Residential vs Public Pool Rules
Keep homeowner guidance separate from public-pool code before you copy a rule into a regulated venue.
- Keep homeowner guidance separate from public-pool code before you copy a rule into a regulated venue.
- Pool type (residential vs public/commercial)
- Local health department or AHJ contact
- Do not copy homeowner FC/CYA or winterization workflows into a regulated aquatic venue without code review
- Do not tell home owners they are violating commercial rules that do not apply to them
Keep homeowner guidance separate from public-pool code — residential workflows do not apply to regulated venues.
- ✕Do not copy homeowner FC/CYA or winterization workflows into a regulated aquatic venue without code review
- ✕Do not tell home owners they are violating commercial rules that do not apply to them
Pool type (residential vs public/commercial) / Local health department or AHJ contact
Residential pools
Residential guidance is mostly about keeping water safe and predictable for a private owner.
Public and commercial pools
Public venues are regulated operations, not just larger home pools.
Why this distinction matters
Confusing these categories produces bad advice fast.
リソース(3)
Commercial vs residential contamination
Use the contamination-specific venue guide when the question is really about cleanup and re-opening standards, not just general code differences.
CDC Model Aquatic Health Code overview
MAHC is CDC guidance for pools, hot tubs, and splash pads that are open to the public.
CDC MAHC current edition work
Use CDC's current-edition MAHC resources when the question is about public/commercial venue operation.
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.