
Your pool’s machinery decides whether you spend weekends swimming or troubleshooting. Yet most homeowners obsess over tile and shape while ignoring the gear behind the equipment pad, the gear that actually keeps the water clear, warm, and safe.
A right-sized pump, the correct filter, and a properly matched heater determine whether your pool feels like a luxury retreat or a constant maintenance project. Get any of these wrong, and you’ll feel it every weekend.
This pool equipment guide distills what we’ve learned over the years, specifying swimming pool equipment across Southern California at Mission Pools since 1960.
Every functional pool runs on the same six-component backbone: a pump for circulation, a filter for clarity, a heater for comfort, a sanitizer for safety, a controller for management, and lights for nighttime use.
Some pools layer in extras like robotic cleaners and automatic covers, but those six are non-negotiable.
The right swimming pool equipment list for your backyard depends on a handful of variables:
Equipment requirements also differ between above-ground and in-ground pool builds, since structural integration and plumbing diameters vary. Most of this guide focuses on inground pools, which is what we build across San Diego and Riverside.

The pump pulls water from your pool, pushes it through the filter, heater, and sanitizer, then returns it clean. Three main types of pool pumps dominate the residential market: single-speed, dual-speed, and variable-speed.
Single-speed pumps run at a single fixed speed whenever they’re on. Operationally simple, but inefficient.
The California Energy Commission’s Title 20 efficiency standards effectively phased out most single-speed pool pumps for new and replacement installations starting in 2021, since they can’t meet the required Weighted Energy Factor for residential pool sizes.
Utility rebates also disappeared, leaving them off most California equipment lists today.
Dual-speed pumps offer a high setting for vacuuming or running water features and a low setting for daily filtration. Running on low cuts your energy use meaningfully versus single-speed motors, though not as dramatically as a variable-speed unit.
That gap is why dual-speed has become a niche option as variable-speed pricing has dropped.
Today, most contractors skip dual-speed entirely and recommend variable-speed for both efficiency and long-term value.
Variable-speed pumps are the gold standard for modern swimming pool equipment.
Adjustable RPM lets you dial filtration to the lowest speed that still keeps your pool completely circulating, dramatically lowering energy use over hundreds of hours of operation each year.
Beyond efficiency, variable-speed motors run quieter, generate less heat, and outlast older single-speed designs. They’re now required for most new and replacement installations in California, with federal Department of Energy regulations following similar standards.
Pump selection is part math, part judgment. Your pump must move your full pool volume through the filter and back at least once per day, ideally in 8 to 12 hours of total run time.
Plumbing diameter (1.5 inch versus 2 inch) affects friction loss and the right horsepower for your job. Most California pools use a range of 1.0 to 2.5 total horsepower for variable-speed units, but the actual number is determined by a hydraulic calculation performed during the design phase.
Across all three pool pump types, variable-speed is the right choice for almost every modern California pool install, since plumbing, equipment, and engineering decisions in the pool construction process are sequenced together from day one.
Now that your pump is moving water properly, your filter is what keeps it crystal clear. As the pump pushes water through, debris, dirt, oils, and microscopic particles get trapped before clean water returns to your pool.
Three pool filter types dominate residential installs:
When choosing your filter, look for swimming pool equipment certified to NSF/ANSI/CAN 50, the recognized performance standard that California Title 24 and most U.S. pool codes reference directly.
Sand filters force water through a bed of specially graded silica sand that traps debris as it flows through. Here’s the trade-off:
Sand filters still work well for budget-conscious or large-volume installations, but the trade-off in water clarity matters in California, where water rates keep climbing.
Cartridge filters use a pleated fabric element that traps particles down to roughly 10 to 15 microns. They’re the most popular choice for modern Southern California new pool construction for good reason:
Most residential builds default to cartridge because the maintenance pattern fits how busy homeowners actually use their pools.
DE filters use grids coated with a fine, fossilized-algae powder that captures particles down to 3 to 5 microns, offering the highest clarity of any standard pool filter type.
DE works beautifully but demands more attention than a cartridge. It’s worth the extra steps for homeowners who want maximum clarity, often on display pools or vanishing-edge designs.

