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Pool closing · California

When to Close Your Pool in Bakersfield, CA: Deadline, Window & Checklist

Last updated: July 15, 2026 · Model window year: 2026 · dates · checklist · FAQ

Circle November 10 on the Bakersfield calendar. Closing earlier traps warm, algae-friendly water under the cover; closing later gambles the plumbing against the first freeze, which the 1991–2020 normals place near December 8. The window opens October 31 — the live widget below shows how this year is actually tracking against it.

Live water estimate

SEASONAL VIEW

Estimated unheated pool water temp (site model, ±5°F). The live estimate loads in your browser from Open-Meteo air temperatures; in a typical year Bakersfield water runs about 48°F at its winter floor and 84°F at its summer peak.

40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 58 open 65 algae

Bakersfield closing dates at a glance

Site model of NOAA 1991–2020 daily normals for Bakersfield 5 NW (4.6 mi from Bakersfield city center). Dates are typical-year guidance, not forecasts.
Closing windowOctober 31 – November 10
Close by (deadline)November 10
First freeze, 50% probabilityDecember 8
Open by (recommended)March 30
Opening windowMarch 23 – April 13
61°F crossing (7-day mean)April 13
Swim-season length (80°F+ days)164 days
NOAA normals stationBakersfield 5 NW · 4.6 mi · 470 ft

Bakersfield's 164-day warm season leaves comfortable margins on both ends — the windows above aim you at the cheap-chemistry versions of each transition.

Four water checkpoints anchor Bakersfield's year in the model: mid-April at about 61°F, mid-June at 76°F, mid-August near the 83°F peak zone, and mid-October easing through 70°F. The dates in the table are where those numbers cross the thresholds that matter.

The 12-step Bakersfield winterizing checklist

The order matters more than the date: balanced water first, verified-dry lines before anything else freezes-proofs, and the cover only after everything below it is done. Work the list inside the window above.

  1. Balance the water a few days ahead

    Three or four days before closing, adjust alkalinity and pH into label ranges. Balanced water is gentler on the liner, plaster, and equipment through the long covered months ahead.

  2. Deep-clean the pool

    Brush, skim, and vacuum like company's coming. A pool that goes under the cover spotless comes out needing a rinse; one that goes under dirty comes out needing a project.

  3. Service the filter one last time

    Clean media goes into storage, dirty media comes out worse: backwash the sand or DE, rinse the cartridges, all per the manual, before anything drains.

  4. Apply winter chemicals per label

    Add a winterizing kit or your usual closing chemicals exactly as their labels direct for your volume, with the pump still circulating so everything distributes before shutdown.

  5. Lower the water level

    Take the level down only as far as the cover's manual says — usually just below the skimmer for solid covers, higher for many mesh systems. An empty pool is never the goal; shells crack and shift without water's weight.

  6. Blow out the lines and plug returns

    The blowout is the whole ballgame: drive air through each line until it runs dry, seat the plug against the airflow, move to the next. A dry line cannot burst, full stop.

  7. Protect the skimmer

    Give the skimmer something cheap to break: a guard bottle or rated plug absorbs the ice expansion that would otherwise split the housing.

  8. Add pool antifreeze where blowouts fall short

    Antifreeze is the insurance policy for doubtful lines, not a replacement for the blowout: pool-grade product, label dosing, and only where air couldn't finish the job.

  9. Drain the equipment

    Open the drains on everything that holds water and let the pad empty completely. Cartridges and small equipment overwinter far better on a garage shelf than outside.

  10. Set the air pillow and cover

    Inflate the pillow to about two-thirds, center it, then bring the cover over and secure it per its design. Under ice, that soft dome is the difference between inward compression and outward wall pressure.

  11. Note this year's dates

    Jot down when Bakersfield's water actually cooled and when you closed. A two-line note beats memory next October 31 — your own yard runs a few days off any model, including ours.

  12. Winterize the water features

    Waterfalls, slides, and spillover spas hold water in places gravity won't clear — blow those lines separately and plug them, or they'll be the one crack you find in spring.

