Pool Automation Systems: What They Do and Are They Worth It?
Pool automation systems control your pump, filter, lights, heater, and chemical dosers from a single app or control panel. Entry-level automation (a variable-speed pump with a digital timer) runs $400-$1,200. Full automation covering your pump, lights, heater, and chemical dosing costs $2,000-$6,000 installed. For most inground pool owners, automation is worth it. For above-ground or seasonal-only pools, it usually is not.
Here is how to decide where you fall.
Is This Guide for You?
This guide is for you if:
- You own an inground pool or a complex above-ground setup with a heater and lights
- You are evaluating whether to add automation during a renovation or equipment replacement
- You want to understand the cost difference between entry-level and full automation
This guide is NOT for you if:
- You own a portable or pop-up above-ground pool (automation is not cost-effective at that scale)
- You are shopping for a robotic pool cleaner, that is a different category covered in our robotic pool cleaner automation guide
- Your budget is under $500 and you want maximum impact, put that money toward chemicals and a reliable pool filter first
For a broader look at managing your pool, see our pool maintenance guide for beginners.
What Pool Automation Actually Controls
Most people think of pool automation as a timer on the pump. The reality is broader. A full automation system can manage:
| System | What It Controls | Practical Example |
|---|---|---|
| Pump | Speed, run schedule, energy optimization | Variable-speed pump runs at low RPM overnight for filtration, high RPM for cleaning |
| Filter | Automated backwash scheduling | Sand filter set to auto-backwash weekly |
| Heater | Remote temperature setting, scheduling | Pre-heat pool 2 hours before you arrive via app |
| Lights | On/off, color, LED shows | Color-changing RGB lights on a schedule |
| Chemical dosers | Automated pH and chlorine addition | Inline feeder with sensors that dose automatically |
| Spa/jets | Blower and jet control | Spa jets on/off from your phone |
| Water features | Waterfall, fountain, deck jets | Waterfall runs on a timer, off at 10 PM |
The pool pump and filter system is the foundation everything else connects to. When evaluating automation, always start there.
Pool automation tiers
We find it most useful to think about pool automation in three tiers. Each tier represents a genuine decision point with a distinct cost and benefit profile.
Tier 1: variable-speed pump + timer ($400-$1,200)
A variable-speed pump (VSP) with a digital timer is technically the entry point of pool automation. You program specific run times and speeds for different periods of the day. There is no app control and no remote access, but the energy savings alone make this the highest-ROI pool automation investment available.
According to DOE variable-speed pump energy savings data{:target=“_blank”}, switching from a single-speed pump to a variable-speed pump saves pool owners $400-$800 per year in electricity. A VSP typically pays for itself in 2-4 years.
If your current pump is a single-speed and it needs replacement, choosing a VSP over a basic replacement pump is an easy decision.
Tier 2: controller hub ($1,500-$3,000 installed)
A controller hub adds a single panel that manages your pump, lights, and heater together, plus a smartphone app. You can adjust schedules from anywhere, set vacation mode, and manually override settings from your phone.
Major platforms at this tier include:
- Hayward OmniLogic, touchscreen panel plus strong app; works well with multi-feature pools
- Pentair IntelliCenter, app plus voice control integration; popular in Florida and Southwest markets
- Jandy iAquaLink, strong app compatibility with Alexa and Google Home; good retrofit option for existing equipment
This tier does not include automatic chemical dosing. You still test and add chemicals manually.
Tier 3: full automation + chemical control ($3,000-$6,000+ installed)
Full automation adds continuous water monitoring sensors and automatic chemical dosers that inject pH reducer, pH increaser, or chlorine when sensors detect a reading outside your target range.
At this level, the system handles nearly all routine chemical additions automatically. Weekly manual verification is still required because sensors drift and need calibration, but day-to-day chemical management becomes largely hands-off.
Pentair IntelliChem and ORP/pH probe systems are the established options here. Match your chemical automation to your existing pump/controller brand for simpler installation and single-vendor support.
Pool automation costs
Honest cost breakdown including installation:
| Component | Cost Range |
|---|---|
| Variable-speed pump (VSP) | $400-$1,200 |
| Basic timer/controller upgrade | $200-$600 |
| Mid-range automation system (equipment only) | $1,000-$2,000 |
| Installation labor | $500-$1,500 depending on complexity |
| Full automation + chemical control (all-in) | $3,000-$6,000+ |
| Annual electricity savings (VSP vs single-speed) | $400-$800/year |
The VSP payback period is 2-4 years in electricity savings alone. For a full pool maintenance cost breakdown that includes automation alongside other ownership expenses, see our cost guide.
Major pool automation brands
Three platforms dominate the residential pool automation market. We recommend matching your automation brand to your pump brand when possible. Better integration, single-vendor support, and fewer compatibility issues at the controller level.
- Hayward OmniLogic: Touchscreen panel plus app control; strong ecosystem for pools with multiple features (lights, waterfalls, spa). View the Hayward OmniLogic automation overview{:target=“_blank”}.
