Cloudy water 2–3 days before a property inspection is usually a control + filtration issue, not a “mystery chemical” issue. The fastest clean result comes from doing three things in the right order: sanitation (FC in a safe range), mechanical removal (filter + baskets + vacuum), and stable circulation (enough run time to actually capture the suspended fines).
1) 15-minute triage: identify what kind of “cloudy” you’re dealing with
Don’t throw multiple chemicals at a cloudy pool at once. In the last 72 hours before photos/inspections, the safest wins come from: correct chlorine + strong filtration + gentle brushing/vacuum.
Treat it as early algae. Pure “clarifier only” will often fail. Use the rescue branch below and consider a structured recovery approach.
2) The fastest 48–72h clarity sequence (the order matters)
This timeline assumes the pool is basically safe and you’re aiming for crystal clarity, not a full green recovery. If your pool is green, jump to the “rescue” section.
- Test: FC and pH (and CC if available). If you can: quick CYA check (stabiliser) to avoid “under-chlorinating” outdoors.
- Correct FC first: bring chlorine to a safe operating level for your pool type and stabiliser (avoid “zero” periods).
- Skim + baskets: empty skimmer and pump baskets — this alone can restore flow and filtration.
- Vacuum gently: slow passes, overlapping. If you blast the floor, you suspend fines and lose 12–24 hours.
- Filter hard: run the pump longer than normal (often continuous during daylight). Clarity comes from capture time.
Target outcome by end of Day 1: water looks “better but not perfect,” and filter pressure is behaving predictably (rising as it captures fines).
- Filter maintenance (type-specific): backwash/rinse (sand/DE) or clean cartridge if flow is weak.
- Brush order: walls first → steps/benches → floor last. Brush gently to move fines into suspension only if the filter is pulling well.
- Re-vacuum: slow, methodical. If you see a dust “puff,” stop and let it settle 30–60 minutes, then vacuum again.
- Optional (only if needed): a small dose of a non-floc clarifier can help the filter grab suspended fines. Avoid over-dosing.
If clarity stalls on Day 2, the cause is usually: (1) the filter isn’t capturing, (2) you keep re-suspending the floor, or (3) sanitation is still inadequate for the load.
- Morning skim: remove floating debris early (it reads badly in inspection photos).
- Waterline wipe: quick clean of the tile/line so the pool looks cared-for.
- Final vacuum: only if settled dust is visible. Otherwise, leave the floor undisturbed.
- Run circulation: enough time to keep the surface clean and the water uniform. Avoid last-minute chemical experiments.
Goal: water looks calm, bright, and consistent — not stirred up right before the viewing.
3) Filter cheat-sheet: what to do based on pressure and filter type
Cloudy water is often “suspended fines + not enough capture.” The filter is the capture device — but only if flow and media are right. Use your baseline pressure as the anchor (the normal pressure when the filter is clean and the system is running well).
| Filter type | What “good capture” looks like | When to clean/backwash | Do-no-harm tips for fines |
|---|
4) Typical mistakes that make cloudiness worse (and waste your 48 hours)
- Vacuuming too fast: you create a “dust storm,” then blame chemistry. Slow vacuuming is a clarity strategy.
- Brushing the floor first: it lifts the worst fines into suspension before the filter is ready. Walls/steps first, floor last.
- Over-backwashing: you reset the filter’s ability to trap fine particles and may lose water/stabiliser. Backwash only when needed.
- Throwing in multiple products: clarifier + algaecide + “shock” + pH swings can create more haze. Make one change, then circulate and re-assess.
- Ignoring circulation faults: air leaks, stuck weir, clogged baskets, low water level, or a weak pump will defeat any chemical fix.
- Assuming “chlorine smell” = too much chlorine: often the opposite (combined chlorine / insufficient effective sanitation).
A torn cartridge, bypass issue, wrong multiport setting, missing/incorrect DE charge, or a failing spider gasket can send cloudy water right back to the pool. If you keep vacuuming and nothing improves, treat it as an equipment/filtration problem, not a chemistry problem.
5) When you need a “rescue” scenario (and what “rescue” should look like)
This is not a “polish” job — it’s sanitation first, then filtration. If algae is starting, clarifier alone won’t save the timeline. Use a structured recovery approach and consider professional help if the inspection clock is tight.
If you’ve maintained reasonable sanitation and filtered hard, but the haze doesn’t move, suspect: filter media issue, bypass/leak, or re-suspension (you keep stirring the same dust).
- Don’t over-dose floc unless you can vacuum to waste and you understand the equipment constraints.
- Don’t swing pH aggressively right before showing — it can make water look dull and can stress surfaces/equipment.
- Don’t “shock blindly” without checking the basics (FC trend, pH, circulation, filter readiness).
