Pool Resurfacing in Fort Lauderdale: Materials, Methods, and Timelines

Pool resurfacing is a structural maintenance category distinct from routine cleaning or chemical balancing — it addresses the physical shell of the pool basin when surface degradation has progressed beyond cosmetic concern. Fort Lauderdale's subtropical climate, with its intense UV exposure, high humidity, and frequent rainfall, accelerates surface breakdown relative to arid or temperate markets. This page covers the primary resurfacing materials, the phased process contractors follow, the scenarios that trigger resurfacing decisions, and the regulatory and permitting framework that governs this work in Fort Lauderdale and Broward County.


Definition and scope

Pool resurfacing is the process of removing or mechanically abrading the existing interior finish of a pool shell and applying a new bonded surface layer. It is categorized separately from replastering in some trade contexts, though in common contractor usage the terms overlap when plaster is the selected material. The scope of work covers the interior basin surface — walls, floor, steps, and ledges — but does not inherently include decking, coping, tile replacement, or hydraulic system work, each of which constitutes a distinct service category.

The relevant regulatory authority in Fort Lauderdale is the City of Fort Lauderdale Development Services Department, which enforces the Florida Building Code, including Chapter 4 of the Florida Building Code: Swimming Pools and Bathing Places. Broward County Code of Ordinances also governs contractor licensing at the county level. The Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) licenses pool contractors under Chapter 489, Florida Statutes — only licensed pool/spa contractors or certified general contractors may perform resurfacing work in Fort Lauderdale.

Scope boundary: This page applies specifically to privately owned residential and commercial pools within the City of Fort Lauderdale municipal limits. Work performed in adjacent municipalities — including Oakland Park, Wilton Manors, Dania Beach, or unincorporated Broward County — falls under separate permitting jurisdictions. Public pool facilities regulated under the Florida Department of Health's Chapter 64E-9 F.A.C. (public swimming pools and bathing places) are subject to additional inspection standards not covered here. For a broader regulatory overview, see Regulatory Context for Fort Lauderdale Pool Services.


How it works

Pool resurfacing follows a structured sequence of discrete phases, regardless of the material selected:

  1. Drain and prep: The pool is fully drained — typically using submersible pumps — with timing coordinated to avoid hydrostatic pressure issues during Fort Lauderdale's wet season (June through September). Florida's high water table makes drain timing a structural risk factor; hydrostatic relief valves are checked prior to drainage.
  2. Surface removal: Existing plaster, pebble, or tile surfaces are removed by chipping, grinding, or acid washing, depending on condition. Bond coat integrity is assessed at this stage.
  3. Shell inspection and repair: Any cracks, spalling, or delamination are repaired using hydraulic cement or epoxy injection before new material is applied. This phase may trigger a structural inspection depending on permit conditions.
  4. Material application: New surface material is applied in one or more coats by hand trowel or spray, according to manufacturer specifications and trade standards.
  5. Curing and startup: The pool is refilled in a controlled sequence. A startup chemical regimen — typically spanning 28 days — establishes water chemistry compatible with the new surface. The Pool & Hot Tub Alliance (PHTA) publishes standardized startup protocols referenced by Florida contractors.
  6. Final inspection: If a permit was pulled, a City of Fort Lauderdale building inspector closes the permit upon verified completion.

For a broader overview of how pool service work is structured in Fort Lauderdale, the Fort Lauderdale Pool Authority index provides a reference map of service categories.


Common scenarios

Resurfacing is not an elective upgrade in most cases — it is triggered by identifiable failure conditions or compliance requirements. The four primary scenarios are:


Decision boundaries

Material classification

The three principal resurfacing material categories differ in durability, texture, cost structure, and maintenance requirements:

Material Expected Lifespan Surface Texture Primary Characteristic
White plaster (marcite) 7–12 years Smooth Lowest initial cost; highest ongoing maintenance
Pebble/aggregate finish 15–25 years Textured Mid-range durability; reduced staining visibility
Quartz aggregate 12–18 years Slightly textured Chemical resistance; dimensional stability
Tile (full-surface) 25+ years Variable Highest durability; highest initial cost

Pebble finishes — sold under brand names including Pebble Tec and Pebble Sheen — are prevalent in Broward County installations due to their UV resistance and compatibility with Florida's hard water chemistry.

Permitting thresholds

Under the Florida Building Code, Section 454, pool resurfacing may or may not require a building permit depending on scope. The City of Fort Lauderdale Development Services Department has historically classified full interior resurfacing as a permitted activity when it involves structural repair. Contractors are responsible for determining permit requirements prior to project commencement. Unpermitted resurfacing work can affect property title and insurance claims. For detailed permitting concepts, see Permitting and Inspection Concepts for Fort Lauderdale Pool Services.

Pool service costs in Fort Lauderdale vary substantially by material selection, pool size, and surface condition — a 12×24-foot residential pool resurfacing project in Broward County ranges from approximately $3,500 for standard plaster to $10,000 or more for full aggregate finishes, based on contractor trade pricing typical of the South Florida market.

Commercial facilities face additional considerations: commercial pool services in Fort Lauderdale must comply with Chapter 64E-9 F.A.C. inspection requirements, and resurfacing timelines must account for facility downtime and regulatory re-inspection before reopening to the public.


References

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