A mid-century Wilton Manors backyard pool surrounded by mature landscaping

Pool care for Wilton Manors.

Pool care for the homes that hold the neighborhood together.

In Wilton Manors, the pool is part of a smaller footprint and a more active household. Pools here aren’t the canal-estate average. They’re smaller, often older, and used more frequently per square foot than most of the city’s pools. The pool is closer to the daily life of the household, not separated from it.

That changes the math. Smaller water volume means chemistry shifts faster. Heavier use means free chlorine consumes more quickly. Older surfaces and equipment want gentler handling than newer pools tolerate. The service that fits a Wilton Manors pool isn’t a smaller version of an estate service; it’s a different routine.

Regent Pools tunes service to the volume and use pattern. Chemistry dosed in partial measures rather than rounded volumes. Tile and surfaces cleaned with the care that mid-century materials require. Equipment monitored on the age curve of what’s actually installed.

The pool stays balanced under heavy use, and the materials stay intact under decades-old design.

How we work

Built around your pool.

The same hands, every week.

One technician handles your pool every week, not a rotating crew. The same person learns how often your pool gets used and how an older surface and older equipment behave. The same eyes each week catch wear early, while it is still a small fix rather than a big one.

A schedule kept without exception.

We come on the same day and around the same time every week. A pool that gets used often needs that steady rhythm to stay balanced, so the chemistry does not drift between visits and the water is always ready to swim.

Quiet by design.

You do not need to be home or to clear the deck for us. We work around whatever is out, do the job, and leave the pool ready. We will not call to interrupt. After every visit, a recap email arrives with the details and photos, so the proof comes to you.

The service

Three tiers. One standard.

Your pool is never your concern. Not at the first tier, not at the last. The only difference is how far the standard reaches.

Essential, and your water is pristine. Premium, and it stays that way without a thought. Elite, and the same standard reaches past the water to the deck, the patio, the whole setting. Service in Wilton Manors fits the size, age, and use pattern of the property it's serving.

See the three tiers

Frequently Asked

Questions, answered.

Are smaller pools harder to keep balanced?

In some ways yes. A dose of chlorine that barely moves a large pool can swing a smaller one out of balance. The same is true for pH, alkalinity, and stabilizer. Smaller pools want chemistry handled in partial measures, with more frequent test cycles. The work isn't faster; it's more deliberate. Most homeowners find this harder to DIY than a larger pool, not easier.

How often should I add chlorine to my pool?

In South Florida summer, most pools want chlorine added two to three times per week if dosed manually, or continuously via a salt cell or feeder. Free chlorine should hold between 2 and 4 parts per million. Weekly service handles this through automated systems and weekly testing, which is more consistent than manual dosing can be.

How does heavy use affect pool chemistry?

Heavy use accelerates chlorine consumption, raises phosphate levels, and disturbs pH through introduced organic matter. The shifts can be significant within hours of heavy bather load. The fix is preventive chemistry management rather than reactive shock treatment. Higher baseline chlorine targets and weekly phosphate monitoring keep the pool balanced through the busiest weeks.

Should I shock my pool after a pool party?

Often, yes. Heavy bather load introduces organic compounds that consume chlorine rapidly and can leave the pool below safe sanitizer levels even when test strips look fine. A shock treatment the evening after a party restores chlorine residual and oxidizes the introduced organic load. We can include this in routine service when we know about events in advance.

How do I clean my pool deck?

Pool decks respond best to regular fresh-water rinsing and periodic deeper cleaning with the right product for the surface. Travertine, concrete, and composite materials each want different chemistry. Routine weekly service includes debris removal and basic deck rinsing. Deeper deck cleaning (pressure washing, sealing, deep scrubbing) is offered as a separate service rather than weekly maintenance.

Service for the right pool.

Schedule a site visit. We'll handle the details from there.

Schedule a site visit in Wilton Manors

Nearby

Other neighborhoods we serve.