What to buy before the rush

The October crowd empties shelves in a predictable order. This is the short list worth owning before Bakersfield's window opens — nothing exotic, just the stuff everyone needs the same weekend.

  • Air pillow

    A soft target for the ice sheet, centered under the cover.

  • Winter cover

    Sized to overlap; the cheapest insurance the pool wears all winter.

  • Cover pump

    Solid covers collect rain all winter; this is the drainage plan.

  • Expansion plugs + skimmer guard

    Cheap rubber that stands between ice and your fittings.

  • Pool antifreeze

    Backup for unverifiable lines; label rate per foot of pipe.

  • Winter closing kit

    Closing chemistry in one box, dosed by pool volume.

How Bakersfield compares locally

Statewide context: across the 147 California cities we model, Bakersfield's November 10 deadline sits in the earlier half. Nearby, Porterville (49 mi) closes around November 11 and Tulare (61 mi) around November 6 — treat gaps under a week as microclimate noise, not strategy. Spring planning restarts at the opening guide; the Bakersfield pool season page keeps the whole year in one view.

The instrument behind this page is Bakersfield 5 NW, 4.6 miles north of Bakersfield — the closest station publishing complete 1991–2020 daily temperature normals. Thirty years of its readings set every date above; your own yard adds or subtracts a degree with shade, wind, and pavement, which is what the window's width is for.

Field notes for Bakersfield owners

Leaf season vs closing day

If your yard drops serious leaves, the cheap trick is a leaf net over the main cover through the drop, then one bulk removal before snow. Leaves that winter on (or worse, under) the cover steep like tea and hand you stained water and clogged pumps in spring.

Salt cells overwinter indoors

Remove the cell at closing, inspect and clean per the manufacturer, and store it inside with the unions capped. A dummy cell or spacer keeps the plumbing sealed. Cells left in outdoor plumbing through freezes are a common — and completely avoidable — spring casualty.

Match the drainage plan to the cover

Solid covers shed nothing — they need a cover pump staged before the first storm and checked after each one. Mesh covers drain themselves but pass silt that settles all winter. Either way, the plan is decided in October, not improvised in January when the cover is an ice sheet.

Bakersfield pool closing FAQ

What temperature should water be to close a pool?

Below roughly 65°F, and trending down. Water closed warm keeps feeding algae under the cover for weeks; water closed in the 50s goes dormant almost immediately. Bakersfield's cool-down lands near October 31 in the normals, which is why the window opens there.

Can you close a pool too early?

Early closing is the mistake the whole model is built to prevent from the other direction. A cover installed over 70°F water is a terrarium: sanitizer decays, algae compound, nobody looks for months. Bakersfield's water isn't reliably out of that zone until about October 31 — the calendar's first cold weekend doesn't change that.

Do I need antifreeze in pool lines?

It depends entirely on your confidence in the blowout. Lines that blew fully dry need nothing; anything uncertain — low runs, water features, a stubborn cleaner line — gets pool-grade antifreeze at the label's rate per foot. With Bakersfield's freeze clock starting near December 8, uncertainty is the thing to eliminate.

How far should I drain my pool for winter?

As far as your cover manufacturer specifies and no farther — typically a few inches below the skimmer mouth for solid covers, near normal level for many mesh systems with skimmer plugs. Never drain fully: an empty shell can shift or crack under groundwater pressure.

What happens if you don't winterize a pool?

Expect equipment damage first — cracked pump volutes, split filter tanks, ruptured heater exchangers — then plumbing leaks that surface at startup. In Bakersfield, normals put the first freeze near December 8; everything after that date is borrowed time for an unwinterized system.

When is the last safe date to close in Bakersfield?

Treat November 10 as the deadline in Bakersfield. It's derived from the 1991–2020 normals: the cool-down plus ten days (the freeze normal, December 8, leaves room to spare). Weather varies year to year, so watch the 10-day forecast in late November — an early cold snap moves the real deadline, and the widget above flags exactly that.

Data: NOAA 1991–2020 climate normals via Bakersfield 5 NW (4.6 mi); live outlook by Open-Meteo. Full attribution on the sources page. Model assumptions and error bars on methodology.