How Much Does an Inground Pool Cost in Phoenix, Arizona? (2026 Guide)

If you’re a Phoenix homeowner thinking about adding an inground pool, the first question is almost always the same: what is this actually going to cost me? It’s a fair question — and one that deserves a straight answer rather than a vague “it depends.” In this 2026 guide, we’ll walk you through what drives the price of an inground pool cost in Phoenix, Arizona, what typical ranges look like today, which features add real value versus fluff, and how to keep your budget from spiraling. By the end, you’ll know exactly what to expect before you ever pick up the phone.

Quick answer — 2026 Phoenix pool cost ranges:
  • Starter inground pool: $45,000–$65,000
  • Mid-tier custom build: $65,000–$100,000
  • Premium / luxury build: $100,000+
  • Attached spa: add $12,000–$25,000
  • Custom features (waterfalls, fire bowls, lighting): $3,000–$15,000+ each

What Determines an Inground Pool’s Price in Phoenix?

Every backyard is different, and so is every pool. But a handful of factors consistently drive the price up or down. Understanding these before you get a bid helps you have smarter conversations with any builder — and avoid the classic “the number keeps going up” experience.

Pool size and shape

Larger pools cost more — that part is obvious — but shape matters just as much. A rectangular pool is the most efficient to build (straight forms, simpler steel layout, less material waste). Freeform curved pools, L-shapes, and Roman-end designs cost more because they take longer to lay out, shoot, and finish.

Pool type: gunite, fiberglass, or vinyl

In Arizona, gunite (shotcrete) pools dominate — and for good reason. They handle the ground movement, extreme heat, and long life spans that Arizona soil and sun demand. Fiberglass shells are less common here (limited size and shape options plus tight access constraints for the delivery truck), and vinyl-lined pools are rarely built in the Valley because the liner material degrades quickly under intense UV exposure.

Interior finish material

Your interior finish is what you see, touch, and swim next to every day. NPT Mini Pebble is the Arizona standard — durable, algae-resistant, and beautiful under the sun with a 10–15 year life. PebbleTec PebbleSheen is the premium tier with smaller, smoother pebbles, superior stain resistance, and 15+ years of life. Standard plaster is cheaper up front but typically needs resurfacing in 5–7 years in the Valley — often costing more over time.

Decking and coping options

Decking is one of the biggest single line items in your quote and drives the finished feel of your backyard. Arizona homeowners typically choose between:

  • Cool Deck — a textured acrylic-cement coating over concrete. Budget-friendly, stays cool underfoot in AZ summers, and comes in multiple colors. A practical Valley classic.
  • Travertine — natural stone pavers. Elegant, cooler than plain concrete, and a mid-range upgrade that pays off in resale.
  • Natural stone or marble — the premium finish. Higher cost, unmatched aesthetic, and the finish of choice for luxury builds.

Site conditions and access

Caliche or rock in your yard, tight side-gate access for excavation equipment, HOA setback rules, slope corrections, and utility relocations can all add cost before the first shovel of dirt is moved. This is why an on-site consultation always beats a phone estimate — real prices come from real ground.

Typical Phoenix Inground Pool Cost Ranges (2026)

Here’s what a Phoenix homeowner can realistically expect at three common price tiers this year. All three follow our published pool package framework — customized to your backyard, lifestyle, and budget.

Starter Build $45K–$65K Up to 400 sq ft · NPT Mini Pebble finish · Travertine coping or Cool Deck · variable-speed pump · LED lighting · full permitting
Mid-Tier Custom $65K–$100K Up to 400 sq ft · upgraded Pebble · natural stone or Cool Deck · attached spa · gas or heat-pump heater · Pentair automation · raised wall accent
Premium Build $100K+ Up to 650+ sq ft · PebbleSheen finish · premium natural stone or marble deck · salt system · fire bowls · multiple water features · smart automation

The 7 Phases of Pool Construction (Where Your Money Actually Goes)

One of the fastest ways to sanity-check a bid is to understand what happens across the build. Every gunite pool in Arizona follows roughly the same seven-phase sequence — and each phase has a well-defined cost profile.

