Water temperature is both a comfort setting and a chemistry variable. Higher temperatures accelerate chlorine demand, pH drift, and scaling tendency.
Temperature Recommendations by Use
| Application | Minimum (°F) | Ideal Range (°F) | Maximum (°F) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Recreational pool (adults) | 72 | 78–84 | 90 | Above 90°F increases dehydration risk |
| Lap swimming / competition | 77 | 78–82 | 85 | Cooler temperatures aid endurance |
| Children's pool | 80 | 82–86 | 90 | Younger children chill faster |
| Hot tub / spa (adults) | 98 | 100–102 | 104 | Maximum per PHTA/CDC: 104°F |
| Therapeutic / hydrotherapy | 98 | 100–104 | 104 | Consult healthcare provider |
| Pregnant women / elderly | — | Below 100 | 100 | Safety guideline, not absolute |
| Infants under 3 | — | Not recommended | — | Hot tubs not safe for infants |
Temperature Effect on Chemistry
| Temperature (°F) | Chlorine Depletion Rate | pH Drift Rate | LSI Effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| 70 | Low | Low | Baseline |
| 80 | Moderate | Moderate | +0.1 vs 70°F |
| 90 | High | High | +0.2 vs 70°F |
| 100 (spa) | Very High | Very High | +0.3 to +0.4 vs 70°F |
| 104 (spa max) | Extreme | Extreme | +0.4 to +0.5 vs 70°F |
Notes
- CPSC and PHTA maximum safe hot tub temperature: 104°F (40°C).
- Hot tub use above 104°F can cause hyperthermia within minutes.
Sources:
- Pool & Hot Tub Alliance — Pool & Spa Operator Handbook, 2022
- CDC — Healthy Swimming Guidelines