One of the first equipment decisions every new Arizona pool owner faces is how to sanitize the water: traditional chlorine or a salt chlorine generator (aka “salt water pool”). It sounds like a big fork in the road — chlorine pool vs salt water pool — but the reality is more nuanced. Salt water pools still use chlorine (they generate it from salt on-demand). Chlorine pools can be just as gentle if managed properly. The choice affects your upfront equipment cost, monthly chemical spend, ongoing maintenance routine, and how the water actually feels on your skin in 115°F Phoenix heat. In this 2026 guide, we’ll break down what each system actually is, what each really costs to run in Arizona, how maintenance differs day-to-day, and give you a clear decision framework based on your specific priorities.
- Salt system installed upfront: $1,800–$3,500 (equipment + first fill of salt)
- Chlorine (traditional) upfront: $200–$600 (tab feeder + starter chemicals)
- Monthly chemical cost — salt: $10–$30/mo · chlorine: $40–$80/mo
- Salt cell replacement: $500–$800 every 4–7 years
- Salt water is NOT chlorine-free — it generates chlorine from salt on-demand
- Both work in Arizona; salt systems are on ~65% of new AZ pool builds
What “Salt Water Pool” Actually Means
The biggest misconception in the whole salt-vs-chlorine debate: many homeowners think salt water pools have zero chlorine. That’s not true. A salt water pool IS a chlorine pool. The chlorine is just generated on-site by a salt chlorine generator (also called a salt cell or SCG) rather than added manually as tablets or liquid.
Here’s how it works: the generator uses a small electrical charge to convert dissolved salt (NaCl) in the pool water into hypochlorous acid — the same active chlorine you’d get from a tab, just produced continuously in tiny amounts as water passes through the cell. Water salinity stays around 3,200 ppm (parts per million) — noticeable but mild, comparable to human tears. For reference, seawater is about 35,000 ppm, or roughly 10 times saltier.
“Chlorine” or traditional pools use chlorine you add manually — 3-inch trichlor tabs in a floating dispenser or in-line feeder, liquid chlorine (essentially concentrated bleach) poured in weekly, or granular shock added periodically to boost sanitizer levels.
Both systems keep pool water at the industry-standard 1–3 ppm free chlorine — the sanitization target recommended by the CDC’s Healthy Swimming program. The chlorine chemistry doing the actual work is identical; only how the chlorine gets into your pool differs.
Upfront Cost Comparison
The upfront difference is the biggest reason budget-conscious buyers choose chlorine and long-term owners choose salt:
Ongoing Monthly and Annual Chemical Costs
Here’s where salt pulls ahead over time. Continuous on-demand chlorine generation is dramatically cheaper per month than buying tabs, liquid chlorine, and shock.
| Category | Salt Water Pool | Chlorine Pool |
|---|---|---|
| Chlorine (generated or purchased) | Included in salt cost | $25–$50/mo |
| Salt refill (bags every 6–12 mo) | $5–$15/mo avg | — |
| pH balance chemicals | $5–$10/mo | $8–$15/mo |
| Stabilizer, alkalinity, calcium | $2–$5/mo | $5–$10/mo |
| Shock treatments | Occasional ($3–$5/mo avg) | $5–$15/mo |
| Total monthly | $15–$35/mo | $45–$90/mo |
| Annual | ~$180–$420 | ~$540–$1,080 |
Break-even math: Salt costs roughly $1,500–$2,900 more up front but saves ~$400–$700/year in chemicals. Payback: 3–7 years. If you plan to own the pool 10+ years, salt is meaningfully cheaper total-cost-of-ownership. If you’re selling within 5 years, chlorine is cheaper.
Maintenance Routine Comparison
Day-to-day, the two systems demand different attention patterns:
Salt System — Set It & Check It
- Check salinity monthly with a test strip (~$0.10)
- Add a bag of salt every 6–12 months (~$5–$10 per 40-lb bag)
- Clean the salt cell 2–3 times per year (5-minute task — soak in muriatic acid diluted 1:10)
- Standard chemistry testing: pH, alkalinity, cyanuric acid (same as chlorine pool)
- Roughly 15–20 minutes/week of active maintenance
Chlorine Pool — Weekly Hands-On
- Refill tab feeder weekly (or add tabs to floater)
- Test water chemistry 2–3 times per week
- Add liquid chlorine or shock as needed to maintain 1–3 ppm free chlorine
- pH tends to drift low (chlorine is acidic) — more frequent pH balancing needed
- Roughly 30–45 minutes/week of active maintenance
The Arizona-Specific Advantage: Sun, Heat, and Salt
Phoenix’s climate creates unique demands that shift the salt-vs-chlorine calculation:
UV burns off chlorine faster in AZ
Direct summer sun degrades unprotected chlorine within hours. Both pool types combat this with cyanuric acid (stabilizer) that shields the chlorine molecule from UV. But salt systems produce chlorine continuously as water flows through the cell — better matched to Arizona’s high sanitizer demand than adding tabs once a week and hoping they hold.
