used.
Need frequent shocking to keep water clear CYA fluctuating or outside sweet spot. Review CYA results over time, plus pH and alkalinity logs.
Salt cell output always set near maximum Often CYA too low for UV conditions. Check CYA and adjust before blaming the chlorinator.

Step-by-step algorithm to adjust CYA in a Melbourne pool

Because CYA moves slowly, adjustments are usually planned, not rushed. Use this simple algorithm when your stabiliser test shows you are out of range.

Raising and lowering CYA – practical sequence
1
Test accurately. Use a proper CYA test – many drop kits use a “disappearing black dot” method. Test in good light and repeat if unsure.
2
Define your target by system. For a typical outdoor salt pool in Melbourne, aim for 40–60 ppm. For liquid-chlorine pools, aim for 30–50 ppm.
3
If CYA is too low, calculate how much stabiliser to add based on pool volume. Add granules slowly via the skimmer or in a sock in front of a return. Do not dump undissolved product on the pool floor.
4
If CYA is too high, plan a partial drain and refill. As a rough guide, replacing 25% of the water lowers CYA by about 25%. Coordinate with weather, water restrictions and structural advice.
5
Re-test after one week. CYA can take days to fully show in tests after adding stabiliser. Only re-dose once levels have stabilised.
6
Align chlorine targets with CYA. At higher CYA, your everyday free chlorine target also rises. Adjust salt output or dosing schedule accordingly.

Everyday routines to keep CYA and chlorine stable in Melbourne

Stabiliser is only one part of the picture. The way you run the pool day-to-day also matters. In practice, Melbourne owners who enjoy stable chlorine typically:

  • Test CYA monthly through summer and early autumn.
  • Check pH and free chlorine at least weekly, more often in heatwaves.
  • Set salt chlorinators to run in the early morning and late evening, when UV is lower.
  • Use a blanket or cover when the pool is not in use to cut both UV and evaporation.
  • Review chemical choices and avoid layering multiple stabilised products indefinitely.
Simple rule of thumb: once you reach your CYA target, prefer unstabilised chlorine (liquid or some cal-hypo products) for routine adjustments to avoid creeping higher every season.

Melbourne’s UV-heavy climate makes stabiliser almost essential for outdoor pools, but it is not a “more is better” chemical. The best-performing pools in suburbs from Bayside to the northern growth corridors share the same pattern: a clearly defined CYA target, slow and measured adjustments, and regular testing through the sunny months.

Keep CYA in the right window, align your chlorine dosing with that level and with the local UV, and your pool will hold its chlorine more reliably – with fewer surprises, clearer water and far less time spent chasing disappearing sanitiser on hot Melbourne afternoons.