Comparison

Saltwater Pool vs. Chlorine Pool: Which Is Better in Miami?

Written by Angel Flores, CPC #1461473 — 10+ years servicing Miami-Dade and Broward poolsPublished May 21, 2026

Quick answer

Saltwater pools generate chlorine on-demand from dissolved salt via an electrolytic salt cell, while chlorine pools rely on manually added chlorine (liquid or tablet). For Miami's heat and humidity, saltwater is the dominant choice in newer construction because it's lower-maintenance and gentler on swimmers. The trade-off: a higher upfront cost for the salt-cell system and ongoing replacement parts (salt cells need replacing every 3–7 years).

How each system works

A saltwater pool isn't "salty" — the salinity is about 3,000–4,000 ppm, roughly 1/10th the salinity of seawater. The salt cell uses electrolysis to split sodium chloride into sodium ions and chlorine, which sanitizes the water. The chlorine eventually reverts back to salt, creating a low-maintenance loop.

A traditional chlorine pool uses manually added chlorine — liquid (sodium hypochlorite), tablet (trichlor), or granular (cal hypo). You're refilling chemicals every 1–2 weeks. The chemistry is the same in both pools; only the chlorine source differs.

Cost over 10 years

Upfront: a saltwater conversion has a meaningful one-time cost (salt cell + control board + initial salt). A new chlorine pool comes with the basics built in.

Ongoing: salt cells need replacing every 3–7 years (3–5 in coastal Cocoplum and Doral; 5–7 inland). Chlorine pools have a recurring monthly chemical cost that varies with pool size and use. Over 10 years, saltwater often comes out cheaper overall once you factor in chemical savings.

Maintenance differences

Saltwater: still test all 5 chemistry numbers weekly, plus salt level monthly and cell health quarterly. No more chlorine refills, but the pH tends to drift upward faster (salt cells produce sodium hydroxide as a byproduct), so muriatic acid dosing is more frequent.

Chlorine: refill chemicals every 1–2 weeks. Same 5-number testing. pH drift is less aggressive. Lower equipment cost but more hands-on time.

Equipment lifespan in Miami

Salt cells in inland Miami-Dade (Doral, Pinecrest interior) last 5–7 years. In coastal Coral Gables/Cocoplum, salt-air corrosion cuts that to 3–5 years. Pump shafts and heater coils on salt pools corrode 20–30% faster than chlorine-pool equivalents because there's always low-grade chloride in the water.

Bottom line: salt pools have higher equipment failure rates in coastal homes; identical reliability inland.

Common questions

Quick answers

Thinking about converting?

We do salt conversions. And we maintain both.

We work on every brand of salt system (Hayward AquaRite, Pentair IntelliChlor, Jandy AquaPure) plus traditional chlorine. Free inspection to see what makes sense for your pool.

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