Hobe Sound Pool Service
Weekly pool cleaning, green pool recovery, salt system service, and filter cleaning for Hobe Sound homeowners. Local, consistent, no contracts — Scott shows up and keeps your pool ready to use.
Hobe Sound Regular Route
No Contracts
Licensed & Insured
🏊 Find the Right Pool Service for You
3 quick questions. Scott will take care of the rest.
What best describes your situation right now?
Be honest — no wrong answers here.
Good news — sounds like your pool just needs a pro to keep it that way.
What matters most to you in a pool service?
How long has the pool been green or cloudy?
This helps Scott know what he's working with.
What's the problem with your current service?
Let's figure out what you actually need.
Scott runs a one-man operation — and that's the point. When you hire Scott, Scott shows up. Same day, every week. Not a rotating crew. Not someone you've never met.
If something looks off, he calls you. If chemicals need attention, he handles it before you ever notice. You enjoy your pool. He handles the rest.
Most standard screen-enclosure pools in Stuart and Palm City start at $140/month. Every pool is a little different — Scott will take a look and give you a straight number, no surprises.
A pool that just started turning is the easiest situation to fix. The sooner Scott gets there, the less it costs and the faster your pool is back to crystal clear.
Call Scott today — he'll tell you exactly what he's working with and get you scheduled fast.
A pool that's been green a few weeks usually needs a shock treatment and multiple chemical adjustments to get back to clear. Very doable — but the longer it sits, the harder the job gets.
Scott will assess the situation, give you a straight answer on what it takes, and get it knocked out. Call today.
A pool that's been green for months can have heavy algae buildup, chemistry completely off, and equipment strain from running dirty water. This isn't a DIY situation.
Scott has seen pools in every condition. He'll assess it honestly, tell you what it takes and what it costs — no BS. Call now and let's get your pool back.
What you're describing — no consistency, zero communication, a revolving door of workers, a pool that never looks right — that's not what pool service should be.
Scott runs a one-man operation. When you hire Scott, Scott shows up. You get his number. He picks up. If something's off he calls you before you ever notice it. Same person, same day, every single week.
Switching is simple. Scott handles the transition. Most standard pools start at $140/month. Call and he'll take a look, give you a straight number, and you can decide from there — no pressure, no contracts pushed on you.
Every pool situation is a little different. Scott has seen it all. Call or send a message — describe what you're working with and he'll give you a straight answer, no runaround.
Hobe Sound Is One of Martin County’s Most Distinctive Communities — and Its Pools Reflect That
Hobe Sound occupies the southern end of Martin County — bordered by Jonathan Dickinson State Park to the west, the Intracoastal Waterway and Jupiter Island to the east, and the Loxahatchee River basin to the south. It’s one of Florida’s more ecologically preserved communities, with large lots, significant natural buffer, and a character that feels deliberately different from the more developed corridors to the north.
That natural setting comes with specific pool conditions. Properties adjacent to Jonathan Dickinson State Park and the Loxahatchee River deal with organic input from surrounding preserve that’s more significant than most residential neighborhoods. Large lots with mature Florida native landscaping — live oaks, slash pines, saw palmetto, and cabbage palms — generate debris loads that push filtration systems hard. The proximity to Jupiter Island and the Intracoastal means coastal air exposure on the eastern side of the community.
Scott’s Pool Service has been on regular routes in Hobe Sound for over a decade. We know this community, its pools, and the specific conditions that make maintenance here different from other parts of Martin County. No franchise, no rotating crew, no contracts.
Established weekly routes in Hobe Sound — not occasional coverage when we pass through.
Preserve-adjacent organic load, Loxahatchee River influence, Intracoastal proximity — we factor Hobe Sound’s specific environment into how we approach pools here.
Stay because the service works, not because you signed something. That’s always been the arrangement.
A decade-plus of maintaining Martin County pools means knowing what Hobe Sound’s natural setting actually does to pool chemistry and equipment over time.
Pool Services Available in Hobe Sound, FL
From routine weekly maintenance to green pool recovery and salt system service — here’s what we handle for Hobe Sound pool owners.
Consistent weekly cleaning, chemistry adjustment, and equipment checks. Hobe Sound’s preserve-adjacent organic load makes regular weekly service especially important — debris and phosphates don’t wait.
High organic input from surrounding natural areas means phosphate levels in Hobe Sound pools can climb fast — and algae follows. We clear green pools and address the chemistry conditions behind them.
Salt cell cleaning, chlorine output verification, and chemistry balanced for Martin County’s harder water. Salt systems in Hobe Sound deal with the same hard water scaling issues as the rest of the county.
Florida native vegetation generates fine, wind-carried debris that challenges filtration systems. Cartridge, sand, and DE filter cleaning to restore flow and keep water clearing properly.
What Hobe Sound’s Natural Setting Does to Pools
Hobe Sound’s location at the southern edge of Martin County — adjacent to one of Florida’s largest state parks, bordered by the Loxahatchee River, and positioned along the Intracoastal — creates pool maintenance conditions that are among the most ecologically influenced in the county. A few things we see consistently in pools here:
Preserve-Adjacent Organic Load
Properties near Jonathan Dickinson State Park and the Loxahatchee River basin deal with organic input from surrounding natural areas that goes beyond what typical residential landscaping generates. Pollen, airborne debris, tannins from nearby waterways, and the general organic richness of a preserve-edge environment all find their way into pools. Phosphate levels climb faster in these conditions, algae pressure is higher, and filter cleaning intervals run shorter than they would for a pool in a more developed setting.
