Fiberglass Pool Cost Calculator
Fiberglass shells come in manufacturer-set sizes. Pick the closest to what you have in mind.
Site conditions are the biggest source of cost surprises. Be realistic here.
Equipment is the second biggest cost variable after shell size. VS pumps are required by energy codes in most US states.
Select everything you want. Items marked ⭐ are significantly cheaper to include during construction than to add later.
How Much Does a Fiberglass Pool Cost?
Most complete fiberglass pool projects land between $55,000 and $110,000 for a ready-to-swim installation. That range covers the shell, installation, basic equipment, deck, and fence. The exact number depends on shell size, where you live, equipment tier, and what you add.
The number your contractor quotes for the shell alone is never the full project cost. By the time you add excavation, installation labor, equipment, a proper deck, safety fencing, electrical work, and landscaping, the real number is typically 50 to 80% higher than the base shell price you see advertised.
Fiberglass Pool Cost by Size
| Size | Dimensions | Shell cost | Full project range | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small | Up to 12×24 ft | $18K to $26K | $45K to $70K | Tight lots, plunge pools, first pools |
| Medium | 14×28 to 16×32 ft | $24K to $34K | $58K to $90K | Most homeowners – best selection and pricing |
| Large | 18×36 to 20×40 ft | $30K to $44K | $72K to $110K | Families who swim seriously |
| Extra large | 22×44 ft+ | $38K to $55K | $90K to $135K | Serious swimmers, entertaining, luxury builds |
What Is Included in a Fiberglass Pool Quote
A legitimate fiberglass pool quote should include the shell, delivery, excavation, installation, backfill, plumbing, basic equipment (pump, filter, salt system), startup chemicals, and at minimum an equipment pad. It should specify equipment brand names and model numbers, not just categories.
What is almost never included in a base quote: the pool deck, safety fencing, electrical work beyond the equipment pad, landscaping to restore your yard, permits in most cases, and any water features or automation upgrades. These items add $20,000 to $40,000 to the average project.
Fiberglass Pool Cost by Equipment Package
| Package | Typical cost | What is included | Annual electricity savings vs basic |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic | $6,500 to $9,000 | VS pump, sand filter, basic salt or tablet system, standard LED, basic timer | Baseline |
| Standard | $9,000 to $14,000 | VS pump, cartridge filter, SWG salt chlorinator, color LEDs, heater pre-plumb, basic automation | $200 to $400/yr from better pump scheduling |
| Premium | $14,000 to $22,000 | VS pump + booster, DE filter, SWG with ORP sensor, multi-color LEDs, heat pump, full automation, in-floor cleaning system | $600 to $1,200/yr from optimized scheduling and heat pump |
Variable speed pumps save $600 to $1,200 per year in electricity compared to single-speed pumps and are required by energy codes in most US states. The standard package pays for its upgrade cost within 3 to 5 years through electricity savings alone.
Regional Cost Differences
Labor rates for pool installation vary significantly by region. The Midwest is used as the baseline (1.0x). The Northeast adds 20 to 22% due to higher labor costs and more complex permitting. California and the Pacific Northwest add 25 to 28%. The South and Southeast are 7% below the national average, which is why Florida and Texas account for a disproportionate share of fiberglass pool installations.
| Region | Cost multiplier | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| South / Southeast (FL, GA, TX, SC) | 0.93x | Highest volume market, competitive pricing, year-round work |
| Midwest (OH, IL, IN, MO) | 1.0x | Baseline – moderate labor and permit costs |
| Southwest (AZ, NV, CO) | 1.07x | Higher demand in AZ/NV, altitude complications in CO |
| Northeast (NY, NJ, CT, MA) | 1.22x | Highest labor rates, complex permitting, short season |
| West Coast (CA, WA, OR) | 1.28x | High labor rates, stringent code requirements, permit delays |
Site Conditions That Add to the Cost
Difficult access
A fiberglass shell is delivered by truck and craned into the excavated hole. If your yard has limited access, a standard crane may not reach. Tight side yards under 8 feet wide, overhead obstructions, or no direct access from the street may require a super crane or special equipment that adds $5,000 to $20,000 to the project cost. Get this assessed before signing a contract.
Rocky or difficult soil
Hitting rock during excavation is the biggest budget-busting surprise. Jackhammering or blasting adds $5,000 to $18,000. Clay soil requires additional drainage and backfill material. High water tables may require dewatering systems and additional engineering. Ask your contractor what happens if they hit rock and make sure the contract specifies who pays and how much.
Sloped yards
A yard with significant slope requires additional excavation, retaining walls, and engineered backfill. A mild slope may add $500 to $2,000. A steep slope can add $8,000 to $22,000 for the retaining walls and drainage work needed to properly support the pool shell.
