Pool opening · Texas
When to Open Your Pool in Temple, TX: Best Dates & Checklist
Last updated: July 15, 2026 · Model window year: 2026 · dates · checklist · FAQ
Aim to have your Temple pool open by March 13. NOAA 1991–2020 normals from Stillhouse Hollow Dam show the 7-day mean crossing 61°F around March 27; water in an unheated pool follows within days, and algae wake up with it. Everything you need is below — the live water-temperature model, Temple's opening window, and the complete checklist.
Temple opening dates at a glance
| Open by (recommended) | March 13 |
|---|---|
| Opening window | March 6 – March 27 |
| 61°F crossing (7-day mean) | March 27 |
| Closing window | November 4 – November 13 |
| Close by (deadline) | November 13 |
| First freeze, 50% probability | November 20 |
| Swim-season length (80°F+ days) | 175 days |
| NOAA normals station | Stillhouse Hollow Dam · 9.6 mi · 706 ft |
Temple's 175-day warm season leaves comfortable margins on both ends — the windows above aim you at the cheap-chemistry versions of each transition.
Four water checkpoints anchor Temple's year in the model: mid-April at about 64°F, mid-June at 79°F, mid-August near the 84°F peak zone, and mid-October easing through 71°F. The dates in the table are where those numbers cross the thresholds that matter.
The 12-step Temple opening checklist
Built for Temple's window: physical teardown first, a full day of circulation, then chemistry per each product's label. Nothing here requires a pro, but step 1 goes easier with a second pair of hands.
-
Pump off and clear the winter cover
Water off first, debris second, cover third: pump the standing pool off the top, sweep it dry, then walk the cover off in folds. One careless drag can undo a winter of the cover's work in thirty seconds.
-
Top up the water level
Bring the level up to the middle of the skimmer opening before anything runs. Too low and the pump gulps air; too high and the skimmer door stops doing its job.
-
Remove winter plugs and reinstall fittings
Trade out the winter hardware: expansion plugs and skimmer guard out, eyeball fittings and baskets back in, ladders and rails re-seated. Feel each o-ring as you go — brittleness now means an air leak by July.
-
Reassemble the equipment pad
Return every drain plug to its vessel, dress the o-rings with proper lube, and close the unions snug-plus-a-little. The pad should look exactly like your fall photo before anything gets switched on.
-
Prime the pump and run for 24 hours
Fill the pump basket housing with water, open air relief on the filter, and start the system. Let it run a full day to turn the water over several times before you judge clarity.
-
Service the filter
The filter starts the season clean or the season starts badly: rinse or swap cartridges, backwash sand, recharge DE — whichever your manual prescribes.
-
Brush, skim, and vacuum
Do a full mechanical pass — brush, skim, vacuum — before leaning on chemistry. Chemicals are for what you can't remove by hand, not a substitute for it.
-
Test the water
Run the full panel — pH, alkalinity, calcium, stabilizer, sanitizer — with strips or drops that aren't left over from two seasons ago. Every dose that follows depends on this reading being real.
-
Balance, then shock — per product labels
Correct total alkalinity before pH — it's the stabilizer of the pair — dosing exactly what each label specifies for your volume. Then shock per its label and let the pump run through the night.
-
Filter until the water clears
Run long filtration cycles and re-test daily until the water is clear and readings hold in label ranges. In cool March 6 water this usually goes quickly; warm late starts take longer.
-
Rinse the surrounds before first swim
Hose pollen and winter grit off the deck and furniture so the first windy day doesn't dump it straight back into clean water. A skimmer sock helps through peak pollen weeks.
-
Check ladders, rails, and bonding
Tighten ladder and rail hardware, confirm anchor sockets are snug, and press-test GFCI breakers on pool circuits. Loose hardware chews up anchors all season if it goes in wobbly.
What to buy before the rush
The March crowd empties shelves in a predictable order. This is the short list worth owning before Temple's window opens — nothing exotic, just the stuff everyone needs the same weekend.
-
Leaf net + wall brush
Mechanical cleaning first — every scoop is chemistry you don't buy.
