Heckpools said:
Wasnt sure where to put this....
Im just curious what the guys, or gals in the pool business charge for weekly pool cleanings?
Do you include chemicals in your price?
Is the first cleaning of the season more then the rest of the summer? & do you charge per hour?
Do you have different rates for differant size pools?
Do you give any discount for paying in full for the season up front?
also, i know location has a huge part in this, so also mention where your from!
Thanks
Hey Matt (got the name right this time :lol: )
It's been 16 years since I was doing weekly service in Richmond, Va., but I'll proffer my 'take' on this anyway.
Sounds like you're thinking about going into the weekly service biz - for the most part it's cream $$
Weekly service takes ~ 1/2 hour per pool (yeah, I know... some take longer, but some are quicker) and isn't labor intensive.
You can base the charge on your usual service fee (the company I worked for in Ct. charged $85 for 1/2 hour and $130 for a full hour) and multiply that by how many weeks the pool will be open. If you go that route, you'll not get many customers

But it
is a starting point for your calculations. Or you can look at what your vehicle and labor costs (including insurance, maintenance, gas, and whatever the loan payment is on the truck/ van, cost of reagents[if you do a full test on a regular basis] and 'wear and tear' on your vac, pole, brush, etc.), prorated for each pool and do some simple algebra.
In Va., the charge was $35/ week, if done 'a-la-carte' or $500/ season (May - Sept) which included opening and closing the pool, extra weeks were charged at the $35 rate.
Of course you should knock off ~10% for full payment up front (standard business/ accounting practice)
Anything up to or under a standard ~20 X40 should be at the 'standard' rate and a surcharge would be applied to a pool larger than that. The chems are the pool owner's issue, if they don't have the chems on hand that you need, you charge them for what you use off your van (you can do like my former boss did and sell them a 'bundle' at the beginning of the season, at the 10% discount, with the
expected amount of chems they'll need -- a case of shock, D.E.[if applicable], tri-chlor tabs, pH up, alk. up, dry acid, a couple quarts of algaecide....) - the money making potential is almost endless
However, you come here and want to do the best you can for your customers

It wouldn't be too hard to make a package that fits your clients' needs and your desire to both make a profit and not scr@w them :-D
When, and IF, I get my own pool service company going, I'll teach my customers about BBB and point them here - I might not have too many weekly service customers, but I know who they'll call when they have a structural or equipment problem
Something I've been thinking about is a monthly service, wherein I'll come and vacuum/ clean the pool, test the chems and adjust accordingly, and 'check out' their pool/ system for potential problems.
Most folks who sign up for weekly service either don't really care about their pool (and wouldn't come here nor bother to spend a few minutes a day to care for it) or are just too busy with work or it's a weekend home. While I have sympathy for such folks, they can keep my bank account 'in the red'
Sometimes Ma Nature will work against you

If you have 5 pools to do on Tuesday and it's pouring rain, you have to do them Wednessday, with the 5 pools you do on Wed. - you have to be preparred for that! Also be preparred for a customer you clean on Monday to call you Friday AM needing an 'emergency' clean for their Friday afternoon pool party, it happens :| (charge them 15 - 25% more for the call)
I probably didn't hit all the points, but this is a good start and hope it gives you a decent idea of running a weekly service route. I'm here ~ every day and I hope you know you can always bounce ideas or questions off me
Hey Dman, I took an hour to type this, so yours came in long before mine ;p)