Add-ons That Are Cheaper During Construction
Some features cost 30 to 60% more to add after the pool is filled than during construction. This is because adding them post-construction requires draining the pool, cutting into the shell or plumbing, and paying for additional site work. Items in this category include:
- In-floor cleaning systems: $4,000 to $8,000 during construction vs $8,000 to $18,000 to retrofit
- Pool automation: $2,000 to $5,500 during construction vs $4,000 to $9,000 to retrofit
- Integrated spa: Must be selected at the shell manufacturing stage – cannot be added later to a one-piece fiberglass shell
- Sun shelf / tanning ledge: Must be part of the shell design – cannot be added later
- Water features: $2,500 to $10,000 during construction vs $4,000 to $16,000 post-fill
- Heater / heat pump: Pre-plumbing during construction is $500 to $1,500 vs $2,000 to $4,000 to add later
Fiberglass vs Concrete vs Vinyl: 10-Year Cost Comparison
| Cost factor | Fiberglass | Concrete | Vinyl liner |
|---|---|---|---|
| Typical medium-size install | $75,000 | $115,000 | $68,000 |
| Annual maintenance | $800 to $1,500 | $2,000 to $3,500 | $1,200 to $2,200 |
| 10-year maintenance total | $8,000 to $15,000 | $20,000 to $35,000 | $12,000 to $22,000 |
| Major resurfacing / liner | None (25-yr warranty) | $10,000 to $20,000 at year 10 | $5,500 to $10,000 at year 8 |
| Estimated 10-year total | $83,000 to $90,000 | $145,000 to $170,000 | $85,500 to $100,000 |
| Build time | 3 to 5 weeks | 8 to 12 weeks | 2 to 4 weeks |
For most homeowners, fiberglass wins on total cost of ownership at the 10-year mark despite not having the lowest upfront price in all size categories. The key advantages are lowest annual maintenance cost, no resurfacing requirement for 20 to 25 years, and the smooth gelcoat surface that uses significantly less chlorine than concrete.
How to Get the Best Price on a Fiberglass Pool
- Get at least 3 written quotes. Prices vary 20 to 40% between contractors in the same market for the same work. Never sign on a single quote.
- Specify brand and model numbers. Ask every contractor to quote the same shell brand and model, the same equipment brands, and the same deck specifications. This is the only way to compare bids accurately.
- Build in the off-season. Late summer through early winter (August through January) typically offers better contractor availability, sometimes lower pricing, and the pool is ready when warm weather arrives. Spring and early summer have the highest demand and longest wait times.
- Do not skip the site visit. Any contractor who gives a quote without visiting your yard and assessing access, soil, slope, and electrical cannot be quoting accurately. Walk away from remote quotes.
- Check licensing and insurance. Pool contractors should be licensed in your state and carry general liability and workers compensation insurance. Ask for certificates, not verbal assurances.
- Read the warranty. Quality fiberglass shells carry 25-year structural warranties. Confirm the warranty transfers if you sell the home and what it covers (structure vs gelcoat vs equipment).
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does a fiberglass pool cost?
Most complete fiberglass pool projects cost $55,000 to $110,000 including shell, installation, equipment, deck, and fence. A small pool in the South can come in around $45,000 to $60,000. A large pool with premium equipment and paver deck in the Northeast can exceed $130,000.
What is included in the fiberglass pool price?
A complete quote should include the shell, delivery, excavation, installation, equipment (pump, filter, chlorination system), plumbing, and startup. It should not include the deck, fence, electrical panel upgrade, landscaping, or permits – those add $20,000 to $40,000 to the average project.
How long does a fiberglass pool last?
Quality fiberglass shells carry 25-year structural warranties and often last 30 to 40 years with normal care. The gelcoat surface can fade or chalk over time and may need refinishing after 15 to 25 years. Equipment (pumps, filters, heaters) typically lasts 8 to 15 years depending on quality and maintenance.
Is fiberglass cheaper than concrete?
Fiberglass is typically $20,000 to $40,000 cheaper to install than an equivalent concrete pool. Over 10 years, fiberglass is significantly cheaper to own due to lower annual chemical costs and no resurfacing requirement. Fiberglass wins on total cost of ownership for most homeowners.
Can you negotiate the price of a fiberglass pool?
Yes. Get multiple quotes first to understand the market rate. Negotiate on add-ons (deck size, equipment tier) rather than asking for a blanket discount. Building in the off-season (fall and winter) often yields better pricing. Never use price as your only selection criterion – a bad installation costs far more to fix.
How long does it take to install a fiberglass pool?
From excavation to water, a typical fiberglass pool takes 3 to 5 weeks. The overall project including deck and fence is typically 6 to 10 weeks. Permitting before construction starts can add 2 to 8 weeks depending on your municipality.
Do fiberglass pools require resurfacing?
Unlike concrete pools, fiberglass pools do not require periodic resurfacing. Quality fiberglass shells carry 25-year structural warranties. The gelcoat may need polishing or refinishing after 15 to 25 years if it fades, but this is a cosmetic treatment costing $2,000 to $5,000 rather than the $10,000 to $20,000 concrete resurfacing cycle.
What is the annual cost to maintain a fiberglass pool?
Fiberglass pools typically cost $800 to $1,500 per year in chemicals and maintenance supplies. The smooth gelcoat surface resists algae and requires significantly less chlorine than concrete. Professional cleaning service adds $150 to $300 per month if you choose to hire it out.
