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Pool closing · Massachusetts

When to Close Your Pool in Fall River, MA: Deadline, Window & Checklist

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

In Fall River, the closing window runs from September 22 to October 2. Let the water cool out of the algae-growth range before covering — close too warm and you lift the cover onto a green surprise in spring — but finish ahead of the first freeze, which normals place around October 15. The live estimate below shows where Fall River's water sits today.

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 Fall River water runs about 30°F at its winter floor and 72°F at its summer peak.

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

Fall River closing dates at a glance

Site model of NOAA 1991–2020 daily normals for New Bedford Municipal Airport (7.8 mi from Fall River city center). Dates are typical-year guidance, not forecasts.
Closing windowSeptember 22 – October 2
Close by (deadline)October 2
First freeze, 50% probabilityOctober 15
Open by (recommended)May 18
Opening windowMay 11 – June 1
61°F crossing (7-day mean)June 1
Swim-season length (80°F+ days)59 days
NOAA normals stationNew Bedford Municipal Airport · 7.8 mi · 80 ft

A short season cuts both ways: every week opened before June 1 is a real slice of Fall River's roughly 59-day warm-swim budget.

Put dates aside and follow the water: the Fall River curve says roughly 45°F by mid-April, 64°F by mid-June, 72°F in mid-August, then back down through 55°F in mid-October. The summer ceiling sits near 72°F, and every window above is just a line drawn on this curve.

The 12-step Fall River winterizing checklist

Sequenced against Fall River's September 22–October 2 window: chemistry while the pump still runs, blowouts before the equipment drains, cover last. Labels dictate every dose.

  1. Balance the water a few days ahead

    Start midweek for a weekend close: bring alkalinity and pH into their label ranges and let the water settle. What you seal under the cover is what the pool soaks in until spring.

  2. Deep-clean the pool

    Leave nothing organic behind: skim the surface, brush every wall and step, vacuum the floor slowly. What goes under the cover dirty comes out worse — winter only ever compounds what it's given.

  3. Service the filter one last time

    One final filter service per the manual — cartridges rinsed and stored dry indoors, sand or DE backwashed. Winter turns trapped gunk into concrete.

  4. Apply winter chemicals per label

    Winter chemicals go in before shutdown, not after: label-dosed, circulated for a few hours, distributed evenly. A floater dropped on still water protects one corner.

  5. Lower the water level

    Drop the level as your cover manufacturer specifies — typically below the skimmer mouth for solid covers. Never drain a pool fully; groundwater pressure can damage the shell.

  6. Blow out the lines and plug returns

    Air through every line — skimmer, returns, cleaner — until each blows dry mist, plugging returns while the air still pushes. Nothing else on this list protects as much plumbing per minute.

  7. Protect the skimmer

    Install a skimmer guard bottle (or a plug rated for your skimmer) so ice that forms there crushes the sacrificial piece instead of cracking the skimmer body.

  8. Add pool antifreeze where blowouts fall short

    Any line you can't prove is dry gets pool-grade antifreeze at the label's rate per foot. Automotive antifreeze is toxic in this context — pool-rated only, always.

  9. Drain the equipment

    Nothing on the pad should hold water overnight: pull the drain plugs from pump, filter, heater, and feeder, stash them all in the pump basket, and carry the portable pieces indoors.

  10. Set the air pillow and cover

    Float a centered air pillow, then land the cover and secure it the way its design intends — bags, cable, or straps. Ice sheets need somewhere to collapse inward, and the pillow is that somewhere.

  11. Remove and store ladders and rails

    Pull ladders, rails, and the diving-board hardware; rinse, dry, and store them out of the weather. Anchor sockets get a dab of protectant so spring bolts turn freely.

  12. Note this year's dates

    Jot down when Fall River's water actually cooled and when you closed. A two-line note beats memory next September 22 — your own yard runs a few days off any model, including ours.

What to buy before the rush

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

  • Winter closing kit

    The under-the-cover chemistry, measured for your gallons.

  • Air pillow

    Centers under the cover so ice pushes inward, not outward.

  • Winter cover

    The one purchase every other closing step depends on.

  • Cover pump

    Standing water is a cover killer; this is the counter.

  • Expansion plugs + skimmer guard

    Cheap rubber that stands between ice and your fittings.

  • Pool antifreeze

    Pool-rated glycol for the lines air couldn't clear.

How Fall River compares locally

Fall River closes in the later half of Massachusetts's calendar. Neighbors run close: New Bedford (9 mi away) models its deadline at October 2 (the same day vs Fall River's October 2), while Warwick (17 mi) shows October 8. The spring mirror of this page is the Fall River opening guide, and the season overview draws both windows on a single bar.

Local means local: Fall River's dates come from New Bedford Municipal Airport, the nearest station with complete daily temperature normals — 7.8 miles east, about 80 feet up. Between that station and a Bristol County backyard there's always a degree or two of microclimate; the windows are built wide enough to carry it.

Field notes for Fall River owners

The fifteen-minute monthly walk-around

Once a month all winter: pump or siphon standing water off solid covers, re-tension straps or top up water bags, confirm the level hasn't dropped enough to strand the cover, and glance at the pad for critter nests. Every major cover failure starts as a skipped walk-around.

Blowout first, antifreeze second

Air is the only guaranteed freeze protection: a line that's verifiably dry cannot burst. Antifreeze (pool-grade, per label) is the fallback for lines you can't confirm — long runs, low spots, water-feature plumbing. Doing antifreeze instead of a blowout, rather than in addition, is how most cracked returns happen.

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.

Closing for a real winter

A Fall River closing has to hold for months of freeze-thaw, not a few frosty mornings. Spend the effort where winters bite: prove every line dry, drain every vessel on the pad, guard the skimmer, and tension the cover for wind that will actually come. The reward is a spring opening that's a rinse, not a rebuild.

Fall River 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. Fall River's cool-down lands near September 22 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. Fall River's water isn't reliably out of that zone until about September 22 — the calendar's first cold weekend doesn't change that.

Do I need antifreeze in pool lines?

Only for lines you can't verify dry — a proper blowout makes antifreeze unnecessary. Where doubt remains, use pool-grade product at its label rate, never automotive. No freeze-probability normal is published near Fall River, so let the live forecast, not a calendar, tell you when freeze protection starts mattering.

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?

Two failure modes. Where freezes reach the plumbing, expansion cracks pumps, filters, and fittings from the inside. Where they don't, an unwatched pool simply drifts green and unbalanced by spring. Fall River has no published freeze normal to pin the date, so the winterizing above plus forecast-watching covers both risks.

When is the last safe date to close in Fall River?

Our model's practical deadline is October 2 — set by the cool-down plus ten days (the freeze normal, October 15, leaves room to spare). Push much past it and you're winterizing in freeze-warning weather, rushing the blowout, and hoping the cover goes on before the first hard night. Inside the September 22–October 2 window, none of that drama applies.

Data: NOAA 1991–2020 climate normals via New Bedford Municipal Airport (7.8 mi); live outlook by Open-Meteo. Full attribution on the sources page. Model assumptions and error bars on methodology.