  1. Design and permitting — 3D renderings, engineering, HOA and city permit submittals. Usually 4–8 weeks and 3–5% of the total cost. Cutting this phase short is the #1 way projects get delayed later.
  2. Excavation — digging the hole. Duration is 1–3 days; cost varies enormously with soil (caliche or hard rock can triple this line item). Site access matters — narrow gates or long dirt-haul routes add real money.
  3. Steel and plumbing — the rebar cage that gives the pool its structural bones, plus every plumbing line before the concrete goes in. About a week. Get this wrong and it cannot be corrected later.
  4. Shotcrete (gunite shell) — the sprayed structural concrete that forms the pool walls and floor. One long day, then a two-week cure. Typically 20–30% of the build cost — the biggest single line item after the finish.
  5. Tile and coping — waterline tile band and the stone edge around the pool. This is where design personality shows up. 1–2 weeks.
  6. Deck and equipment — decking installation (Cool Deck, travertine, or natural stone) and the equipment pad (pump, filter, heater, automation, salt cell). 2–3 weeks combined.
  7. Plaster and start-up — the interior finish goes on last. After plaster cures, the pool fills, chemistry is dialed in, and you get your orientation. Roughly a week.

When a builder shows you a full phase-by-phase timeline before you sign, that is a signal they have done this hundreds of times. When a bid is a single lump sum with no schedule, ask for one — every reputable Arizona pool builder should provide it. Learn more about our full build process.

What Adds Cost Beyond the Base Build?

Once your base pool is quoted, this is where budgets tend to grow. Some upgrades are worth every penny; others are pure vanity. Here’s an honest breakdown of what commonly gets added — and what it typically costs in the Phoenix market:

Add-on Typical Cost (2026) Worth It?
Attached spa with spillover$12,000–$25,000Yes — high resale + year-round use
Waterfall or rock feature$3,000–$12,000Depends on backyard style
Fire bowls (pair)$4,000–$8,000Great ambiance, mid-range ROI
Tanning ledge / Baja shelf$2,500–$6,000Yes — kids, dogs, lounging
LED lighting package$1,500–$4,000Yes — cheap, high impact
Salt chlorination system$1,800–$3,500Yes — softer water, lower ongoing cost
Cool Deck coating (over concrete)$3–$6 / sq ftYes — practical AZ classic, stays cool underfoot
Travertine decking (upgrade over concrete)$8,000–$20,000Yes — elegant + resale value
Automatic pool cover$8,000–$18,000Rare in AZ; more common in cooler climates

Hidden Costs Most Homeowners Don’t See in the Quote

Even a detailed pool bid usually leaves a few line items outside the scope. These are not always the builder’s responsibility — but they are your responsibility, and knowing them upfront prevents the ugly “why is my project $8,000 over budget” conversation three months in.

  • HOA architectural fees. Many Phoenix-area HOAs charge a plan review fee ($100–$500) plus a compliance deposit ($500–$2,500 refundable) before your project can start.
  • City permit fees. Vary by municipality — typically $500–$1,500. Some cities also charge separate mechanical, electrical, and gas permits on top.
  • Utility service upgrades. Pool heaters, salt systems, and automation may require a bigger electrical panel or a new gas line. Panel upgrades run $1,500–$4,000 and are rarely included in the pool quote.
  • Fence or barrier updates. Arizona law requires a self-closing, self-latching pool barrier at least 5 feet tall. If your existing yard fence doesn’t comply, you’ll need to update it — typically $2,000–$6,000 depending on run length.
  • Dust control during excavation. Maricopa County requires dust control on active construction sites. Small projects can absorb this in the excavation line, but larger builds sometimes bill separately.
  • Landscaping restoration. Excavation and equipment access will disturb sod, plants, and irrigation lines. Repair costs $1,000–$5,000 depending on how well the yard is protected during the build.

