Pool closing · North Carolina
When to Close Your Pool in Greensboro, NC: Deadline, Window & Checklist
Last updated: July 15, 2026 · Model window year: 2026 · dates · checklist · FAQ
In Greensboro, the closing window runs from October 14 to October 24. 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 November 4. The live estimate below shows where Greensboro's water sits today.
Greensboro closing dates at a glance
| Closing window | October 14 – October 24 |
|---|---|
| Close by (deadline) | October 24 |
| First freeze, 50% probability | November 4 |
| Open by (recommended) | April 6 |
| Opening window | March 30 – April 20 |
| 61°F crossing (7-day mean) | April 20 |
| Swim-season length (80°F+ days) | 121 days |
| NOAA normals station | Greensboro Wtp · 1.6 mi · 765 ft |
Greensboro's 121-day warm season leaves comfortable margins on both ends — the windows above aim you at the cheap-chemistry versions of each transition.
The same model in water terms: Greensboro's estimated pool temperature runs about 58°F in mid-April, 74°F in mid-June, 78°F in mid-August, and 63°F in mid-October, peaking near 80°F. Those four checkpoints — not any calendar holiday — are what the windows above are protecting.
The 12-step Greensboro winterizing checklist
A closing is a plumbing project with a chemistry warm-up. Start a few days ahead of your target date, keep every dose per its product label, and don't skip the photographs — spring-you reassembles from them.
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Balance the water a few days ahead
Give the chemistry a head start — balance to label ranges several days out, while circulation can still mix corrections evenly. Closing-day dosing never distributes as well.
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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.
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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.
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Apply winter chemicals per label
Dose the winter kit while the pump still runs — every product exactly per its label for your volume — so the chemistry is fully mixed before the system goes quiet.
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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.
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Blow out the lines and plug returns
Work line by line: push air until the return spits dry mist, plug it against the flowing air, move on. Skimmer, returns, cleaner line, in whatever order your plumbing prefers — dry pipes are the entire point of closing.
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Protect the skimmer
The skimmer throat is where trapped water has no escape — park a guard bottle or rated plug in it and let ice crush the cheap part.
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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
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.
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Note this year's dates
Jot down when Greensboro's water actually cooled and when you closed. A two-line note beats memory next October 14 — your own yard runs a few days off any model, including ours.
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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
A small stack of supplies turns the checklist above into a single-weekend job. Buy before Greensboro's October rush and the whole list ships at leisure instead of sprinting.
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Air pillow
Gives ice somewhere to push besides your pool walls.
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Winter cover
The one purchase every other closing step depends on.
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Cover pump
Standing water is a cover killer; this is the counter.
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Expansion plugs + skimmer guard
The blowout's finishing move — one per return, one for the skimmer.
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Pool antifreeze
For lines you can't verify dry — pool-grade only, per label.
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Winter closing kit
Season-length winter chemicals in one label-dosed box.
How Greensboro compares locally
Two nearby data points to triangulate with: High Point, 12 miles from Greensboro, models its close at October 28 (about a week later); Burlington, 20 miles out, at October 26. Greensboro's own window ends October 24. For the other half of the calendar see when to open in Greensboro, or scan the full year on the season page.
The instrument behind this page is Greensboro Wtp, 1.6 miles southeast of Greensboro — 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 Greensboro 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.
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.
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.
Greensboro pool closing FAQ
What temperature should water be to close a pool?
The practical target is water in the low 60s°F or below at closing day. Our Greensboro model has the sustained cool-down starting October 14; closing between then and October 24 means chemistry stays put and the spring reveal is a mild one.
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. Greensboro's water doesn't settle below the risk zone until around October 14 — 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 Greensboro's first freeze normal near November 4, don't leave that question open.
How far should I drain my pool for winter?
Only to the line your cover manufacturer prints — a few inches below the skimmer for most solid covers, close to operating level for many mesh designs with the skimmer plugged. The water you leave in is structural: it holds the shell against groundwater all winter.
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. Greensboro 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 Greensboro?
Treat October 24 as the deadline in Greensboro. It's derived from the 1991–2020 normals: the cool-down plus ten days (the freeze normal, November 4, leaves room to spare). Weather varies year to year, so watch the 10-day forecast in late October — an early cold snap moves the real deadline, and the widget above flags exactly that.
Email me when Greensboro hits the closing window
Data: NOAA 1991–2020 climate normals via Greensboro Wtp (1.6 mi); live outlook by Open-Meteo. Full attribution on the sources page. Model assumptions and error bars on methodology.