Pool Shock Calculator
Enter your pool volume, current free chlorine, and target chlorine level to calculate exact shock dosage. Formula verified against Standard Chemicals and the CDC Model Aquatic Health Code guidelines (June 2026).
Pool Shock Inputs
Dosing by Pool Size & Scenario
| Pool Size | Routine (10 ppm) | Cloudy (20 ppm) | Algae (30 ppm) |
|---|
Assumes 68% cal-hypo, 0 ppm starting FC. 1 lb of 68% cal-hypo raises FC by ~7.8 ppm per 10,000 gal. Source: Standard Chemicals pool shock calculator; CDC MAHC guidelines — verified June 2026.
Formula
- Product strength — the available chlorine fraction (0.68 for 68% cal-hypo)
- 10,000 — the volume base: 1 lb of 100% pure chlorine raises FC by 1 ppm per 10,000 gal
- FC raise — you only add the deficit from current to target
Related calculators: Salt Calculator · Chlorine Calculator · Alkalinity Calculator · Stabilizer (CYA)
Frequently Asked Questions
For 68% calcium hypochlorite (cal-hypo), the standard dose is 1 pound per 10,000 gallons for routine maintenance, raising free chlorine by approximately 7–8 ppm. For algae treatment, 2–3 lbs per 10,000 gallons is typical.
Shock after heavy use (swim parties, storms), when free chlorine drops below 1 ppm, when water turns cloudy or green, after opening the pool for the season, and once per week as a preventive measure during peak summer months.
Yes. Household bleach (6–8.25% sodium hypochlorite) works but requires a much larger volume than pool-grade granular shock. The calculator supports 65% and 73% cal-hypo; for liquid chlorine, use the separate Chlorine Calculator.
Wait until free chlorine drops below 5 ppm — typically 8–24 hours depending on sunlight and circulation. Always test before allowing anyone to swim.
Shock at dusk or nighttime. UV from sunlight destroys chlorine rapidly — shocking at night lets the chemical circulate for hours before sunlight degrades it.