Pool Water Calculator 2026

Free pool utility • gallons, fill time and cost

Pool Water Calculator

Use this pool water calculator to estimate swimming pool gallons, liters, CCF/HCF billing units, water weight, fill time, water cost, average depth, surface area and turnover time.

This is built for real pool jobs. Use it before filling a new pool, refilling after repair, estimating chemical startup volume, checking a high water bill, or asking your water department about pool-fill sewer adjustment.

Calculator outputs Gallons, liters, cubic feet, CCF/HCF, water weight, fill time, estimated water cost, average depth and turnover time. Pool shapes Rectangular, round, oval, kidney/irregular and custom gallons.

Quick answer: how many gallons are in my pool?

For a rectangular pool, multiply length × width × average depth in feet. Then multiply cubic feet by 7.48052 to estimate gallons.

For a round pool, use diameter and average depth. For an oval or kidney pool, the calculator applies a shape factor so the result is more practical than a simple rectangle estimate.

Pool fill warning A pool fill can create a high water bill. Before filling a large pool, ask your water department about sewer adjustment, pool-fill credit, irrigation meter use, drought restrictions, hydrant meter rules and high-usage alerts.

Pool Water Calculator

Choose pool shape, enter dimensions, then add optional hose flow rate, water cost and pump flow rate. The calculator will estimate volume, cost, fill time and turnover time.

For rectangular pools, enter length, width, shallow depth and deep depth.

Pool gallons8,078
Liters30,577
CCF / HCF10.8
Cubic feet1,080
Average depth4.5 ft
Surface area240 sq ft
Water weight67,369 lb
Fill time16.8 hr
Water-only cost$48.47
Water + sewer estimate$113.09
Turnover time3.4 hr
Pool sizeMedium
Practical note Confirm sewer adjustment rules before filling if your utility bills sewer from metered water use.

Pool water formulas used

Pool shape Formula Best use
Rectangular Length × width × average depth × 7.48052 Most in-ground and above-ground rectangular pools.
Round π × radius² × average depth × 7.48052 Round above-ground pools and round plunge pools.
Oval Length × width × average depth × 5.875 Oval above-ground pools and oval in-ground pools.
Kidney / irregular Length × width × average depth × 7.48052 × 0.85 Kidney, freeform and irregular pools when you need a practical estimate.
Custom gallons Entered gallons converted to liters, CCF, weight, fill time and cost When pool builder, permit, manual or old bill already lists gallons.
Useful conversions 1 cubic foot = 7.48052 US gallons. 1 CCF/HCF = 100 cubic feet = about 748 gallons. 1 US gallon = 3.78541 liters. 1 gallon of water weighs about 8.34 pounds.

Pool fill cost and water bill planning

The water-only cost is not always your full bill impact. Many utilities bill sewer based on metered water use. That means a pool fill may increase both water and sewer unless your utility offers an adjustment.

Water charge
Usage × rate

Use your cost per 1,000 gallons. Some cities use tiered rates, so a large fill may enter a higher tier.

Sewer charge
Ask first

If sewer is billed from water usage, your pool fill may increase sewer charges unless adjusted.

Fixed charges
Not included

Base fees, stormwater, trash, taxes, penalties and past balance are not included in this calculator.

Before filling a pool: call or check these items

Question Why it matters What to ask
Is there a pool-fill sewer adjustment? Pool water usually does not enter the sewer. “Do you offer a pool fill credit or sewer adjustment?”
Are there drought restrictions? Outdoor filling may be limited during drought or water emergency periods. “Are pool fills allowed this week?”
Can I use a separate meter? Some utilities offer irrigation or temporary meters. “Is a separate meter or hydrant meter available?”
Will this trigger a high-usage alert? A large one-time fill may look like a leak. “Should I notify you before filling?”
Do I need proof? Some utilities require dates, photos, contractor invoices or meter readings. “What documents do you need for pool-fill adjustment?”

Pool water examples

Small round pool
15 ft × 4 ft

A 15 ft round pool with 4 ft average depth holds about 5,288 gallons.

Medium rectangle
20 × 12 × 4.5

A 20 ft by 12 ft pool with 4.5 ft average depth holds about 8,079 gallons.

Large rectangle
32 × 16 × 5

A 32 ft by 16 ft pool with 5 ft average depth holds about 19,150 gallons.

Common pool volume mistakes

Mistake Why it gives wrong gallons Fix
Using deep end only It overestimates sloped pool volume. Use average depth: shallow + deep ÷ 2.
Using outside pool dimensions Wall thickness and coping are not water volume. Measure inside water length and width.
Ignoring steps and benches They displace water and reduce actual gallons. Treat result as a close estimate, not exact chemical dosing proof.
Forgetting sewer charges A pool fill may increase sewer charges on the bill. Ask utility about pool-fill sewer adjustment before filling.
Guessing hose flow Fill time can be very different from the estimate. Time how long it takes to fill a 5-gallon bucket, then calculate gallons per minute.

