Beach Entry Pool Designs (Zero-Pool Design)

Beach Entry Pool Design Visualizer | Zero-Entry Swimming Pool Designer
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Beach Entry Pool Design Visualizer

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Beach Entry Pool

Configure every detail of your zero-entry pool: slope configuration, ramp dimensions, depth transition, pool shape, surface finish, bubblers, shade, landscape style, deck material, complementary features, safety, and lighting. Live preview with every choice.

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Design Your Beach Entry Pool, One Decision at a Time

A beach entry pool eliminates the step entirely. The pool floor slopes gradually from deck level down to full swimming depth, exactly the way a natural ocean or lake shoreline does. The result is a pool where a toddler can wade in from zero depth without anyone lifting them, where a swimmer with limited mobility can enter without gripping a handrail, and where every adult immediately gets the feeling of walking into the Gulf of Mexico. That sensory experience is what drives demand for beach entry pools and what makes them consistently the most photographed and discussed feature of any backyard they occupy.

Work through all 17 steps below. Each one is a real specification your pool contractor needs before they can design or price this type of pool.

Step 1 of 176%
Step 1 of 17
Beach Entry Configuration
The entry configuration determines how the slope zone relates to the rest of the pool. This is the most fundamental beach entry decision.

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Beach Entry Pool Guide

Beach Entry Pool Designs: The Complete Zero-Entry Swimming Pool Guide

A beach entry pool, also called a zero-entry pool or sloped entry pool, has no steps. The pool floor begins at deck level and slopes gradually down to full swimming depth, exactly the way a natural ocean shoreline or lake beach does. The slope is what makes it work. A toddler can walk in from zero depth with no lift needed. An elderly swimmer can enter without gripping a rail. Everyone gets the physical sensation of walking into the water rather than descending into it, and that sensory difference changes how the pool is used and enjoyed every single day.

Beach entry pools have been standard in resort and water park design for 30 years. Their adoption in residential construction accelerated dramatically after 2015 as gunite technology improved and homeowners became more familiar with what was possible. Today a beach entry pool is among the most requested features in new residential pool construction, and among the most searched pool topics in Google and AI search tools.

Beach Entry vs Tanning Ledge: Understanding the Difference

These two terms cause more confusion than any other pair in pool design. A tanning ledge is a flat raised platform, typically 6 to 12 inches deep, positioned at one end of the pool. It is a horizontal surface at a fixed shallow depth. A beach entry is a slope, not a platform. It begins at grade (zero depth) and angles gradually downward over 8 to 20 feet until it reaches 18 to 36 inches, where it transitions to the main pool depth. A beach entry has no flat section at its top. The entry begins at zero depth and immediately starts sloping. You can combine both elements, a flat tanning ledge at the start of the beach slope that then continues angling down, but they are not the same feature and should not be quoted as the same feature by your contractor.

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Beach Entry Pool Construction: Why Gunite is the Standard

Gunite (pneumatically applied concrete, also called shotcrete) is the dominant construction method for beach entry pools because the slope geometry requires a contractor to form and shoot the pool floor at a continuous angle. Unlike a traditional hopper-bottom pool floor that pitches to a central drain, a beach entry pool floor must slope uniformly from the entry edge down to the transition point. Gunite can be applied at any angle from flat to nearly vertical, which makes it ideal for beach entry slopes ranging from a steep 1:8 grade to a gentle ADA-compliant 1:20 grade. Fiberglass beach entry shells exist in catalog form from manufacturers including San Juan, Latham, and Thursday Pools, but they come in fixed sizes with predetermined slope widths and lengths. If the available fiberglass shell does not match your property dimensions or your desired slope width, gunite is the only option that can accommodate a fully custom beach entry design. Vinyl liner beach entry pools are possible but require specially fabricated liners that must be formed to the slope geometry during installation, which adds cost and complexity and limits the future liner replacement options to the same specialty manufacturer.

Slope Surface Finish: The Most Safety-Critical Beach Entry Decision

The slope finish in a beach entry pool is the single most important safety decision in the entire design. A smooth white plaster finish on a 1:10 slope is genuinely dangerous, especially for children running toward the entry. The industry standard for any sloped pool surface is a textured aggregate finish, either exposed aggregate, pebble aggregate, or quartz aggregate. Pebble aggregate (branded products include Pebble Tec, Pebble Sheen, and similar systems from various manufacturers) is the most popular finish for beach entry pools because its naturally rough rounded pebble surface provides excellent grip at all slope angles while also creating a color and texture that genuinely resembles an ocean or lake floor. The sand-tone pebble colors, typically marketed as sand dollar, ivory coast, or Caribbean sand, are the most requested finish for beach entries because they complete the ocean shore appearance better than any other available material. For buyers who want to use travertine tile on a beach slope, the tile must be tumbled or honed, never polished, and must be set with a heavily textured surface. Polished travertine on a pool slope is a serious slip hazard regardless of any anti-slip additive applied to the sealer.

