Pool Service & Repair in Midlothian, TX
Midlothian is one of our most active service areas. We run weekly cleaning routes and equipment repair calls here year-round. The city operates two water treatment plants — the Tayman Plant, which draws raw water from Joe Pool Lake under contract with the Trinity River Authority, and the Auger Plant, which processes water from Richland-Chambers Reservoir and Cedar Creek Lake through the Tarrant Regional Water District. Some properties outside city limits are served by Sardis-Lone Elm Water Supply Corporation, which blends deep groundwater from the Trinity Aquifer with purchased surface water. That mix of sources means pool chemistry can vary from one property to the next, and we test every pool we service to adjust accordingly.
Local Knowledge. Proven Results.
- Weekly routes already running through Midlothian
- Familiar with both city and Sardis-Lone Elm water sources
- Experienced with newer-construction pool systems common in the area
- 20 years of Ellis County pool service experience
How Midlothian's water sources affect your pool
The City of Midlothian treats all of its own drinking water. The Tayman Plant processes raw water from Joe Pool Lake under a contract with the Trinity River Authority, while the Auger Plant — a microfiltration membrane facility that came online in 2013 — handles water from Richland-Chambers Reservoir and Cedar Creek Lake, supplied by the Tarrant Regional Water District. Properties outside city limits may be served by Sardis-Lone Elm Water Supply Corporation, which pumps groundwater from Trinity Aquifer wells roughly 2,500 to 2,700 feet deep and supplements that supply with purchased surface water from the City of Midlothian and Rockett Special Utility District. Because the groundwater blend carries more dissolved minerals than treated lake water, pools on the Sardis-Lone Elm system often develop scale on waterline tile and salt cell plates faster than those on city water. We account for that difference every time we test and treat.
Midlothian sits on the Blackland Prairie, and the expansive clay soil here swells when wet and shrinks when dry. That seasonal movement puts stress on pool decks, coping joints, and underground plumbing. We check expansion joints and skimmer connections on our visits so that small shifts get caught before they become cracks or leaks.
Mature trees in established areas drop heavy leaf loads through fall and winter, and the open terrain on the south and west sides of town lets wind carry debris into pools quickly. Our weekly service includes thorough netting, vacuuming, and cleaning filter elements to keep flow rates strong and chlorine demand under control.
Common pool service calls in Midlothian
- Mineral scale on groundwater-fed pools. Pools served by Sardis-Lone Elm WSC receive water with higher mineral content from deep Trinity Aquifer wells. We monitor calcium hardness weekly and apply scale inhibitor when needed to protect tile, plaster, and salt cells.
- Builder-grade pump wear in newer homes. Many newer Midlothian homes were built with entry-level pumps that lose efficiency within a few years. We diagnose flow and amperage issues and can upgrade to variable-speed models that cut energy costs.
- Leaf and debris loading. Pecan, oak, and cedar elm canopies drop heavy seasonal debris that clogs skimmer baskets and spikes chlorine demand. Regular netting and filter cleaning keep circulation strong.
- Deck and joint movement from clay soil. Expansive clay under pool decks shifts with moisture changes, opening gaps at the coping line. We inspect mastic seals and expansion joints to catch movement early and prevent water intrusion.
Pool Services Available in Midlothian
What Midlothian Customers Say
"Our pump died on a Friday afternoon in July. A&M had a tech out the next morning and we were back up and running by lunch. Honest pricing, no pressure."
Pool Service FAQ — Midlothian
Midlothian has two main water providers. The city treats surface water from Joe Pool Lake, Richland-Chambers Reservoir, and Cedar Creek Lake at its own treatment plants. Sardis-Lone Elm WSC blends groundwater from deep Trinity Aquifer wells with purchased surface water. Groundwater-fed pools tend to carry more dissolved minerals, which can speed up calcium buildup on tile and equipment. We identify your water source and adjust our chemical program to match.
Every weekly visit includes skimming the surface, vacuuming the pool floor, brushing the walls and tile line, emptying all baskets, checking filtration pressure, and running a full chemical panel. We adjust chlorine, pH, alkalinity, and stabilizer levels on each visit to keep the water balanced and clear.
Yes. We drain equipment lines, set freeze protectors, and verify that automation freeze-guard settings are correct. The expansive clay soil in this area holds moisture and shifts with temperature changes, which makes exposed plumbing and equipment pads vulnerable during hard freezes if they are not properly prepped.
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Last updated: June 2026
Need Pool Service in Midlothian?
We drive through Midlothian on routes daily. Call us or schedule a free 10-panel water analysis to get started with our local team.