Salt water feels softer in daily-swim climates
When you swim daily (which many Arizona homeowners do from April through October), the “feel” of the water matters. Salt water is noticeably softer on skin, hair, and eyes than heavily chlorinated water. Chlorine pools can achieve similar comfort with careful chemistry management, but salt is more forgiving.
The downside: salt corrodes metal fixtures
The salt-corrosion risk is real. Salt water accelerates corrosion of exposed metal — pool ladders, handrails, decking anchors, and some heater components. This is why modern salt pools use corrosion-resistant materials (titanium heat exchangers, stainless steel or fiberglass ladders, sealed decking). If your build includes traditional galvanized steel fixtures nearby, salt may not be the right choice. Reputable Arizona pool builders spec corrosion-resistant hardware by default when salt is on the plan.
Chloramine buildup and skin irritation
The “chlorine smell” and eye irritation many people associate with chlorine pools actually comes from chloramines — byproducts formed when chlorine reacts with organic matter (sunscreen, sweat, cosmetics). Per the EPA’s guidance on chloramines, well-maintained pools (salt or chlorine) with proper chemistry keep chloramines low. Salt systems tend to produce fewer chloramines because the chlorine is generated cleaner and more continuously — one of the main reasons swimmers report salt water feels less irritating.
The Real Downsides Nobody Talks About
Neither system is perfect. Here’s what pool salespeople don’t always mention:
Salt system honest downsides
- Corrosion risk to metal fixtures — must design around it
- Salt cell replacement every 4–7 years: $500–$800 (labor + parts)
- Higher upfront investment — dead money if you sell within 3 years
- Still needs chemistry balancing — “set and forget” is a myth
- Small electricity cost to run the cell ($3–$8/month)
Chlorine pool honest downsides
- More hands-on weekly time commitment (30–45 min/week)
- Water can develop that harsh “chlorine smell” if chloramines build up
- Rougher on skin, hair, and swimwear over time — noticeable after months of regular use
- Tabs release cyanuric acid (stabilizer) into the water; over time this can build up above the 30–50 ppm target range and requires partial water replacement to correct
- Chemical storage — chlorine tabs, liquid chlorine, and shock all need dry, ventilated storage away from kids and pets
Which Should You Pick? Decision Framework
Neither system is universally “better.” Use this framework based on your specific priorities:
Choose Salt If
- You’ll swim frequently (3+ times per week)
- You have sensitive skin, kids, or pets
- You want less hands-on weekly maintenance
- You’re a long-term owner (10+ years)
- You’re willing to pay $1,500+ more upfront
- Your build includes corrosion-resistant materials
Choose Chlorine If
- Tight budget upfront — every dollar matters
- You plan to sell the home within 3–5 years
- You don’t mind weekly hands-on maintenance
- Your yard has salt-sensitive landscaping close to the pool
- You already have chlorine equipment and don’t want to convert
What About Alternative Systems (UV, Ozone, Mineral)?
You’ll see marketing for UV, ozone, and mineral-based sanitization systems. Here’s the honest breakdown:
- UV systems — Kill bacteria and viruses passing through the UV chamber. But UV doesn’t leave residual sanitizer in the water. You still need chlorine (or salt-generated chlorine) as the primary sanitizer. UV is a supplement, not a replacement.
- Ozone — Same story. Ozone kills pathogens as water passes through the ozone chamber, but leaves no residual protection. Still requires chlorine as the main sanitizer.
- Mineral systems (Nature2, Pool Frog) — Silver and copper ions inhibit algae and bacteria growth, allowing you to run lower chlorine levels (~0.5 ppm instead of 1–3 ppm). Reduce chlorine consumption but don’t eliminate it.
- Bromine — Rare in outdoor Arizona pools due to cost and UV degradation. More common in spas and indoor pools.
The bottom line: every outdoor pool needs some form of chlorine sanitizer. The choice is really “how do you want to introduce the chlorine into your pool” — generated on-site from salt, added manually as tabs/liquid, or reduced with mineral supplements. Industry standards published by the Pool & Hot Tub Alliance (PHTA) reinforce that free chlorine is still the sanitizer of record for residential pools.
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Related reading: Pool Packages · Phoenix Pool Cost Guide · Cost Calculator · CDC Healthy Swimming
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