PoolWindow

Pool closing · State guide

When to Close Your Pool in Florida

Last updated: July 15, 2026 · 64 cities covered

Closing deadlines across Florida stretch about 47 days: Tallahassee needs the cover on first (November 14), Deltona last (December 31), and the statewide median deadline is December 30. Another 45 covered cities never need a traditional closing at all.

Each deadline is the model's two-clock compromise — ten days after the water leaves the algae zone, capped a week before the local 50% first-freeze date. City pages carry the live widget that flags early-freeze years and the full winterizing sequence.

Florida model dates from NOAA 1991–2020 normals; every city links to its full guide. Click a column header to sort.
City Window opensClose byFirst freeze (50%)
Alafaya optionalno deadline
Boca Raton optionalno deadline
Bonita Springs optionalno deadline
Boynton Beach optionalno deadline
Brandon optionalno deadline
Cape Coral optionalno deadline
Clearwater optionalno deadline
Coral Springs optionalno deadline
Davie optionalno deadline
Daytona Beach Dec 20Dec 30Jan 8
Deerfield Beach optionalno deadline
Delray Beach optionalno deadline
Deltona Dec 25Dec 31Jan 12
Doral optionalno deadline
Fort Lauderdale optionalno deadline
Fort Myers optionalno deadline
Gainesville Nov 23Nov 25Dec 2
Hialeah optionalno deadline
Hollywood optionalno deadline
Homestead optionalno deadline
Horizon West Dec 27Dec 31Jan 9
Jacksonville Dec 2Dec 12Jan 5
Kendall optionalno deadline
Kissimmee Dec 25Dec 30Jan 6
Lakeland optionalno deadline
Largo optionalno deadline
Lauderhill optionalno deadline
Leesburg Dec 23Dec 31Jan 9
Lehigh Acres optionalno deadline
Melbourne optionalno deadline
Miami optionalno deadline
Miami Beach optionalno deadline
Miami Gardens optionalno deadline
Miramar optionalno deadline
North Port optionalno deadline
Ocala Dec 10Dec 5Dec 12
Orlando optionalno deadline
Palm Bay optionalno deadline
Palm Coast Dec 14Dec 24Jan 11
Panama City Nov 17Nov 27Dec 12
Pembroke Pines optionalno deadline
Pensacola Nov 16Nov 26Dec 9
Pine Hills Dec 27Dec 31Jan 9
Plantation optionalno deadline
Poinciana Dec 25Dec 30Jan 6
Pompano Beach optionalno deadline
Port Charlotte optionalno deadline
Port St. Lucie optionalno deadline
Riverview optionalno deadline
Sebring optionalno deadline
Spring Hill Dec 24Dec 25Jan 1
St. Augustine Dec 10Dec 20Jan 5
St. Cloud Dec 25Dec 30Jan 6
St. Petersburg optionalno deadline
Sunrise optionalno deadline
Tallahassee Nov 11Nov 14Nov 21
Tamarac optionalno deadline
Tampa optionalno deadline
The Villages Dec 23Dec 31Jan 9
Town 'n' Country optionalno deadline
Wesley Chapel Dec 23Dec 31Jan 8
West Palm Beach optionalno deadline
Weston optionalno deadline
Winter Haven optionalno deadline

Dates are typical-year model outputs, not forecasts — each city guide carries the live widget that tracks the current year against them.

How to use these dates

Each "close by" deadline is the model's two-clock compromise for that city: ten days after its 7-day mean temperature falls back through 61°F (water goes algae-dormant soon after), but never later than a week before its 50% first-freeze date from the NOAA 1991–2020 normals. Closing inside the window seals cold, stable water under the cover; closing early seals a warm algae incubator instead.

Treat the dates as typical-year guidance, not forecasts. An early cold snap moves the real deadline — each city guide runs a live water-temperature widget that flags a 32°F night inside the 10-day forecast as urgent, and carries the full winterizing checklist in working order.