Calcium Buildup on Pool Tile: How to Remove It (DIY + Pro Options)
The white or gray crusty buildup on your pool tile is calcium scale, calcium carbonate or calcium silicate that precipitates out of pool water and bonds to tile surfaces at the waterline. It is caused by high calcium hardness combined with high pH. Regular brushing won’t remove it. You need acid treatment, a pumice stone, or a professional service. Here’s how to get it off and keep it off.
This guide is part of our pool algae and water clarity hub. For general water chemistry issues, start with the pool algae and water problems hub.
Is This Guide for You?
Yes, if: You see white, gray, or chalky crusty buildup along the waterline, on tile grout lines, or on pool steps. The deposit feels rough and gritty. It does not wash off with pool water or regular brushing.
Not if: The discoloration is smooth and colored (green, brown, rusty) rather than a chalky crust, that’s likely a pool stain, not calcium scale. See our pool stain removal guide for organic and metal stain treatment.
Not if: Your pool water is green, cloudy, or has visible algae. Fix the water problem first, then address tile deposits. Calcium scale is a cosmetic issue; active algae is a water safety issue.
What Causes Calcium Buildup on Pool Tile?
Calcium scale forms when pool water becomes supersaturated with calcium carbonate and can no longer hold it in solution. The calcium then precipitates out and bonds to the nearest hard surface, which is usually the tile at the waterline.
Two conditions must exist simultaneously: calcium hardness above 400 ppm AND pH above 7.8. When both conditions are met, calcium carbonate drops out of solution at the water-air interface, where CO2 escapes and pH is highest. This is why scale appears at the waterline first, then spreads onto nearby tile.
Hot weather accelerates the process. Summer evaporation concentrates dissolved minerals, and warmer water holds less CO2, both of which push pH up and drive more calcium out of solution.
The TroubleFreePool guide on pool water saturation index{:target=“_blank”} covers the chemistry in detail if you want to understand the Langelier Saturation Index (LSI) that measures scale risk.
Two types of calcium scale, identification matters before treatment:
Calcium carbonate is white, chalky, and relatively soft. It forms early and dissolves in acid. This is the most common type and the most treatable at home.
Calcium silicate is gray, much harder, and silica-based. It forms over years of neglect. The DIY acid test distinguishes them: apply a few drops of muriatic acid to a small spot of the deposit.
- If it bubbles or fizzes: calcium carbonate. DIY treatment works.
- If no reaction: calcium silicate. Requires professional bead blasting in most cases.
Target chemistry to prevent scale:
- Calcium hardness: 175-225 ppm (vinyl liner pools), 200-275 ppm (concrete, plaster, gunite)
- pH: 7.4-7.6 (scale starts forming above 7.8)
For background on black algae vs calcium deposits, another surface problem that shows up as dark spots on tile, see that dedicated guide.
DIY Removal Method 1: Pumice Stone (Light Scale)
A pool pumice stone is the first tool to try for light to moderate calcium carbonate deposits that haven’t been building for years. Pumice is softer than tile glaze but harder than calcium deposits, which makes it effective without scratching most tile types.
What you need: Pool pumice stone ($5-15 at any pool store), pole attachment recommended for reaching below the waterline, bucket of water to keep stone wet.
Step-by-step:
- Keep both the pumice stone AND the tile surface wet at all times. Dry stone on dry tile causes scratches. Never let either surface dry during the process.
- Work in small sections, about 6-12 inches at a time.
- Rub in gentle circular motions with light pressure. Do not scrub aggressively.
- Rinse frequently to see progress and remove loosened calcium particles.
- Repeat until the section is clean, then move to the next.
What to expect: Pumice stone treatment takes 1-4 hours for a typical pool waterline perimeter. The stone itself wears down as you work, budget for 2-3 stones for a full perimeter.
What pumice doesn’t work on: Calcium silicate scale (gray, no acid fizz), heavy calcium carbonate buildup that has been accumulating for 5+ years, polished or glazed tile that could scratch, or natural stone tile (travertine, slate) that can be damaged by abrasive tools.
A note on pool water: pumice stone particles fall into the pool as you work. Run the filter for several hours after treating to clear the debris.
DIY Removal Method 2: Muriatic Acid Solution (Moderate Scale)
For heavier calcium carbonate deposits that pumice alone can’t clear, a diluted muriatic acid solution is significantly more effective. The acid dissolves calcium carbonate on contact, confirmed by the fizzing reaction.
What you need: Muriatic acid ($15-25 per gallon at hardware stores), plastic bucket, stiff nylon brush or old paintbrush, chemical-resistant gloves and eye protection, baking soda for neutralization.
Step-by-step:
- Drain pool water below the waterline tile, or position yourself to work from the pool deck at the waterline. The tile must be exposed to air during treatment, acid in pool water dissipates quickly and disrupts water chemistry.
- Mix solution: 10 parts water to 1 part muriatic acid in the plastic bucket. Add the acid to the water, not the other way around.
- Apply the solution to the tile with a stiff nylon brush or paintbrush. Work in small sections.
- Allow the solution to sit for 1-3 minutes. Do not let it dry on the tile.
- Scrub gently while the solution is active, you’ll see fizzing as calcium carbonate dissolves.
- Rinse thoroughly with clean water.
- Neutralize any runoff with baking soda solution before it reaches pool water.
- Repeat for each section, then allow the tile area to dry before inspecting.
After treatment: test and rebalance pool water chemistry. Muriatic acid lowers pH significantly if any reaches the pool. Use the PoolMath chemistry calculator{:target=“_blank”} to calculate the correction dose.