Bubblers, Slope Width, Ramp Length, and Cost

Beach Entry Bubblers, Slope Dimensions, and Complete Cost Guide

Bubblers: The Signature Feature of a Beach Entry Pool

Floor bubblers are small nozzles installed flush in the pool floor at the beach entry slope. When activated, they push water upward through the shallow water covering the slope, creating a pattern of gentle upwelling that looks and feels like waves lapping at a shoreline. Bubblers are what transform a beach entry pool from a unique entry method into a genuine sensory experience. Young children play in the bubbler zone for hours. Adults sit on the slope in the shallow water and feel the upwelling around them. The effect at night, when LED-lit bubblers illuminate the shallow water from below, is one of the most photographed features in residential pool design. A single row of bubblers at the shallowest point of the slope costs approximately $2,000 to $5,000 installed. A cascading three-row system across the full depth of the slope costs $5,500 to $13,000. LED bubblers with color-changing capability cost $7,500 to $20,000 for a full installation and require a compatible controller that integrates with the pool automation system.

Slope Width and Ramp Length: The Key Dimensional Decisions

The slope width is how far the beach entry extends across the pool. A narrow beach entry of 8 to 10 feet handles one or two swimmers side by side. A standard 12 to 16 foot width allows a family to enter together. A full-width entry that runs the complete width of the pool creates the most convincing beach shoreline effect when viewed from the deck or from the house. Full-width entries are more expensive because more pool floor area must be sloped and the bubbler system, if included, must extend across the full width. The ramp length is how many feet the slope travels from the entry point (zero depth at the deck edge) to the transition to full pool depth. A short 6 to 8 foot ramp has a steeper grade, approximately 1:8, which is adequate for most swimmers but not ADA-compliant. A standard 10 to 12 foot ramp achieves the most popular 1:10 to 1:12 grade. A long 14 to 16 foot ramp achieves a very gradual 1:14 grade that is comfortable for wheelchair users and small children learning to walk. A 1:20 grade, which requires approximately 20 feet of ramp for a 12-inch depth transition, meets ADA requirements for fully accessible pool entries without any mechanical lift device.

Base Pool (Gunite, no slope)
$52k-$95k
Standard gunite pool, starting point before beach entry add
Beach Entry Slope Addition
+$8k-$22k
Slope construction and finish over standard pool cost
Bubbler System (single row)
$2k-$5k
Installed, one row at shallowest entry point
Cascading Bubbler System
$5.5k-$13k
3-row system across full slope depth
LED Bubblers (full system)
$7.5k-$20k
Color LED bubblers with automation controller
Full ADA Beach Entry
+$12k-$28k
1:20 grade, bilateral rails, 20ft ramp, tactile markers
Travertine Deck at Entry
$18-$28/sqft
Natural travertine pavers installed around beach entry
Pergola Shade Structure
$5.5k-$20k
Aluminum pergola over beach entry zone installed
TShop Travertine Pool Pavers on AmazonNatural travertine pavers for beach entry pool deck surrounds
Safety, ADA, and Night Lighting

Beach Entry Pool Safety, ADA Compliance, and LED Slope Lighting

Safety Requirements Specific to Beach Entry Pools

A beach entry pool has safety requirements that a traditional pool with steps does not share. The VGB drain compliance requirement applies to any drain at the base of the slope where flow concentrates, and the drains must be properly sized for the depth at which they are installed. The slope surface must provide adequate traction, which as discussed above means textured aggregate rather than smooth plaster or polished tile. Depth markers are required by most state pool codes at the transition from the slope to the full pool depth, and the color contrast of those markers must meet the minimum standard set in the state code. For beach entry pools that will be used by elderly swimmers or people with limited mobility, recessed stainless steel handrails on both sides of the slope are strongly recommended even where not required by code. The rails must be recessed flush with the slope surface so swimmers do not trip over them in the shallow water. A depth-change marker band in a contrasting color, typically a 6-inch wide band of dark tile or dark aggregate, at the transition point between slope and full depth is a best practice regardless of local code requirements.

