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5 min read Beginner

How to Tell If Pool Sand Filter Needs Changing - 5 Clear Signs

A pool sand filter that needs new sand shows specific symptoms: persistent cloudiness after backwashing, pressure rising faster than normal, dark backwash water on every cycle, and sand or debris returning to the pool. This guide walks through each sign and how to confirm the diagnosis.

The 5 Signs to Check

Sign 1 - Persistent Cloudy Water

This is the most common symptom. If your pool water stays hazy or milky even when:

  • Chlorine and pH are in range
  • You have backwashed recently
  • You ran a shock treatment

…and the cloudiness returns within 24-48 hours - the sand is not filtering fine particles anymore.

New pool filter sand catches particles down to about 20 microns. Worn, smooth sand lets particles pass through that it would have trapped when new. The pool water looks continuously cloudy because the filter is returning fine debris back to the pool.

Before assuming it is the sand, confirm your chemistry is correct. A pH above 7.8 or a chlorine level below 1 ppm can cause cloudiness unrelated to filtration. Rule out chemistry first, then suspect the sand.

Sign 2 - Filter Pressure Rises Faster Than Before

A clean sand filter has a baseline pressure - the reading on the pressure gauge right after a backwash cycle. Track this number.

A healthy filter stays within 5-8 psi of that baseline for 1-4 weeks before needing another backwash.

If your filter is hitting backwash pressure (10 psi above baseline) every 3-4 days instead of every few weeks, worn sand is a likely cause. Old sand has embedded debris and rounded grains that restrict flow faster than fresh sand.

Note: if this symptom appeared suddenly rather than gradually, check for a different problem - algae bloom, debris event, or a torn lateral. Gradual pressure creep over months is more consistent with worn sand.

Sign 3 - Dark Backwash Water on Every Single Cycle

During a normal backwash, the water starts out brown or cloudy and clears within 2-3 minutes. That is the trapped debris flushing out.

If your backwash water stays dark, heavily discolored, or full of visible debris on every single backwash - even right after you backwashed a few days ago - the sand is holding more embedded matter than it can flush out. The sand bed is saturated with debris that has been compressed and embedded over years.

At that stage, backwashing is not fully restoring the filter. Replacement is the fix.

Sign 4 - Sand or Fine Debris Returning to the Pool

If you see sand on the pool floor near the return jets, or a visible dusty cloud returning through the jets, the sand is either:

  • Too fine (wrong grade, or sand that has been broken down into smaller particles)
  • Passing through cracked laterals (a separate mechanical problem)

How to distinguish:

  • Scoop up the material from the pool floor. If it feels like fine sand, touch a lateral with your finger after removing the filter head - a broken lateral will have a visible crack.
  • Broken laterals are the more common cause of sand returning to the pool. A cracked lateral needs to be replaced, not just the sand.

Sign 5 - The Sand Itself Looks Worn

You can do a quick visual and tactile check:

  1. Unplug the pump and release filter pressure through the air bleeder
  2. Remove the multiport valve
  3. Scoop a small sample from 3-4 inches below the sand surface

What to look for:

Fresh SandOld Sand
Angular, irregular grain edgesSmooth, rounded grains
Feels gritty between fingersFeels slippery or powdery
Light tan or off-white colorGrey or discolored, clumped
Grains separate easilyGrains may be packed and stick together

A severely worn sand sample will look almost like fine aquarium gravel - smooth, round, and uniform rather than angular.

Quick Diagnostic Checklist

Work through this in order before deciding on a sand change:

  • Is pool chemistry correct? (pH 7.4-7.6, chlorine 1-3 ppm, alkalinity 80-120 ppm)
  • Have you backwashed recently and thoroughly?
  • Is the multiport valve in the correct position (FILTER)?
  • Is there an algae bloom? (cloudiness + green tint = algae, not filtration)
  • Are any laterals visibly cracked? (causes sand in pool)
  • Is the sand 5+ years old?

If chemistry and equipment are fine, and the sand is 5+ years old with any of the symptoms above, replace the sand.

What to Do Next

If the sand needs replacing:

Replacement is a half-day DIY job. You need the correct amount of #20 silica pool filter sand for your tank size and about 2-3 hours.

If you want to extend sand life before replacing:

A filter cleaner product can sometimes dissolve oils and scale that make the sand bed behave like it is older than it is. This is not a substitute for replacement but can help if the sand is only 3-4 years old.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my pool sand filter needs changing?
The main signs are persistent cloudy water that does not clear even after backwashing and correct chemical treatment, filter pressure rising faster than normal between backwash cycles, dark backwash water on every single cycle, and sand or fine debris returning to the pool through the return jets. If your sand is 5-7 years old and showing any of these symptoms, it is time to replace it.
What does bad pool filter sand look like?
Old pool filter sand that needs replacing looks smooth and rounded rather than angular and gritty. New filter sand has irregular, sharp-edged grains. Worn sand feels almost like fine aquarium gravel between your fingers. You may also see the sand clumped together with embedded debris that does not flush out during backwashing.
Can I just backwash more often instead of changing the sand?
No. More frequent backwashing is a symptom of worn sand, not a solution to it. Worn sand loads up faster because the grain surfaces are smooth and no longer trap debris efficiently. The only fix is replacing the sand. More backwashing just accelerates wear on the remaining sand and does not restore filtration efficiency.
How long does pool filter sand last before needing to be changed?
Pool filter sand lasts 5-7 years under normal residential use. Heavy bather load, algae blooms, and infrequent backwashing all shorten that lifespan. If your sand is approaching 5 years and you are noticing filtration problems, replacement is the right call.
Can channeling in pool sand cause the same symptoms as worn sand?
Yes. Channeling - where water finds a direct path through the sand bed without filtering - causes cloudy water and looks similar to worn sand failure. You can test for channeling by backwashing thoroughly and inspecting the sand surface. Channeling shows up as visible grooves or depressions on the sand surface. Worn sand looks uniform but filters poorly. Both problems require addressing the sand, though channeling can sometimes be fixed by breaking up the sand bed.

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