Natural stone tile exception: Travertine, marble, slate, and other natural stone tiles should never be treated with muriatic acid. Acid etches and permanently damages stone surfaces. Use a dedicated stone-safe calcium remover instead, available at pool supply and tile specialty stores.
Material costs: Muriatic acid runs $15-25 per gallon. A typical residential pool waterline perimeter requires 1-2 gallons for moderate calcium scale.
Professional options: when DIY won’t work
Some situations exceed what DIY methods can safely and effectively handle. These include: calcium silicate scale (gray, no fizzing with acid test), very heavy buildup from years of neglect, polished or natural stone tile, and cases where DIY attempts have scratched or damaged the tile surface.
Bead blasting (glass bead blasting) is the most common professional service for pool tile calcium removal. Technicians use pressurized glass beads to strip calcium deposits from tile and grout. It’s safe for ceramic, porcelain, and most pool tile finishes, and effective for both calcium carbonate and calcium silicate scale.
Typical cost for residential pool waterline bead blasting: $150-400 depending on pool size and deposit severity. Most pools can be completed in a half-day service call.
Pressure washing with acid is an alternative professional approach for heavy calcium carbonate deposits. Professional-grade diluted acid applied via pressure washer is more controlled and effective than DIY methods. Cost: $100-300 depending on pool size.
Full tile replacement is the last resort for tiles that are cracked, delaminating, or have calcium staining etched into the tile surface itself. Cost varies widely: $500-3,000 or more depending on tile area, material, and type.
Our recommendation: If two rounds of DIY acid treatment and pumice work haven’t cleared the scale, or if scale has been building for 5 or more years, bead blasting is the most cost-effective professional option. We consistently find it faster and more thorough than any DIY approach, and the cost is reasonable given the time savings.
How to Prevent Calcium Buildup From Returning
Removing existing scale is only half the solution. Without chemistry adjustments, calcium scale returns within one swim season. We find this is where most guides stop too early, leaving pool owners with clean tile that scales over again within a season.
Fix the root cause: calcium hardness. Target ranges by pool type:
- Vinyl liner: 175-225 ppm
- Concrete, plaster, gunite: 200-275 ppm
If calcium hardness exceeds 400 ppm, no chemical treatment lowers it. The only fix is a partial drain and refill with fresh water. After refilling, add a metal sequestrant or scale inhibitor immediately to prevent new precipitation.
Maintain pH 7.4-7.6. High pH is the trigger for calcium precipitation. pH above 7.8 dramatically accelerates scale formation. Test pH twice per week during swim season and adjust with muriatic acid if it climbs. The pool calcium hardness guide covers the dosing approach for managing both calcium and pH together.
Add a scale inhibitor monthly. Scale inhibitors (sequestrants) are the most underused prevention tool in pool care, and in our experience the easiest one to skip until you’re dealing with heavy scale again. Added monthly, they keep calcium and other minerals suspended in solution rather than allowing them to precipitate. Most effective as preventive maintenance, much harder to use reactively after scale has formed. The CDC pool water maintenance guidance{:target=“_blank”} recommends regular water chemistry testing as the foundation of pool surface protection.
Seasonal filling tips: When filling a pool with high-calcium tap or well water, add a sequestrant dose before the pool is fully filled. Starting with high-calcium water and then exposing it to summer heat creates immediate scale conditions.
Test monthly during swim season. Test calcium hardness monthly (not just at opening and closing). Test pH twice per week. Catching calcium hardness at 350 ppm is much easier than managing it at 500 ppm.
For broader chemistry context, the pool water chemistry balance guide covers all the interrelated variables (alkalinity, CYA, calcium hardness, pH) that affect pool surface condition.
FAQ
Will muriatic acid damage my pool tiles?
Standard glazed ceramic and porcelain tiles tolerate diluted muriatic acid (10:1 water to acid ratio) without damage when applied correctly. Natural stone tiles (travertine, slate, marble) should never be treated with acid, acid etches stone surfaces permanently. Always test a small inconspicuous area first. If you’re uncertain about tile type, check with the tile manufacturer or use a stone-safe calcium remover.
Why does calcium buildup keep coming back after I clean it?
Cleaning removes existing scale but doesn’t change the water chemistry causing it. If calcium hardness remains above 400 ppm or pH regularly exceeds 7.8, scale returns within weeks. Fix the root cause: partial drain to lower calcium hardness to 175-275 ppm, then maintain pH below 7.8 consistently. Monthly scale inhibitor treatments help maintain that balance between drain cycles.
Can I use vinegar to remove calcium from pool tile?
Vinegar (acetic acid) can lighten very light calcium deposits, but it’s too weak for established pool tile scale. It also introduces organic material to pool water that can feed bacteria. Muriatic acid is significantly more effective, use the diluted 10:1 method described above. For heavily scaled tile, vinegar is not a practical substitute.
Is calcium buildup the same as pool scale?
Yes. Pool scale and calcium buildup refer to the same thing: calcium carbonate deposits that precipitate from pool water. In severe or long-neglected cases, silica-based deposits (calcium silicate) form alongside calcium carbonate. Calcium silicate is gray, much harder, and doesn’t dissolve in acid, it requires professional bead blasting for effective removal.
How often does pool tile need cleaning for calcium buildup?
With proper chemistry management (calcium hardness 175-275 ppm, pH 7.4-7.6, monthly scale inhibitor), pool tile cleaning for calcium deposits is needed rarely, perhaps once every 2-3 seasons for light maintenance cleaning. Without chemistry management, visible scale builds within one swim season and requires significant effort or professional service to remove.