ADA-Compliant Beach Entry Pools

The Americans with Disabilities Act requires that public pools provide at least two accessible means of entry, and one of those must be a pool lift or a sloped entry. A sloped entry that meets ADA standards must have a slope no steeper than 1:20, meaning 20 feet of horizontal run for every foot of vertical depth. It must have handrails on both sides of the entry, and those rails must extend horizontally at the top and bottom of the slope. The slope must be a minimum of 60 inches wide, which translates to 5 feet, though most residential beach entries are considerably wider. For private residential pools, ADA compliance is not legally required, but designing a beach entry to ADA dimensions is increasingly popular among homeowners planning for aging in place or those with family members who currently have mobility limitations. The practical implication is that an ADA-compliant residential beach entry requires approximately 20 feet of pool length for the slope alone, which means the total pool must be at least 35 to 40 feet long to provide adequate swimming area beyond the ramp.

LED Lighting in the Beach Entry Slope at Night

The night effect of a well-lit beach entry pool is genuinely extraordinary. LED fixtures installed in the slope floor shine upward through the shallow water covering the slope, making the gradient of the slope visible as a glow that transitions from vivid near the water surface at the shallowest point to deeper and more intense at the transition to full pool depth. Combined with LED bubblers that illuminate the upwelling water from below, the beach entry zone at night looks like a glowing shoreline that has no parallel in residential pool design. The most effective configuration is slope-specific LED fixtures positioned in rows that mirror the bubbler layout, so the lit water jet columns line up visually with the LED glow below. A full beach entry lighting system including slope fixtures, underwater pool lights, LED bubblers, and landscape lighting can cost $4,500 to $13,000 installed and is controlled through the same pool automation system as the pump and filtration.

FAQ

Beach Entry Pool Questions Homeowners Ask Most

What is a beach entry pool?+
A beach entry pool is a swimming pool with no steps. The pool floor begins at deck level (zero depth) and slopes gradually down to full swimming depth, exactly like a natural beach or lake shoreline. Also called a zero-entry pool or sloped entry pool, it allows swimmers of all ages and abilities to walk into the water rather than stepping down. The slope typically runs 10 to 20 feet from the entry point to the transition to standard pool depth, at a grade ranging from 1:8 (steep, compact) to 1:20 (gentle, ADA-compliant).
How much does a beach entry pool cost?+
A beach entry pool costs $55,000 to $150,000+ installed depending on size, slope dimensions, finish, bubblers, and regional labor rates. The beach entry slope itself adds approximately $8,000 to $22,000 to the cost of a comparable standard gunite pool. A bubbler system adds $2,000 to $20,000 depending on configuration. A full-width extended slope on a large pool with a cascading LED bubbler system and ADA compliance can add $30,000 to $45,000 over a standard pool. Get three written bids from contractors who have completed at least 5 beach entry pools, and ask to see completed projects in person before signing. BShop Pool Bubblers on AmazonFloor jet bubblers for beach entry pools
What is the best surface finish for a beach entry pool slope?+
Pebble aggregate is the best slope finish for a beach entry pool. The naturally rough pebble surface provides excellent traction on the grade, looks like a genuine ocean floor or lake bottom, and is available in sand and earth tones that complete the beach aesthetic. Quartz aggregate in buff or sand tones is a close second. Smooth plaster finishes are not appropriate for sloped pool surfaces because they become slippery when the grade exceeds approximately 1:15. Tumbled travertine tile is acceptable if the tile is properly textured and set with adequate joint width, but it costs significantly more than pebble aggregate and is not as slip-resistant at steeper grades.
What is the difference between a beach entry and a tanning ledge?+
A tanning ledge is a flat raised platform at a fixed shallow depth, typically 6 to 12 inches, at one end of the pool. It has no slope. A beach entry is a slope that begins at deck level (zero depth) and angles gradually down over 10 to 20 feet to the main pool depth. The beach entry has no flat section at its top: it starts sloping immediately at the deck edge. You can combine both: a flat tanning ledge at the top of a beach slope that then continues angling down. But they are not the same feature and should not be quoted as equivalent by a contractor.
Is a beach entry pool good for elderly or disabled swimmers?+
Yes. A beach entry pool is one of the best pool configurations for swimmers with limited mobility, and it is one of two entry types (along with a mechanical pool lift) recognized by the ADA as a compliant accessible pool entry. The slope requires no grip strength, no step-climbing, and no sudden depth change. An elderly swimmer can walk into the water at their own pace and stop at whatever depth they are comfortable with. To meet ADA requirements for a fully compliant entry, the slope must be at least 1:20 (one inch of depth per 20 inches of run), a minimum of 60 inches wide, and equipped with bilateral handrails that have horizontal extensions at both the top and bottom of the slope. RShop Pool Handrails on AmazonStainless rails for beach entry slope ADA compliance