Pool closing · Minnesota
When to Close Your Pool in Brooklyn Park, MN: Deadline, Window & Checklist
Last updated: July 15, 2026 · Model window year: 2026 · dates · checklist · FAQ
In Brooklyn Park, the closing window runs from September 19 to September 29. 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 8. The live estimate below shows where Brooklyn Park's water sits today.
Brooklyn Park closing dates at a glance
| Closing window | September 19 – September 29 |
|---|---|
| Close by (deadline) | September 29 |
| First freeze, 50% probability | October 8 |
| Open by (recommended) | May 10 |
| Opening window | May 3 – May 24 |
| 61°F crossing (7-day mean) | May 24 |
| Swim-season length (80°F+ days) | 67 days |
| NOAA normals station | Mpls Crystal Airport · 3.4 mi · 861 ft |
Brooklyn Park banks only about 67 days of 80°F-plus afternoons — early opening weeks are the cheapest season extension available.
Four water checkpoints anchor Brooklyn Park's year in the model: mid-April at about 43°F, mid-June at 67°F, mid-August near the 72°F peak zone, and mid-October easing through 52°F. The dates in the table are where those numbers cross the thresholds that matter.
The 12-step Brooklyn Park winterizing checklist
Sequenced against Brooklyn Park's September 19–September 29 window: chemistry while the pump still runs, blowouts before the equipment drains, cover last. Labels dictate every dose.
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Balance the water a few days ahead
Do the chemistry midweek, close on the weekend: alkalinity and pH into label ranges with days of circulation left to spread them. Winter locks in whatever state the water holds on closing day.
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Deep-clean the pool
Make the last cleaning the best one of the year: full skim, full brush, careful vacuum. Debris left behind steeps all winter and greets you as April's water problem.
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Service the filter one last time
Send the filter into winter clean: backwash the sand or DE, rinse and dry the cartridges indoors. Media stored dirty over winter hardens into a spring problem no backwash fixes.
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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.
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Lower the water level
Check the cover manufacturer's spec before touching the hose: solid covers typically want water below the skimmer mouth, mesh often barely lower than normal. Full draining is off the table entirely.
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Blow out the lines and plug returns
Push air through skimmer, return, and cleaner lines until they run dry mist, then seat expansion plugs at each return while air still flows. This is the single most important freeze-protection step.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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Set the air pillow and cover
Center an inflated air pillow, then fit the cover and secure it with water bags, cable, or straps as designed. The pillow gives ice a place to push besides your walls.
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Stage the cover pump
Solid covers need drainage all winter: set a cover pump or siphon before the first storm, not after. Standing water strains seams and invites a mid-winter emergency.
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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
Every item below sells out somewhere in Minnesota every September. Stocking the short list before the rush costs nothing extra and saves the mid-project store run — the chemicals guide explains what each category actually does.
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Air pillow
A soft target for the ice sheet, centered under the cover.
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Winter cover
The one purchase every other closing step depends on.
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Cover pump
Solid covers collect rain all winter; this is the drainage plan.
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Expansion plugs + skimmer guard
Cheap rubber that stands between ice and your fittings.
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Pool antifreeze
Pool-rated glycol for the lines air couldn't clear.
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Winter closing kit
Season-length winter chemicals in one label-dosed box.
How Brooklyn Park compares locally
Brooklyn Park closes in the earlier half of Minnesota's calendar. Neighbors run close: Plymouth (8 mi away) models its deadline at September 28 (1 day earlier vs Brooklyn Park's September 29), while Minneapolis (11 mi) shows September 30. The spring mirror of this page is the Brooklyn Park opening guide, and the season overview draws both windows on a single bar.
The instrument behind this page is Mpls Crystal Airport, 3.4 miles south of Brooklyn Park — 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 Brooklyn Park owners
Cover pumps die in the cold — plan for it
A cover pump left running into a hard freeze can lock in ice and burn out. On freezing forecasts, pull it, let the storm pass, and put it back for the melt. Automatic models with freeze protection earn their price in exactly one forgotten weekend.
Cold water is the whole point
A pool closed at 55°F barely changes all winter: algae are dormant, chemicals hold, and spring opens with a light dusting instead of a bloom. A pool closed at 72°F runs its own quiet ecosystem under the cover for a month. The date matters less than the water temperature it represents.
What comes indoors
Cartridges, the cover pump when idle, chemical containers, and anything with a small motor overwinter better in the garage. Cold cycling is hard on plastics and seals; shelf space is cheaper than replacements. Label a single bin now and spring assembly becomes a scavenger hunt with a map.
Hard-winter homework
Where winter is long — Brooklyn Park banks only about 67 warm-swim days — the closing carries months of load. Bury the effort where it counts: verified-dry lines, fully drained equipment, a skimmer guard, and a cover secured for real wind. A short season forgives a late opening; it never forgives a cracked pump.
Brooklyn Park 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. Brooklyn Park's cool-down lands near September 19 in the normals, which is why the window opens there.
Can you close a pool too early?
Absolutely. A pool closed warm is an algae incubator: no circulation, fading sanitizer, and weeks of growth-friendly temperatures. Brooklyn Park's water doesn't settle below the risk zone until around September 19 — closing much before that trades a few weekends of maintenance for a rough spring.
Do I need antifreeze in pool lines?
Only where water might remain. If every line is properly blown out and plugged, air is the antifreeze. Lines you can't verify dry — long runs, low spots, water features — get pool-grade antifreeze dosed per its label. With Brooklyn Park's first freeze normal near October 8, don't leave that question open.
How far should I drain my pool for winter?
Follow the cover's instructions first: solid covers usually want water a few inches below the skimmer; some mesh setups run higher with the skimmer sealed. The hard rule is never empty — hydrostatic pressure can lift or crack an empty pool, a far worse outcome than any freeze.
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 Brooklyn Park, normals put the first freeze near October 8; everything after that date is borrowed time for an unwinterized system.
When is the last safe date to close in Brooklyn Park?
The model draws the line at September 29 for Brooklyn Park. It isn't arbitrary: the cool-down plus ten days (the freeze normal, October 8, leaves room to spare), and the whole closing sequence needs a working weekend of margin. The one exception that overrides any date — a hard freeze inside the 10-day forecast, which the widget above flags as urgent.
Email me when Brooklyn Park hits the closing window
Data: NOAA 1991–2020 climate normals via Mpls Crystal Airport (3.4 mi); live outlook by Open-Meteo. Full attribution on the sources page. Model assumptions and error bars on methodology.