- Pentair IntelliCenter: App plus voice control integration; includes the IntelliChem add-on for chemical automation; strong presence in Sunbelt markets. See Pentair IntelliCenter automation system{:target=“_blank”}.
- Jandy iAquaLink: Compatible with Alexa and Google Home; strong retrofit track record for existing equipment.
- Zodiac AquaLink: Same parent company as Jandy; similar feature set, compatible hardware.
What Pool Automation Does NOT Do
Setting realistic expectations prevents buyer’s remorse. Pool automation does not:
- Eliminate manual testing. Even with chemical dosers and pH/ORP probes, sensors drift. We recommend verifying sensor readings manually once a week regardless of your automation level.
- Vacuum the pool. That is a separate product category: robotic, suction, or pressure-side cleaners. Automation controls your filtration system, not debris removal.
- Prevent algae on its own. Chemical automation reduces the risk of chlorine dropping dangerously low, but automating pool water chemistry still requires correct baseline settings to work. A miscalibrated sensor dosed incorrectly can still lead to a green pool.
- Monitor equipment failures. Some systems send alerts for unusual pump behavior, but pool automation is not a diagnostic system. It will not tell you that your filter pressure is rising due to a dirty cartridge.
- Work without internet. App control requires an active connection. If your internet goes down, the manual panel still functions as a fallback.
Pros and cons of pool automation
Pros:
- Control everything from your phone, useful for vacation homes and pools used on irregular schedules
- Variable-speed pump scheduling saves $400-$800/year in electricity versus a single-speed pump
- Remote heater pre-heating lets you arrive at a pool already at target temperature
- Color LED scheduling without manual switching; programmed shows add ambiance automatically
- Vacation mode: adjust schedules and check system status while traveling
- Chemical automation reduces the time spent manually testing and dosing
Cons:
- High upfront cost ($1,500-$6,000+ installed for meaningful automation above Tier 1)
- Software dependency: apps go offline, manufacturers occasionally discontinue older platforms
- Requires professional installation for most systems (not a DIY project)
- Weekly manual water testing is still required even with chemical automation
- Not cost-effective for above-ground or seasonal-only pools (3 months/year or less)
Is Pool Automation Worth It? (Verdict by Pool Type)
Worth it if:
- You have an inground pool used regularly (4+ months per year) with a heater and lights
- You travel frequently or maintain a second home with a pool
- Your single-speed pump is due for replacement (choosing a VSP at that point adds $200-$400 over a basic replacement pump but returns $400-$800/year in savings)
- Your pool has a spa, waterfall, or multiple water features that you currently switch on and off manually
Not worth it if:
- You have an above-ground or portable pool (the cost simply does not pencil out)
- You use the pool 3 months per year or less
- You are budget-constrained (put money toward chemicals and a functional pump/filter first)
- Your pool has no heater, no lights, and no water features
Our recommendation: Start with a variable-speed pump plus a digital timer (Tier 1). This single upgrade delivers the largest ROI of any pool automation investment and saves $400-$800 per year in electricity. When your pump needs replacement again or you are planning a renovation, that is the right moment to add a controller hub and move to Tier 2.
For the complete overview of what goes into maintaining an inground pool, see our complete pool maintenance guide.
FAQ
What does pool automation cost?
Variable-speed pump automation runs $400-$1,200 for the pump and timer. A mid-range controller hub (Hayward, Pentair, or Jandy) costs $1,500-$3,000 installed, including equipment and labor. Full automation with chemical dosing and sensors runs $3,000-$6,000 or more all-in. The highest-ROI entry point is the variable-speed pump, which saves $400-$800 per year in electricity and pays for itself in 2-4 years.
Can I add automation to an existing pool?
Yes. Retrofit controllers like the Jandy iAquaLink and Hayward OmniLogic are designed to integrate with existing equipment. The key compatibility check is your pump, variable-speed pumps integrate best. If you have an older single-speed pump, automation is a good reason to upgrade the pump at the same time.
Does pool automation really save money?
Yes, but primarily through the variable-speed pump. A VSP saves $400-$800 per year in electricity compared to a single-speed pump, according to DOE data. Chemical automation may reduce the volume of chemicals needed by preventing large swings, but the savings there are harder to quantify and depend heavily on how well sensors are calibrated.
Do I still need to test my pool with automation?
Yes. Even with a full chemical automation system, we recommend testing pool water manually once a week. Sensors drift over time and can give false readings that cause the system to overdose or underdose. Weekly verification keeps the automation accurate.
Which pool automation brand is best?
Hayward, Pentair, and Jandy are all mature platforms with strong support networks. The practical answer is to match your automation brand to your existing pump brand. If you have a Hayward pump, the OmniLogic ecosystem gives you the tightest integration. The same applies to Pentair (IntelliCenter) and Jandy (iAquaLink). Avoid mixing brands at the controller and pump level when possible.