Pool Water Calculator FAQs

How do I calculate pool gallons?

For a rectangular pool, multiply length × width × average depth in feet, then multiply by 7.48052 to estimate gallons.

How do I calculate average pool depth?

Add shallow depth and deep depth, then divide by 2. Example: 3 ft shallow + 6 ft deep = 9 ÷ 2 = 4.5 ft average depth.

How many gallons are in a 20 × 12 pool?

If average depth is 4.5 ft, a 20 ft × 12 ft pool holds about 8,079 gallons.

How many gallons are in a 15 ft round pool?

A 15 ft round pool with 4 ft average water depth holds about 5,288 gallons.

How long does it take to fill a pool?

Divide pool gallons by hose gallons per minute. Then divide minutes by 60. Example: 8,000 gallons at 8 GPM takes about 16.7 hours.

How much does pool water weigh?

One US gallon of water weighs about 8.34 pounds. A 10,000-gallon pool contains about 83,400 pounds of water.

What is CCF or HCF on a water bill?

CCF or HCF usually means 100 cubic feet. One CCF/HCF is about 748 gallons.

Will filling a pool increase my sewer bill?

It can. Many utilities bill sewer from metered water use. Ask about pool-fill sewer adjustment before filling.

Can I use this calculator for chemical dosing?

You can use the estimated gallons as a starting point, but always follow the chemical product label and test your water. Steps, benches, slope and shape can change actual gallons.

Should I notify my water department before filling?

For large pools, yes. Ask about pool-fill credits, outdoor restrictions, high-usage alerts and required proof.

Disclaimer This calculator provides practical estimates. For structural load, engineering, commercial pool compliance, chemical treatment, leak testing or code requirements, verify with a qualified professional or local authority.

Last editorial check: June 2026. Pool volume can vary by actual water depth, curved walls, steps, benches, slope, liner shape and measurement accuracy.

Free Water Bill & Utility Service Assistant

Pay Smarter, Check High Bills, Start Service, Avoid Shutoff and Find Official Water Department Links

Use this free tool before paying a water bill, setting up autopay, starting or stopping service, checking a high bill, requesting leak help, or looking for the official water department portal. It gives practical next steps without collecting your account number or personal details.

Start Water Bill Helper
8 toolsBill pay, high bill check, leak checklist, start/stop service, assistance and official searches.
All utilitiesWorks sitewide for city, county, parish, authority and private water utility pages.
No loginNo account number, email, service address or payment data is required.
Mobile-firstBuilt for customers searching from a phone while trying to solve a bill or service issue.

What water bill or service problem do you need to solve?

Choose your situation. The tool will suggest the safest next step, what to prepare, and which official page to check first.

Payment safety tip

Start from the official water department, city, county or utility website before entering account details. Avoid random payment ads and look-alike bill pay sites.

High bill tip

Before paying a very unusual bill, check meter reads, toilet leaks, irrigation use, estimated bills, late fees, and whether your utility offers a leak adjustment.

Water Bill Payment Route Helper

Choose how you want to pay. The tool will tell you what to prepare and the safest payment path.

High Water Bill Checker

Compare your normal bill with the new bill and get a practical investigation path before calling customer service.

Use gallons, CCF, HCF or units shown on your bill.

Leak Check and Adjustment Checklist

Use this before requesting a leak adjustment, disputing a bill, or calling the water department about high usage.

Start, Stop or Transfer Water Service Helper

Use this before moving, opening a new account, closing an old account, or transferring service to another address.

Past Due, Shutoff and Reconnection Helper

Use this if your account is late, disconnected, at risk of shutoff, or you need a payment plan or assistance program.

Simple Water Usage Cost Estimator

Estimate a rough bill from base charge, usage units, rate per unit, sewer charge, stormwater fee and service fees. Official tiered rates may be different.

Example: if usage is gallons, enter cost per gallon.

Official Water Department Resource Finder

Enter city/utility and state to create safe searches for the official water bill portal, phone number, outage page, assistance, start service, leak adjustment, and Water-Department.org guide.

Water Department vs Payment Processor

  • Water department: account help, service start/stop, leaks, repairs, shutoff, assistance.
  • Payment processor: card/eCheck payment screen, payment fee, confirmation number, posting time.

Best sitewide placement

Add this tool after the main payment section or before FAQs. It helps users solve the next problem after reading the article.

Important safety note

This tool gives educational guidance only. Always confirm payment portals, phone numbers, account balance, assistance rules and reconnection steps with the official water department or utility.

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