Formula Library 3 min read Updated 2026-06-01

Pool Turnover Rate Formula

The Formula

Turnover Time (hours) = Pool Volume (gal) ÷ Pump Flow Rate (GPH)
SymbolDescriptionUnit
VolumeTotal pool volume in gallonsgallons
GPHPump flow rate in gallons per hour (GPM × 60)gallons/hour
Turnover TimeTime in hours to circulate the full pool volume once through the filterhours

Worked Example

Example

Pool: 18,000 gallons. Pump flow rate: 60 GPM.

  • GPH = 60 × 60 = 3,600
  • Turnover time = 18,000 ÷ 3,600 = 5 hours

This pump turns over the pool every 5 hours, meeting the 8-hour recommendation.

Now calculate required pump run time for one daily turnover: - Run time for one turnover = 18,000 ÷ 3,600 = 5 hours per day minimum.

How This Formula Works

Turnover rate is the time required for the pump to move the entire pool's volume through the filter once. Shorter turnover times mean more effective filtration, but require a larger pump or longer run times.

  • PHTA recommends residential pools turn over at least once every 8 hours.
  • Commercial pools and health department regulations often require 6-hour or even 4-hour turnovers.
  • GPM (gallons per minute) × 60 = GPH (gallons per hour).
  • A pump rated at 60 GPM operates at 3,600 GPH.
  • To find required run time at a specific flow rate: Required Hours = Volume ÷ GPH.

Limitations & Notes

Published GPM ratings for pumps are typically at zero head pressure. Actual flow rate in a plumbed system is lower due to resistance from pipes, fittings, valves, and the filter. Always use the pump's curve at your system's head pressure for accurate calculations.

Last reviewed: 2026-06-01