Codes and Standards for Pool Owners
Check drain covers, follow labels and manuals, and keep the current rule text and standards pages within reach before you touch the equipment.
- Check drain covers, follow labels and manuals, and keep the current rule text and standards pages within reach before you touch the equipment.
- Drain cover model
- Barrier type
- Local AHJ contact
- Do not rely on forum summaries over official code pages
- Do not skip permit process or final inspections
- Do not ignore the AHJ for local code questions
Inspect drain covers first — a missing or broken cover is a pool-closure trigger.
- ✕Do not rely on forum summaries over official code pages
- ✕Do not skip permit process or final inspections
- ✕Do not ignore the AHJ for local code questions
Drain cover model / Barrier type / Local AHJ contact
Drain cover and entrapment safety
Suction entrapment is a life-safety issue, not a cosmetic maintenance note.
Labels and manuals outrank casual advice
For chemicals and equipment, the product instructions are the governing document for operation and warranty. Use the current code page when the question reaches safety, installation, or inspection.
Keep the code shelf current
Use official pages for the current rule text and the current standards context instead of forum summaries or secondhand snippets.
When to call the authority having jurisdiction
Some questions should go to the local building, electrical, or health authority instead of an online forum.
Ressources (6)
CPSC Pool and Spa Drain Covers
Current CPSC business guidance for drain covers, successor-standard context, and replacement obligations.
Electronic Code of Federal Regulations: 16 CFR part 1450
Current federal drain-cover regulatory text tied to the VGB framework.
PHTA drain cover safety
Owner-facing entrapment guidance and the standard path for compliant drain covers.
PHTA-16 standard status
PHTA bulletin on the current status of the successor suction-outlet standard.
DOE efficient swimming pool pump
Federal guidance on pump sizing, runtime, and energy savings for ownership planning.
Owner vs pro boundaries
Use the canonical escalation guide when the code question is really about who should perform the work safely.
Educational guidance only. Verify labels, manuals, local code, and site conditions before acting. Stop for electrical, gas, structural, drain, drowning, injury, emergency, or chemical-mixing risk.