-
Robotic pool cleaner
It scrubs the floor overnight; you sleep through the worst chore.
-
Pool opening chemical kit
One box covers balancing and startup for most residential volumes.
-
7-way test strips
The first thing to run and the last thing to skimp on.
-
Start-up shock
Label-dosed oxidizer that sets sanitizer control while water is still cold.
-
Filter cartridge / DE refill
Start the season on fresh media; dirty filters stretch cloudy days.
How Temple compares locally
Temple sits in the later half of Texas's pool calendar — about 74% of the 68 Texas cities we model open earlier. The nearest checkpoints agree: Killeen (20 mi away) models to March 12 (1 day earlier), and Waco (33 mi) to March 14. Planning the other end of the year? The mirror guide covers closing in Temple, and the season overview puts both windows on one bar.
Every number on this page traces to one instrument cluster: Stillhouse Hollow Dam, 9.6 miles southwest of Temple's center at an elevation near 706 feet. NOAA computed its 1991–2020 normals from roughly three decades of daily readings — long enough that one strange spring in Bell County barely moves the dates.
Field notes for Temple owners
First-start checks for heaters
Before the first heater run, confirm the pad drains dry from winter, look for rodent evidence around the cabinet, and follow the manufacturer's startup sequence — not a generic one. Heat exchangers and gas trains are the most expensive components on the pad; they get the by-the-book treatment.
Water level: where spring rain helps and hurts
Aim for mid-skimmer. Low water lets the pump gulp air and lose prime; high water makes the skimmer door lazy so surface debris stays put. Spring storms will move the level around — recheck after every serious rain during the opening weeks.
Stabilizer: the sunscreen your chlorine needs
Spring sun destroys unstabilized chlorine within hours, which reads as "the pool eats chlorine" when it's really UV. Test cyanuric acid at opening — winter rain and splash-out dilute it — and restore it per the product label before judging your sanitizer consumption.
Long-season pacing
With around 175 swim-worthy days a year, Temple pools run more like a second bathroom than a seasonal toy: the equipment accumulates near-continuous runtime. Pace it — clean the filter on schedule rather than on symptoms, watch the pump for bearing noise in late summer, and treat the March 13 opening as a genuine annual service, because it's the only downtime the system gets.
Temple pool opening FAQ
What water temperature causes pool algae?
There's no single magic number, but the practical range is 65–70°F: below it algae barely tick over, above it they bloom, especially in the still, dark water under a cover. Temple reaches that band in the weeks after March 27, which is why the recommended opening lands March 13.
What temperature should it be outside to open a pool?
Air temperature is only a messenger — the pool answers to the weekly average of highs and lows. When that 7-day mean tops 61°F (about March 27 here), unheated Temple water is roughly two weeks from the algae zone, which is why the guide says be open by March 13, not by any particular sunny Saturday.
Is it cheaper to open a pool early or late?
An early open costs pump runtime; a late open risks an algae recovery, and recoveries are where budgets die — multiple shock doses, days of continuous filtration, and occasionally professional help. Opening Temple by March 13, while water is cold, is the cheap insurance version.
How long after opening can you swim?
The honest answer is "when the water says so": visibly clear to the bottom, test results inside label ranges on consecutive checks, and any post-shock interval the product label specifies fully elapsed. An early Temple opening usually clears that bar in days precisely because cold water opens clean.
What chemicals do I need to open a pool?
Plan on five categories: testing (strips or a kit), balancers for pH and alkalinity, stabilizer, sanitizer, and an opening shock. Many stores bundle these as opening kits sized by pool volume. Whatever you buy, the product label — not a rule of thumb — sets the dose.
When do most people open pools in TX?
Nationally, early-to-mid May and the Memorial Day weekend dominate — which is why late openers meet empty shelves and week-long service waits. Our Texas model medians out at March 8 across 68 cities, and Temple pencils in March 13, comfortably ahead of the rush.
Email me when Temple hits the opening window
Data: NOAA 1991–2020 climate normals via Stillhouse Hollow Dam (9.6 mi); live outlook by Open-Meteo. Full attribution on the sources page. Model assumptions and error bars on methodology.