Cyanuric Acid in Your Pool: Why It Matters and How to Fix It
Key Takeaways
- Cyanuric acid (CYA) acts like sunscreen for pool chlorine — without it, UV destroys half of unprotected chlorine in just 17 minutes.
- The Pool & Hot Tub Alliance ANSI standard sets the ideal CYA range at 30–50 ppm for traditional chlorine pools and 60–80 ppm for salt water pools.
- Cyanuric acid is not the same as muriatic acid. Muriatic acid lowers pH; CYA protects chlorine from sunlight.
- Low CYA means chlorine burns off fast, leading to algae and cloudy water. High CYA causes chlorine lock, where chlorine reads fine on tests but can’t effectively sanitize.
- The only reliable way to lower CYA is to drain and dilute — it does not evaporate or break down.
- Most pools drift into high CYA because Trichlor chlorine tablets are 50–55% cyanuric acid by weight.
Introduction
Clear pool water doesn’t always mean safe pool water. Many Houston pool service customers test chlorine, pH, and alkalinity faithfully every week … Read Full Post »