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The Experience Premium: How Years in Business Affect Pool Service Rates

Parker Conley Parker Conley · May 21, 2026
Pool service experience premium data showing rates increase with years in business

Key Findings

  • Experience pays, but geography inflates it — The raw data shows a 75% rate premium for veterans, but controlling for region it is closer to 32% in year-round Sunbelt markets
  • Year 3–5 is the inflection point — Pool count jumps from 41 to 172 and revenue triples, regardless of location
  • Solo rates plateau around $190–$210 — Experience only translates to higher rates if you build a team
  • 19 seasonal-market pros pull the averages up — 81 of 102 submissions are from year-round Sunbelt states. The remaining 19 charge 2–3x more per month but work fewer months

Does experience actually pay in pool service? We looked at real data from 102 pool professionals to find out. The answer is yes, but not as dramatically as the raw numbers suggest. Geography matters almost as much as experience.

This report uses crowdsourced data from poolrates.fyi where pool pros submit their actual monthly rate, pool count, years in business, and business type. No surveys. No estimates. Real numbers from working pros across 19 states.

Why geography matters here: Our dataset is 79% Sunbelt (FL, CA, TX, AZ and other year-round markets) and 21% seasonal states (PA, NY, NJ, CO, etc.). Our state-by-state analysis shows season length is the #1 driver of monthly rate differences (r = -0.739). A Pennsylvania pro at $540/mo and an Arizona pro at $150/mo both earn roughly $1,800–$3,000/year from each customer when you account for season length. Throughout this article, we show both the raw national numbers and the Sunbelt-only numbers so you can see how much geography inflates the experience premium.

The rate curve: $183 to $320

Here is how the median monthly rate per pool changes as pool pros gain experience.

It takes 3 years to triple your revenue: pool pros earn $4,842/mo in years 1-2, then revenue triples to $15,732 at years 3-5 when pool count jumps from 41 to 172. Sunbelt rate premium is 32%, not 75% — geography inflates national numbers
Revenue triples at the year 3-5 inflection point. Sunbelt rate premium is 32%, not 75%. Source: poolrates.fyi, 2026

The raw rate curve shows a climb from $183 to $320 — a 75% premium for veterans. But how much of that is experience vs. geography?

When we isolate just Sunbelt pros (81 of 102 submissions), the curve flattens: $170 → $190 → $225 → $218 → $225. That is a 32% premium, not 75%. The national numbers are inflated because veterans are more likely to include seasonal-market pros who charge 2–3x higher monthly rates but work fewer months per year.

Experience All pros (n=68) Sunbelt only (n=57) Seasonal only (n=11)
0–2 years$183$170$300 (n=2)
3–5 years$190$190$440 (n=2)
6–10 years$230$225$880 (n=2)
11–20 years$218$218$350 (n=2)
21+ years$320$225$433 (n=3)

Source: poolrates.fyi, May 2026. Sunbelt = AZ, FL, CA, TX, AL, GA, NV, HI. Seasonal = all other states.

The takeaway: Experience does drive higher rates, but the effect is more modest than the headline numbers suggest. In Sunbelt markets, a 20-year veteran charges about 32% more than a newcomer. The raw 75% figure is real but partly reflects that some veterans happen to operate in markets where monthly rates are inherently higher due to shorter seasons.

The full picture: rates, pools, and revenue by experience

Rates alone do not tell the story. Pool count and total revenue change even more dramatically with experience.

Experience Median rate Avg pools Median revenue Avg revenue
0–2 years $183 41 $4,842/mo $7,249/mo
3–5 years $190 172 $15,732/mo $31,726/mo
6–10 years $230 260 $28,560/mo $80,654/mo
11–20 years $218 192 $23,000/mo $41,109/mo
21+ years $320 301 $38,000/mo $83,683/mo

Revenue grows dramatically with experience. The median pool pro in their first two years earns $4,842/month. By year 21+, the median is $38,000/month. That growth comes from both higher rates and more pools.

However, the "annual equivalent" column below assumes 12 months of service. For pros in seasonal markets (roughly 20% of our dataset), actual annual revenue is lower. A Pennsylvania pro earning $540/pool × 80 pools = $43,200/month works 5 months, not 12. Their annual revenue is ~$216,000, not $518,400.

32%
Rate increase in Sunbelt (newcomer to veteran)
75%
Rate increase nationally (includes seasonal markets)
7.3x
Pool count increase
3–5 yrs
Inflection point

Source: poolrates.fyi, 102 submissions across 19 states, May 2026

Year 3–5: the inflection point

The biggest jump in the data happens between year 2 and year 5. Pool count goes from 41 to 172. Revenue triples from $4,842 to $15,732. This is when pool pros go from "building a route" to "running a business."

Several things converge at this stage:

  • Referrals kick in. Customers who have used you for 2–3 years start recommending you to neighbors.
  • Confidence to raise rates. You stop undercharging because you know what your service is worth.
  • First hire. 37% of pros in the 3–5 year bracket have brought on at least one employee.
  • Repair revenue. By year 3, most pros add equipment repairs as a second revenue stream.
"You have business owners that won't raise their rates for three or four years. Imagine that compounded over four years, that 8% of everything going up and you haven't raised your prices. By the time you get fed up enough to raise prices, you're already way behind."

Use our price increase calculator to model the impact of raising rates across your entire route.

The 11–20 year dip: lifestyle choice

Something interesting happens in the 11–20 year bracket. Both the median rate ($218) and median revenue ($23,000) actually dip below the 6–10 year bracket. Why?

The data suggests this is a lifestyle choice, not a failure. Pros in this bracket:

  • Average 192 pools (down from 260 at 6–10 years)
  • Are 62% team-based (meaning they have help, but are not aggressively growing)
  • Charge $218/pool (solid but not premium)

These are experienced pros who have found their comfort zone. They are not trying to build an empire. They have a route that works, take home a good income, and have time for their life outside of pools.

