RDspaguy
In The Industry
Ok, first the loophole. While it is a rental, it is not considered public as it's use is limited to the renter for the duration of their stay. The owner must PROVIDE a sanitary spa, but it is the renters' responsibility to MAINTAIN it as such. No liability with records proving it was balanced and sanitized before check-in, which is why many hire a third-party service for maintenance. Their records hold up better in court than if you do it yourself.
Second, the disclaimer. I travel with my test kit and, as a professional in the industry, there has only EVER been ONE spa I would let my family use on a trip. EVER! A vacation rental is the most vile water on earth in my opinion, I maintained them in Tahoe for a couple of years. People do gross stuff in a vacation rental spa that they would never do in a public spa or their own spa that they have to pay to fix. It was not uncommon to drain and refill after each rental.
All of our tubs were chlorine unless specifically required by contract to use something else, and all used trichlor floaters. They are drained far too frequently to worry about cya, and ph damage comes with the territory for a vacation rental. Consider it the cost of business.
Use of any other method (ozone, minerals, ect) was not even a consideration to us, and we treated every tub to cover OUR butt and maintained meticulous records.
Unfortunately, vacation rentals are a nightmare for maintenance and destroy spas. But it's tough to rent one without a spa (at least in Tahoe it was). You never see old spas at a rental, they just don't last that long.
Second, the disclaimer. I travel with my test kit and, as a professional in the industry, there has only EVER been ONE spa I would let my family use on a trip. EVER! A vacation rental is the most vile water on earth in my opinion, I maintained them in Tahoe for a couple of years. People do gross stuff in a vacation rental spa that they would never do in a public spa or their own spa that they have to pay to fix. It was not uncommon to drain and refill after each rental.
All of our tubs were chlorine unless specifically required by contract to use something else, and all used trichlor floaters. They are drained far too frequently to worry about cya, and ph damage comes with the territory for a vacation rental. Consider it the cost of business.
Use of any other method (ozone, minerals, ect) was not even a consideration to us, and we treated every tub to cover OUR butt and maintained meticulous records.
Unfortunately, vacation rentals are a nightmare for maintenance and destroy spas. But it's tough to rent one without a spa (at least in Tahoe it was). You never see old spas at a rental, they just don't last that long.