FAQ #77: Who Should Not Build a Swimming Pool?
Swimming pools can be incredible additions to the right home — and deeply frustrating ones for the wrong situation.
One of the most honest conversations homeowners should have early is not:
“Can we build a pool?”
But:
“Should we?”
Because while many people can build a pool, not everyone should.
If the primary motivation is:
Immediate return on investment
Flipping the house soon
Expecting the pool to “pay for itself” in resale
A pool is often the wrong move.
Pools are lifestyle investments first.
Financial return is highly situational and market-dependent, not guaranteed.
Homeowners who regret pools most often expected them to behave like traditional renovations — and they don’t.
Every pool requires:
Routine attention
Seasonal tasks
Problem-solving when things aren’t perfect
Even “low-maintenance” pools are not no-maintenance.
If the idea of:
Monitoring systems
Learning basic water care
Scheduling service
Handling seasonal openings and closings
Feels stressful or frustrating, pool ownership may become a burden instead of a joy.
Pools work best when:
The budget includes contingency
Ongoing costs are comfortable
Repairs won’t cause anxiety
Homeowners who are:
Stretching to afford the build
Uncomfortable with unexpected expenses
Counting on “nothing going wrong”
Often experience constant stress after construction.
Pools amplify financial pressure if margins are too tight.
A common but risky assumption is:
“We’ll use it all the time once we have it.”
Pools don’t usually create new habits — they support existing ones.
If:
Outdoor time is already limited
Entertaining is rare
Schedules are consistently packed
A pool may be underused, which can quietly turn into regret.
Pools reward alignment with real life, not aspirational life.
Pool construction is temporary — but it is real.
During the build, homeowners must tolerate:
Noise
Yard disruption
Construction traffic
Temporary inconvenience
If the idea of:
Losing yard access for months
Living through a construction zone
Managing uncertainty
Feels unacceptable, the process itself may overshadow the final result.
Homeowners who say:
“I just want the cheapest option.”
Are often unhappy later — not because they built a pool, but because of how they built it.
Price-first thinking often leads to:
Missed scope
Surprise costs
Compromised experience
Process frustration
Pools punish shortcut thinking more than most home projects.
Pools work best for homeowners willing to:
Ask hard questions early
Make decisions intentionally
Learn before committing
Those who prefer to:
Decide quickly
Avoid planning
Defer decisions
Often regret what they didn’t think through upfront.
Who Pools Are Not For — Summed Up
You should strongly reconsider building a pool if you:
Expect guaranteed financial return
Want zero ongoing responsibility
Are financially maxed out
Dislike long-term ownership commitments
Are rushing the decision
Want the cheapest solution above all else
None of these make someone a “bad homeowner.”
They just indicate a poor fit.
A Better Question to Ask
Instead of:
“Should people build pools?”
Ask:
“Does a pool fit how we live, spend, and plan long-term?”
That question prevents more regret than any feature checklist ever could.
The Bottom Line
Swimming pools are incredibly rewarding for the right homeowners — and quietly stressful for the wrong ones.
Knowing who should not build a pool isn’t negative.
It’s responsible.
And homeowners who ask this question early are far more likely to end up happy with whatever decision they make — pool or no pool.
Status
✅ Pillar 5: Fit & Worth It
✅ Round 1 (Authority-First)
✅ Original FAQ #77 (unaltered)
✅ On-track with master FAQ framework
Have more questions about pool decisions? Scott Payne Custom Pools has been building custom pools in the Philadelphia suburbs for over 25 years — get straight answers, no pressure.
Start Your Journey