Florida Pool Services Listings

Florida's residential and commercial pool service market encompasses thousands of licensed contractors operating under a layered framework of state licensing requirements, local health codes, and equipment safety standards. This page presents a structured directory of pool service providers organized by service category, region, and operational scope. Understanding how entries are structured, what data they include, and where verification gaps exist helps readers use this resource accurately. The Florida Pool Services Directory Purpose and Scope page provides broader context on how this resource was built and why it is maintained.


How to read an entry

Each listing entry follows a fixed field structure designed to surface the most operationally relevant data points without editorializing. The standard entry format includes:

  1. Provider name — the licensed business name as registered with the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR).
  2. License classification — reflects whether the provider holds a Certified Pool/Spa Contractor license (CPC), a Registered Pool/Spa Contractor license (RPC), or a Pool/Spa Servicing license (PSC), as defined under Florida Statutes §489.105 and administered by the DBPR Pool/Spa Program.
  3. Service categories — drawn from standardized service types including routine maintenance, chemical treatment, equipment repair, green pool remediation, and post-storm cleanup.
  4. Geographic service area — listed by county or named regional cluster (e.g., Tampa Bay MSA, Palm Beach County, First Coast).
  5. Insurance and liability status — flags whether general liability and workers' compensation documentation was collected at time of listing.
  6. Inspection and permitting notation — indicates whether the provider performs permitted work under local building department authority, relevant where structural or electrical pool work is involved.

The distinction between a CPC and PSC license matters operationally. A Certified Pool/Spa Contractor may contract for construction, remodeling, and repair. A Pool/Spa Servicing licensee is limited to cleaning, chemical balancing, and minor equipment maintenance — not structural modification or equipment replacement requiring a permit. The Florida Pool Service Licensing Requirements page explains these classifications in full detail.

Entries are sorted first by county, then alphabetically within that county. Providers listed under multiple counties appear under each applicable county heading rather than a single primary entry.


What listings include and exclude

Listings in this directory cover pool service providers operating within the state of Florida who hold or have held a DBPR-issued license in one of the three categories noted above. Entries reflect service types the provider has identified as active offerings.

Included:
- Routine maintenance and chemical balancing services (Florida Pool Chemical Service Standards outlines the compliance benchmarks relevant to this work)
- Equipment inspection, pump checks, and filter servicing
- Algae remediation and green pool recovery
- Post-hurricane or post-storm pool cleanup
- Water testing and chemistry reporting
- Commercial pool maintenance providers operating under Florida Department of Health (DOH) public pool rules (Chapter 64E-9, Florida Administrative Code)

Not included:
- General contractors who perform pool construction as a secondary trade
- Unlicensed service operators
- Equipment manufacturers or chemical suppliers without a service component
- Pool inspectors operating solely under the Standards of Practice for home inspection (Florida Statute §468.8323), unless they also hold a DBPR pool license

The Florida Pool Service Provider Types page classifies the full taxonomy of operator categories and clarifies boundary cases such as irrigation contractors who occasionally service pool systems.


Verification status

Entries are assigned one of three verification tiers based on the documentation collected during the listing process:

Verified entries carry a labeled indicator within the listing. Partial and Unverified entries remain in the directory because exclusion of unconfirmed providers would create artificial coverage gaps — particularly in rural counties where the total licensed provider count is low. Readers should treat Unverified entries as leads for independent confirmation, not as endorsements.

License status changes frequently. The DBPR database is the authoritative real-time source; a license that was active at listing time may have lapsed, been suspended, or been upgraded since. The Florida Pool Service Provider Vetting Checklist provides a structured process for confirming current status before engaging a provider.


Coverage gaps

Despite covering all 67 Florida counties in principle, this directory reflects uneven real-world provider density. The 10 most populous counties — including Miami-Dade, Broward, Palm Beach, Hillsborough, Orange, and Pinellas — account for a disproportionate share of total listings. Rural counties in the Florida Panhandle and in South Florida's agricultural interior (Hendry, Glades, and Okeechobee counties, among others) have fewer than 5 verified entries each.

Scope limitations relevant to this page:

The Florida Pool Service Regions and Coverage Areas page maps provider density by region and identifies counties where third-party verification has not been completed. Readers seeking providers in low-density counties are encouraged to cross-reference the DBPR licensee search tool directly for the most complete current data.

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