Ask any builder to flag every line item that is not in their scope. A clear “what we don’t cover” list is one of the strongest signs of an experienced contractor.

Essentials vs Nice-to-Haves

If you’re trying to protect your budget without cutting real value, here’s how we’d sort the common upgrades:

Essentials — Worth the Investment

  • Variable-speed pump — pays for itself in energy savings within 2–3 years
  • LED pool lighting — long life, no bulb changes, low maintenance
  • Salt chlorination — softer water, easier chemistry, less irritation
  • Automatic pool cleaner — protects your finish from Phoenix dust and debris
  • Pebble-grade interior finish — outlasts standard plaster in AZ heat

Nice-to-Haves — Enjoyment, Not ROI

  • Fire bowls and gas features
  • Custom mosaic tile
  • Underwater speakers
  • Perimeter overflow (“infinity”) edges
  • Automated smart controls

How to Get an Accurate Estimate for Your Backyard

Every pool build in Phoenix is priced against real ground: your specific soil, access, utilities, and HOA rules. Ballpark ranges are useful — but the only way to know your actual number is to run the numbers yourself.

That said, if you are comparing bids from multiple builders, ask each one the same five questions. The answers reveal experience level fast:

  1. Can I see a full phase-by-phase timeline? Builders who have done this hundreds of times will have one ready.
  2. What is your ROC license number and how long have you held it? Verify at roc.az.gov.
  3. Are permits, engineering, and HOA submittals inside this quote or separate? Handling all three should be built in.
  4. What isn’t covered? A good builder answers this without hesitation.
  5. Can I talk to three homeowners you built for in the last 18 months? Recent references matter more than a wall of decade-old logos.

When you are ready to see what your specific backyard looks like in numbers, our free cost calculator gets you there in about two minutes. It walks you through the same questions a builder would ask on a first visit — size, features, finishes, decking — and gives you a real budget window. No sales calls unless you ask.

Get Your Personalized Phoenix Pool Estimate

Free, instant, and no sales calls unless you want one. About two minutes.

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Frequently Asked Questions

A typical build runs 8–14 weeks from permit approval to your first swim. Straightforward geometric pools can be completed in as little as 8 weeks; pools with spas, raised walls, water features, and custom decking may take 12–14 weeks. Delays most often come from city permit review times, HOA architectural approvals, or weather during monsoon season.
In most Phoenix-metro HOA neighborhoods, yes. You’ll typically need architectural committee approval before submitting for a city permit. An experienced Arizona pool builder handles both applications for you and manages revision cycles when the HOA asks for changes.
Realistically, the low end of a properly built inground pool in the Valley starts around $45,000 in 2026 for a small geometric pool with essentials-only equipment. Anything significantly lower usually means cut corners on the shell, finish, or equipment — and that almost always costs more down the road in repairs, replaster, or equipment replacement.
Some builders include basic concrete decking or Cool Deck in the base quote; others don’t. Landscaping (grass, plants, irrigation) is almost always separate. Always ask what’s inside a quote line-by-line before comparing two bids side by side — that’s where big price differences hide.
In the Phoenix metro, a well-built pool typically increases your home’s resale value by 5–8% and recovers 40–60% of its cost at resale — but the real return is years of use in one of the country’s best pool climates. Homes with pools also tend to sell faster in most Valley zip codes, particularly in family-oriented neighborhoods.

Arizona Pool Builders is ROC #344023 — licensed for both residential and commercial pool construction with a KA-5 designation and in good standing with the Arizona Registrar of Contractors.

Picture of Dejan Miladinovic

Dejan Miladinovic

Dejan Miladinovic is the Founder & CEO of Arizona Pool Builders (ROC #344023, KA-5 licensed). He has spent 12 years designing and building custom pools across the Phoenix Valley — from Scottsdale luxury builds to family backyards in the East Valley. He writes about pool costs, materials, and construction from the perspective of a working contractor, not a marketer.