Filter selection comes down to two questions: how much maintenance you’re willing to tolerate and how clear you want your water.
Among the three pool filter types, the cartridge wins for most everyday Southern California homes thanks to its no-backwash design and balanced filtration.
Beyond the type, sizing matters just as much. Always match your filter to your pool volume generously, since a slightly oversized filter runs at lower pressure, captures more particles, and stretches your cleaning intervals further than a marginal one ever could.
With your filter dialed in, the next decision is how often you actually want to swim. A heater turns your backyard pool into an amenity you use 8 to 10 months a year, rather than just 3.
Your pool heater options come in three main flavors: gas, electric heat pump, and solar. The right choice depends on how cold your water gets, how quickly you want it to warm, and your local fuel and electricity costs.
Gas heaters are the fastest way to warm your pool. They burn fuel to heat water directly, which means they work in any climate and warm a pool quickly enough for spontaneous weekend use.
For homeowners who want their pool warm by Saturday morning even after a cold week, gas remains the workhorse. Cooler-month performance matters too, and proper winter pool care covers when to keep your heater running and when to power it down.
Heat pumps work like reverse air conditioners, pulling heat from the surrounding air and transferring it into your pool water. They’re remarkably efficient in mild Southern California weather.
The Air-Conditioning, Heating, and Refrigeration Institute reports typical Coefficient of Performance (COP) values between 4.0 and 6.0, meaning your unit delivers four to six times more heat energy than the electricity it consumes.
Heat pumps make excellent sense for homeowners who keep their pool at a steady temperature year-round, since the lower operating costs easily outweigh the slower warm-ups.
Solar heaters route your pool water through rooftop or ground-mounted panels where sunlight warms it before returning it to the pool. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates typical installed system costs of $2,500 to $4,000, with a payback of 1 to 7 years depending on local fuel rates and sunshine.
Solar pairs beautifully with a heat pump or gas backup. The solar handles base temperature on sunny days, and the backup kicks in for stretches of overcast weather or quick warmups.
For Southern California homeowners, choosing among the three pool heater options usually comes down to how you actually use your pool.
Many renovation clients combine a heat pump with a solar system for maximum efficiency, with heat-loss calculations during design ensuring the unit is sized correctly.
Once your heater is dialed in, sanitation is what keeps your pool water safe to swim in.
The CDC recommends a chlorine concentration of at least 1 ppm and a pH between 7.0 and 7.8 for healthy residential pool water, since both numbers control how effectively chlorine kills germs in your water.
Traditional chlorination uses tablets, liquid, or granular chlorine added to your water on a regular schedule. It’s the most affordable option upfront and the simplest to understand.
Manual chlorination still works well for hands-on homeowners who don’t mind the routine. The trade-off is your time; you’re committing to weekly chemistry checks for the life of the pool.
Salt systems convert dissolved salt in your pool water into chlorine automatically through a process called electrolysis. Your pool stays chlorinated continuously without you handling jugs of bleach or stacking tablets.
Salt has become the dominant choice for new builds and renovations in Southern California. Most homeowners who switch tell us they’d never go back to chasing chlorine tablets every weekend.
UV and ozone are supplemental sanitizers that destroy contaminants as your water passes through them. Neither replaces chlorine entirely, but both reduce the amount of chlorine you need to maintain the same water quality.
Both pair well with traditional chlorine or salt setups, and they’re especially valuable for indoor pools, heavy-use families, or anyone sensitive to chlorine smell and skin irritation.

Smart pool automation consolidates all swimming pool equipment into a single app. Pumps, heaters, lights, salt chlorinators, and water features all run from a single controller you manage right from your phone.
A good system typically includes:
Per the U.S. Department of Energy, optimized pump scheduling alone can cut your pumping costs by up to 75%.
With your automation system tying everything together, lighting is what brings your backyard to life after dark. LEDs now dominate pool lighting because they use a fraction of the energy and last 25 times longer than older bulbs.
Common lighting layers include:
Beyond the visuals, code-compliant fixtures help swimmers see depth changes and reduce after-hours accidents.
Beyond the core six components, a few additional pieces of equipment dramatically improve the day-to-day pool experience.
Robotic cleaners are standalone units with their own pump, motor, and brushes. They scrub and vacuum your pool’s floor, walls, and waterline on a schedule, completely independent of your main pump and filter.
A robotic cleaner is the upgrade most homeowners say they wish they’d bought sooner.
Covers are among the most underrated pieces of swimming pool equipment because they affect heating costs, debris load, water evaporation, and child safety simultaneously.
If your pool sits unused for weeks at a time, a quality cover changes off-season pool care entirely by reducing debris, evaporation, and chemistry headaches.
Automatic water levelers keep your pool topped off automatically. A sensor monitors your water level, and a small valve adds water from your domestic supply when evaporation drops it too far.
Water levelers are worth every dollar in dry SoCal summers, when evaporation can pull half an inch of water per day off the surface.
Properly maintained swimming pool equipment lasts dramatically longer and runs cheaper than gear that gets ignored. Three habits cover most of the upkeep:
Consistent residential pool maintenance is the single biggest factor in your equipment’s lifespan and long-term performance.

Choosing the right swimming pool equipment is what separates a backyard you actually enjoy from one that feels like a part-time job. Right-size your pump, match your filter to your clarity goals, and pick the heater that fits how you really use your pool.
At Mission Pools, 60+ years of equipment installs across Southern California mean our crew handles design, integration, and aftercare in-house.
Book your free consultation, and let’s walk your equipment pad together.
The pump is the most important piece of swimming pool equipment because it powers the circulation of water through every other component. Without it, your filter, heater, and sanitizer all stop working.
A correctly sized variable-speed pump circulates the entire volume of your pool daily.
Most major pool equipment lasts roughly 7 to 15 years, though it varies by component.
Variable-speed pumps run 8 to 12 years, gas heaters 5 to 12 years, and heat pumps 10 to 20 years. Salt cells in saltwater systems typically need to be replaced every 3 to 5 years.
In Southern California, variable-speed pumps run $1,200 to $2,500 installed, while gas heaters cost $3,500 to $6,000. Across pool heater options, heat pumps run $4,000 to $8,000. A full equipment pad rebuild typically lands between $10,000 and $20,000.
You can, but you don’t have to. Upgrading everything at once saves on labor since the pad rebuilds only once. If the budget is tight, prioritize the pump first because it drives efficiency for everything downstream.
Yes. Pool equipment involves high-voltage electrical, gas plumbing, and pressurized water lines, all of which create safety risks or void warranties if installed incorrectly. California also requires permits for electrical and gas work, which licensed contractors handle automatically.
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