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Pool closing · Washington

When to Close Your Pool in Spokane, WA: Deadline, Window & Checklist

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

In Spokane, the closing window runs from September 17 to September 27. 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 Spokane'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 Spokane water runs about 31°F at its winter floor and 73°F at its summer peak.

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

Spokane closing dates at a glance

Site model of NOAA 1991–2020 daily normals for Spokane Felts Field (5.3 mi from Spokane city center). Dates are typical-year guidance, not forecasts.
Closing windowSeptember 17 – September 27
Close by (deadline)September 27
First freeze, 50% probabilityOctober 15
Open by (recommended)May 23
Opening windowMay 16 – June 6
61°F crossing (7-day mean)June 6
Swim-season length (80°F+ days)70 days
NOAA normals stationSpokane Felts Field · 5.3 mi · 1953 ft

A short season cuts both ways: every week opened before June 6 is a real slice of Spokane's roughly 70-day warm-swim budget.

The same model in water terms: Spokane's estimated pool temperature runs about 47°F in mid-April, 62°F in mid-June, 72°F in mid-August, and 52°F in mid-October, peaking near 73°F. Those four checkpoints — not any calendar holiday — are what the windows above are protecting.

The 12-step Spokane 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.

  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

    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.

  3. Service the filter one last time

    Backwash sand or DE, or pull and rinse cartridges, per the manual. A filter stored dirty cakes over winter and starts spring half-clogged.

  4. 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.

  5. 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.

  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

    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.

  8. Add pool antifreeze where blowouts fall short

    Doubt is the criterion: any run you can't confirm dry gets pool-grade antifreeze at the label's per-foot rate. The automotive jug from the garage is for cars — it has no business in pool plumbing.

  9. 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.

  10. 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.

  11. Shut down the heater carefully

    Follow the manufacturer's winterizing sequence for your heater — drain it fully and, for gas units, close the supply valve. Heat exchangers are the most expensive freeze casualty on the pad.

  12. 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

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

  • Winter cover

    Sized to overlap; the cheapest insurance the pool wears all winter.

  • Cover pump

    Keeps rain and melt off a solid cover all season.

  • Expansion plugs + skimmer guard

    Seals blown-out lines and sacrifices itself to skimmer ice.

  • Pool antifreeze

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

  • Winter closing kit

    Closing chemistry in one box, dosed by pool volume.

  • Air pillow

    Gives ice somewhere to push besides your pool walls.

How Spokane compares locally

Spokane closes in the earlier half of Washington's calendar. Neighbors run close: Spokane Valley (9 mi away) models its deadline at September 27 (the same day vs Spokane's September 27), while Coeur d'Alene (30 mi) shows September 26. The spring mirror of this page is the Spokane opening guide, and the season overview draws both windows on a single bar.

The instrument behind this page is Spokane Felts Field, 5.3 miles east of Spokane — 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 Spokane owners

Match the drainage plan to the cover

Solid covers shed nothing — they need a cover pump staged before the first storm and checked after each one. Mesh covers drain themselves but pass silt that settles all winter. Either way, the plan is decided in October, not improvised in January when the cover is an ice sheet.

Gas heaters get the manual, not a guess

Every heater brand sequences its winterizing differently — drain plugs, blower considerations, gas supply, control settings. The generic advice (drain fully, close the valve) is right but incomplete; ten minutes with your model's manual protects the most expensive component you'll winterize.

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.

Closing for a real winter

A Spokane 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.

Spokane 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 Spokane model has the sustained cool-down starting September 17; closing between then and September 27 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. Spokane's water doesn't settle below the risk zone until around September 17 — 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 Spokane's first freeze normal near October 15, don't leave that question open.

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?

Expect equipment damage first — cracked pump volutes, split filter tanks, ruptured heater exchangers — then plumbing leaks that surface at startup. In Spokane, normals put the first freeze near October 15; everything after that date is borrowed time for an unwinterized system.

When is the last safe date to close in Spokane?

Our model's practical deadline is September 27 — 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 17–September 27 window, none of that drama applies.

Data: NOAA 1991–2020 climate normals via Spokane Felts Field (5.3 mi); live outlook by Open-Meteo. Full attribution on the sources page. Model assumptions and error bars on methodology.