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Pool Salt Calculator

Calculate pounds of pool salt needed to reach your saltwater chlorinator target.

Pool salt needed

534.1 lb

242.3 kg

40 lb bags

14

Morton solar / pool salt — food-grade NaCl

Est. bag cost

$70–$140

$5–10 per 40 lb bag retail

How to add salt to the pool

  1. Turn the pump on with the SWG cell off.
  2. Broadcast the salt across the deep end — do not pour it into the skimmer. Skimmer dumping pushes a slug of high-salinity water through the SWG cell and the heater core, which can damage both.
  3. Brush undissolved salt off the floor toward the main drain.
  4. Keep the pump running for 24 hours to circulate.
  5. Test salinity again with a strip or digital meter; re-dose only if you're still under target.

Add 534.1 lb (242.3 kg) of pool salt to bring 20,000 gal from 0 ppm to 3200 ppm. 14 × 40 lb bags (~$70–$140).

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How to use Pool Salt Calculator

What this pool salt calculator does

This calculator works out the pounds of pool salt you need to dissolve into your pool to bring its salinity (in parts per million, ppm) from where it is now to the target your saltwater chlorinator (SWG) wants. Most SWGs sit in the 3,000–3,500 ppm band — the calculator defaults to 3,200 ppm, which is the safest single target across Hayward, Pentair, Jandy and CircuPool models. The output is the pounds of salt to add plus the 40 lb bag count and a typical price range so you can plan the home-centre run.

How to use the pool salt calculator

  1. Paste your pool volume in gallons. If you don’t know it, head to the Pool Volume Calculator first — the salt dose changes by ~17 lb per 1,000 gallon error, so accuracy matters.
  2. Enter the current salinity in ppm. For a fresh fill from municipal water it’s effectively 0 (some municipal supplies read 100–200 ppm from naturally dissolved minerals — close enough). For an existing pool, use a test-strip or digital-meter reading.
  3. Enter the target salinity. 3,200 ppm is the default; check your SWG’s manual if your unit calls for a different number.
  4. Read the result. The headline pounds figure is what you need; the bag count and price help size the trip to the store.
  5. Tap Copy summary to text it to your service or paste it into a pool-care log.

How the formula works

Salt dosing uses one of the simplest pieces of pool chemistry:

lb of salt = (target_ppm − current_ppm) × gallons × 8.345 ÷ 1,000,000

The 8.345 is the weight in pounds of one US gallon of water. ppm literally means “parts per million by mass,” so to add 1 ppm to one million pounds of water you add one pound of solute. The formula just scales that down to your pool’s gallons. For metric users the equivalent is (target_ppm − current_ppm) × litres ÷ 1,000,000 kilograms — and 1 kg = 2.2046 lb.

Salt-chlorinator targets at a glance

SWG brandTarget salinity (ppm)Floor (cell stops)
Hayward AquaRite3,2002,700
Pentair IntelliChlor3,4003,000
Jandy AquaPure3,5003,000
CircuPool RJ-Series3,2002,700
Saltron Mini (portable)3,5003,000

These are the manufacturer-published targets. Stay within ±200 ppm of them — going too high doesn’t make the cell produce more chlorine, it just corrodes ladders and rails, and over ~4,500 ppm you start to taste it.

Picking the right salt bag

Look for “99.8 % pure pool salt” or “food-grade NaCl” on the bag. Morton Pool Salt, Diamond Crystal Pool Salt, and Aquasalt are the three most common US retail brands. Avoid:

  • Water-softener pellets unless the bag says “no additives” — many brands include YPS (yellow prussiate of soda) anti-caker that stains pool plaster.
  • Iodised table salt — the iodine reacts with chlorine and turns pool water pink-grey.
  • Rock salt — coarse, dirty, won’t dissolve fast enough, often has iron-staining impurities.
  • Road de-icer salt — calcium chloride, which raises water hardness and damages the SWG cell.

How to actually add the salt

The most-violated rule on the pool deck: broadcast the salt across the deep end with the pump running. Do not dump it into the skimmer. Skimmer dumping pushes a slug of saturated salt water through the salt cell and the heater’s copper heat exchanger, which can damage both within minutes. Broadcast across the surface and let the pool’s circulation dissolve it; brush any settled salt off the floor toward the main drain so it doesn’t sit on plaster or vinyl. Keep the pump running for 24 hours before re-testing and switching the SWG on.

When to add vs. drain and refill

If your salt level is above target (over-added on the last dose, or evaporation concentrated the salt), the only way down is to partial-drain and refill with fresh water. Use the salt formula in reverse: to drop 20,000 gal from 4,500 ppm to 3,200 ppm you need to replace about 29 % of the water with fresh. Salt does not evaporate — only water does, so heavy summer evaporation slowly concentrates the salt. Heavy rain or backwash drops it. Test monthly.

Privacy

This calculator runs in JavaScript on your device. There is no fetch call, no analytics on the values you enter, no server-side logging. The page works the same way offline once loaded.

Frequently asked questions

How much salt do I need to add to my pool?
The formula is simple: (target ppm − current ppm) × pool gallons × 8.345 ÷ 1,000,000 = pounds of salt. For a 20,000 gallon pool going from 0 ppm (a fresh fill) to 3,200 ppm (the typical SWG target), that's about 534 lb — roughly fourteen 40 lb bags. For a 10,000 gallon pool, it's half that: about 267 lb, or seven bags. Always paste the gallon figure from a measured pool volume; guessing the volume is the most common reason salt levels overshoot or undershoot the target.
What kind of salt should I buy for a saltwater pool?
Use pool-grade or food-grade sodium chloride (NaCl), 99.8 % pure, with no anti-caking agents, no iodine, and no yellow-prussiate-of-soda (YPS). In the US the most common brand is Morton Pool Salt or Morton Solar Salt; in box stores you'll also see Diamond Crystal Pool Salt. Avoid water-softener pellets unless the bag specifically says 'no additives' — softener salt often contains iron-removing agents that stain pool plaster. Never use rock salt, road salt, or table salt with iodine. The 40 lb bag size is standard; some big-box stores also sell 50 lb.
What is the target salinity for a saltwater pool?
Almost every residential saltwater chlorine generator (SWG) targets 3,000 to 3,500 ppm, with 3,200 ppm being the safest single number. Below 2,700 ppm the cell stops producing chlorine; above ~4,000 ppm you'll start corroding equipment, fading vinyl liners, and tasting salt in the water. Pentair IntelliChlor, Hayward AquaRite, Jandy AquaPure and CircuPool all sit in this 3,000–3,500 band — check your unit's manual for the exact spec. For comparison, ocean water is ~35,000 ppm and a human tongue starts tasting salt around 3,500–4,000 ppm.
How long after adding salt can I swim and turn the chlorinator on?
Swim immediately — pool salt is just sodium chloride dissolved in water and is safe at any concentration up to several thousand ppm. Wait 24 hours before turning the salt cell on, though. The salt needs time to fully dissolve and circulate; switching the cell on before then can scale the cell plates and shorten cell life. Run the pump continuously for those 24 hours, brush any salt sitting on the pool floor toward the main drain, then test salinity with a strip or digital meter before activating the SWG.
Is my pool-salt data uploaded anywhere?
No. Pool volume, current ppm and target ppm are arithmetic on your device — there are no fetch calls, no analytics on the values you enter, no server-side logging. You can verify in your device's Network panel: once the page has loaded, switching off Wi-Fi does not change the calculator's behaviour. The numbers stay on this device.

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