Pool closing · Texas
When to Close Your Pool in San Angelo, TX: Deadline, Window & Checklist
Last updated: July 15, 2026 · Model window year: 2026 · dates · checklist · FAQ
Two dates decide a San Angelo closing: November 1, when the 7-day mean drops back through 61°F and the water goes algae-quiet, and November 3, the model deadline set a safe week ahead of the November 10 first-freeze normal. Everything on this page — live water estimate, window, winterizing sequence — exists to land you between them.
San Angelo closing dates at a glance
| Closing window | November 1 – November 3 |
|---|---|
| Close by (deadline) | November 3 |
| First freeze, 50% probability | November 10 |
| Open by (recommended) | March 8 |
| Opening window | March 1 – March 22 |
| 61°F crossing (7-day mean) | March 22 |
| Swim-season length (80°F+ days) | 194 days |
| NOAA normals station | San Angelo · 5.5 mi · 1890 ft |
With 194 days of 80°F-plus highs, San Angelo is keep-it-open country for plenty of owners; the closing dates above matter most if you'd rather not maintain water you won't swim in.
The same model in water terms: San Angelo's estimated pool temperature runs about 66°F in mid-April, 81°F in mid-June, 85°F in mid-August, and 70°F in mid-October, peaking near 85°F. Those four checkpoints — not any calendar holiday — are what the windows above are protecting.
The 12-step San Angelo 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.
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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
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
Run the winter kit through moving water: dose each product per its label with the pump on, give it a few hours to distribute, then start the shutdown. Chemistry added to still water stays where it lands.
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Lower the water level
Your cover's manual sets the number — commonly a few inches under the skimmer for solid covers, barely below normal for mesh. Stop there. The remaining water isn't laziness; it's ballast holding the shell in the ground.
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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.
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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
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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
What to buy before the rush
Every item below sells out somewhere in Texas every November. 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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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
The under-the-cover chemistry, measured for your gallons.
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Air pillow
Gives ice somewhere to push besides your pool walls.
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Winter cover
Sized to overlap; the cheapest insurance the pool wears all winter.
How San Angelo compares locally
San Angelo closes in the earlier half of Texas's calendar. Neighbors run close: Abilene (81 mi away) models its deadline at November 3 (the same day vs San Angelo's November 3), while Midland (106 mi) shows November 2. The spring mirror of this page is the San Angelo opening guide, and the season overview draws both windows on a single bar.
Local means local: San Angelo's dates come from San Angelo, the nearest station with complete daily temperature normals — 5.5 miles southwest, about 1890 feet up. Between that station and a Tom Green County backyard there's always a degree or two of microclimate; the windows are built wide enough to carry it.
Field notes for San Angelo owners
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.
The mesh-cover spring surprise, prevented in fall
Mesh-covered pools green up early because late-winter sun plus nutrient-carrying meltwater reaches the water. The fall counter-moves: close late and cold, dose the winter kit exactly per label, and plan an early-spring peek under the cover rather than a Memorial Day reveal.
The skimmer is the most breakable part you own
Skimmer bodies crack because water freezes inside the throat with nowhere to push. A sacrificial bottle or spring-loaded guard absorbs that expansion for a few dollars. It's the highest-return item in the entire closing kit relative to what it protects.
Don't close a pool people are still using
With San Angelo's long season, the question isn't "is it November?" but "has the water actually cooled?" The window running to November 3 exists because warm-water closings breed spring algae. If swimmers keep showing up through November, let them — patience here is free maintenance.
San Angelo 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 San Angelo model has the sustained cool-down starting November 1; closing between then and November 3 means chemistry stays put and the spring reveal is a mild one.
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. San Angelo's water isn't reliably out of that zone until about November 1 — 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 San Angelo, so let the live forecast, not a calendar, tell you when freeze protection starts mattering.
How far should I drain my pool for winter?
Less than most people think. Below the skimmer opening is the classic solid-cover target; mesh covers often specify higher water. The cover's own manual wins every argument, and "drain it completely" is never the answer — empty shells pop out of wet ground.
What happens if you don't winterize a pool?
The freeze finds every shortcut. Ice in an unprotected pump or heater cracks castings from the inside; ice in underground lines splits fittings you can't see until spring. San Angelo reaches freeze territory around November 10 — the checklist above is cheaper than any one of those repairs.
When is the last safe date to close in San Angelo?
The model draws the line at November 3 for San Angelo. It isn't arbitrary: a week of margin before the November 10 first-freeze normal, 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 San Angelo hits the closing window
Data: NOAA 1991–2020 climate normals via San Angelo (5.5 mi); live outlook by Open-Meteo. Full attribution on the sources page. Model assumptions and error bars on methodology.