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Pillar guide · 9 articles

Spa & Hot Tub Care: The Complete Guide

Everything that's forgiving about a pool is unforgiving about a spa. Higher temperatures volatilize chlorine; tiny volume means chemistry changes fast; and bather-to-water ratios are 10x. Here's how to keep a spa clean, clear, and safe.

Spas are not small pools. A 400-gallon spa running at 102°F with four people in it is the opposite of a 20,000-gallon pool at 82°F with nobody in it. Higher heat, tiny volume, and 10x the bather-to-water ratio mean chemistry shifts fast and forgiveness is low.

What's different about spa chemistry

  • Sanitizer volatilizes faster at 102°F. You lose chlorine (or bromine) quickly.
  • Bromine outperforms chlorine in hot water — it stays active longer and doesn't outgas as readily.
  • Alkalinity buffering matters more because small pH swings in small volumes are big percentage swings.
  • TDS (total dissolved solids) climbs fast, which is why spas need full water changes every 3–4 months.

The 3-month drain rule

There's a rough math for when to drain a spa: spa gallons ÷ 3 ÷ daily bathers = days between refills. A 400-gallon tub used by 2 people daily = 400 ÷ 3 ÷ 2 = ~67 days. Real-world, most residential spas hit the refill point every 3–4 months.

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