The data shows two paths after year 10: Some pros push into the 21+ bracket at $320/pool with 301 pools, building a premium operation. Others settle at a comfortable scale with less stress. Both are valid. The revenue difference is significant ($23K vs. $38K/month median) but so is the lifestyle difference.

Solo vs. team at each stage

Experience and business type are closely linked. Here is how the solo-to-team transition plays out across experience brackets.

Experience % Solo Solo avg rate Team avg rate Rate gap
0–2 years 100% $193
3–5 years 63% $189 $215 +14%
6–10 years 40% $207 $344 +66%
11–20 years 38% $204 $210 +3%
21+ years 44% $208 $401 +93%

Two findings stand out:

Solo rates plateau around $190–$210 regardless of experience. Whether a solo operator has 5 years or 25 years, their average rate stays in a tight band. The experience premium mostly shows up for team-based businesses that use their reputation to win higher-value accounts.

The team premium is biggest at 6–10 years and 21+ years. Team businesses in those brackets charge 66% and 93% more than solo operators. However, some of this gap reflects geography: within Sunbelt states, solo pros charge a median of $190 vs. $220 for teams — a 16% gap, not the 20% the national average suggests. The larger gaps in the 6–10 and 21+ brackets may be amplified by the small number of seasonal-market team operators who charge significantly higher monthly rates.

Solo rates hit a wall at $190-$210 no matter how many years of experience, while team rates climb from $215 to $401. Sunbelt-only gap is 16%. National numbers inflated by seasonal markets
Solo rates plateau at $190-$210 regardless of experience. Team rates keep climbing. Source: poolrates.fyi, 2026
"You got to believe that you can do this. If somebody else is doing it, especially if that's somebody who's doing it telling you it can be done, I think you should listen. We've helped guys all over the country. They have to believe that they can do it."

What drives the experience premium?

Why do veterans charge more? The data cannot answer "why" directly, but it suggests several factors.

1. Reputation compounds. A pool pro with 20+ years in a market has hundreds of past customers who refer friends and neighbors. They do not need to compete on price because the phone rings on its own.

2. Technical confidence. Veterans can diagnose problems faster, avoid mistakes, and offer services that newer pros cannot. That expertise justifies higher rates.

3. Client selection. Experienced pros have learned to fire low-value clients and keep the ones who pay well. Over time, the route self-selects for higher-paying accounts.

4. Rate increases compound. A pro who raises rates 5% per year for 20 years has doubled their price. Those who never raise rates stay at their starting price.

Our rate calculator can help you benchmark your current rate against pros in your market with similar experience.

Revenue growth by year: what to expect

If you are early in your career, here is what the data says about realistic revenue progression.

Stage Median monthly revenue Annual equivalent* What's happening
Year 1–2 $4,842 $58,100 Building route, learning trade, all solo
Year 3–5 $15,732 $188,800 Route filling up, adding repairs, maybe first hire
Year 6–10 $28,560 $342,700 Team growing, multiple routes, premium pricing
Year 11–20 $23,000 $276,000 Established, stable, lifestyle-oriented
Year 21+ $38,000 $456,000 Premium reputation, large route or team

*Annual equivalent assumes 12 months of service (Sunbelt). Pros in seasonal markets (5–6 month seasons) should multiply monthly revenue by their actual working months instead.

Remember: these are gross revenue figures. Solo operators in years 1–2 are keeping 60–75% as income. Team-based businesses at year 6–10 may only keep 15–25% after payroll and overhead.

For a deeper dive into solo vs. team economics, see our Solo vs. Team Economics Report.

How to accelerate your experience premium

You cannot skip years. But you can do things that make each year count more toward your rates.

Raise rates every year. The data shows pros who wait 3–4 years between increases fall behind permanently. Even 3–5% annually adds up. Use our price increase calculator to see the compound effect.

Get your CPO. A CPO certification signals expertise that newer pros lack. It opens doors to commercial accounts that pay more per pool.

Drop low-value accounts. Every time you replace a $100/month account with a $250/month account, you are effectively giving yourself years of rate increases in one move.

Add repair revenue. Pros at year 6–10 in our data average 260 pools and $230/pool. Many of them got there by adding equipment repairs, which builds expertise and justifies higher maintenance rates.

"It doesn't matter because you've raised your prices enough that now you're doing less pools and making more money."

Limitations and methodology

This data comes from poolrates.fyi, a free benchmarking tool where pool pros submit their real business numbers. Key caveats:

  • Geography inflates the premium. 81 of 102 submissions are from Sunbelt states (median $190/mo). The 19 seasonal-market submissions (median $400/mo) pull national averages up significantly. We address this by showing Sunbelt-only numbers alongside national figures throughout the article.
  • Small seasonal sample. Most experience brackets have only 2–3 seasonal-market submissions. A single $880/mo pro in the 6–10 year bracket can skew the national median substantially.
  • Self-reported data. We rely on pros submitting accurate numbers. There is no third-party verification.
  • Survivorship bias. Pros who quit the business do not submit data. The 21+ year bracket only includes people who survived that long.
  • Sample sizes vary. The 21+ bracket has 10 submissions (7 Sunbelt, 3 seasonal) vs. 16 for the 3–5 bracket. Smaller samples have more variance.
  • Correlation, not causation. More experience correlates with higher rates, but geography, business type, and service quality are confounding factors.

As of May 2026, the dataset includes 102 total submissions. 68 reported years in business. Revenue calculations are based on the 80 submissions that included pool counts. The data is updated continuously. Submit your rates to help grow the dataset.

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