Florida Native Landscaping Debris
Hobe Sound’s large lots and preservation-minded character mean properties are more likely to have Florida native landscaping — live oaks, slash pines, sabal palms, and saw palmetto — rather than manicured tropical plantings. Native Florida vegetation generates fine, persistent debris that gets into pools even with screen enclosures, and the tannins from oak leaves and pine needles can affect water chemistry in ways that purely tropical debris doesn’t.
Intracoastal and Jupiter Island Proximity
The eastern edge of Hobe Sound along the Intracoastal and Jupiter Island deals with coastal air exposure — not as directly as beachside Jensen Beach properties, but enough that equipment on waterfront lots shows corrosion patterns consistent with coastal conditions. Properties along Bridge Road and the Intracoastal communities have equipment that warrants the same attention to corrosion development that we apply to more directly coastal pools.
Loxahatchee River Influence
The Loxahatchee River — Florida’s only nationally designated Wild and Scenic River — runs along Hobe Sound’s western and southern boundary. Properties near the river and its associated wetlands deal with humidity levels and organic airborne content that influence pool conditions in ways that differ from drier inland settings. The tannin-rich water characteristic of the Loxahatchee watershed also affects the chemistry of water that enters pools from rain events or runoff in ways worth accounting for.
Larger, Less Dense Properties
Hobe Sound’s development pattern trends toward larger lots with more natural buffer. That means pools are more likely to be exposed to surrounding natural environment — wind-driven debris from adjacent preserve, more direct UV without urban shading, and organic load patterns that differ from densely landscaped subdivisions.
Getting Started With Pool Service in Hobe Sound
Simple process. No paperwork. Here’s what getting your Hobe Sound pool on a consistent schedule looks like.
Current water chemistry, organic load indicators like phosphates, filter condition, and equipment state all get assessed before a service schedule starts. A pool adjacent to Jonathan Dickinson State Park needs to be approached differently than one in a Palm City subdivision. Result: service calibrated to what Hobe Sound conditions actually require, not a generic starting point.
A fixed weekly day means the service interval doesn’t stretch. Debris gets cleared, chemistry gets checked and adjusted, and filter load gets managed before it backs up into a problem. You don’t need to be home. Result: the organic load from Hobe Sound’s natural setting gets managed rather than accumulating between visits.
The same person showing up week after week builds a picture of what your pool’s baseline looks like — how fast phosphates climb between visits, what filter pressure reads after a clean, how chemistry holds after a heavy rain. That baseline is what makes changes noticeable before they become problems. Result: pattern recognition that a rotating service crew can’t develop.
Corrosion on equipment near the Intracoastal, filter pressure trending upward faster than expected from heavy organic load, chemistry that’s harder to hold stable near the Loxahatchee — if something looks like it’s heading somewhere, we tell you. No contracts means you have full flexibility in how you respond. Result: informed decisions, not reactive ones.
Before and After Consistent Pool Service in Hobe Sound
❌ Without Regular Service
- Preserve-adjacent organic debris overwhelms filtration between visits
- Phosphates climb rapidly — algae establishes faster than expected
- Tannins from oak and pine debris affect chemistry unpredictably
- Green pool develops after a missed week or heavy storm event
- Filter cleaning intervals run shorter than expected — pressure builds fast
- Equipment wear on waterfront properties goes unnoticed until failure
✓ With Weekly Service
- Organic debris managed before it backs up filtration
- Phosphates addressed as part of regular chemistry management
- Chemistry maintained with Hobe Sound’s organic load factored in
- Storm recovery and debris events handled as part of routine service
- Filter condition monitored — cleaning timed to actual need
- Pool consistently usable in one of Martin County’s best settings
Local Service That Knows Hobe Sound
Hobe Sound isn’t a community that responds well to generic service — the natural setting, the larger properties, and the preserve-adjacent conditions here are specific enough that experience with local pools matters. Scott’s Pool Service has been maintaining pools in Hobe Sound for over a decade alongside routes in Stuart, Palm City, Jensen Beach, and Port Salerno.
No franchise, no rotating crew, no contracts. The same person who knows your pool shows up and takes care of it. That’s the whole model — and the reason pools on our Hobe Sound routes have been with us for years.
Over a decade of maintaining Hobe Sound pools means understanding what Jonathan Dickinson, the Loxahatchee, and the Intracoastal do to pool conditions specifically.
Local ownership, local knowledge, local accountability. One person, consistent service.
Stay because the service earns it. No paperwork holding you here.
Common Questions From Hobe Sound Pool Owners
Do you cover all of Hobe Sound including the areas near Jonathan Dickinson State Park?
Yes. We service Hobe Sound throughout — including properties near Jonathan Dickinson State Park, along the Loxahatchee River, the Intracoastal waterfront communities, and the residential neighborhoods along US-1 and Bridge Road. Reach out and we can confirm availability for your specific address.
My pool seems to get algae faster than my neighbors’ pools in other areas — is the location a factor?
Likely yes. Preserve-adjacent and waterway-proximate pools in Hobe Sound deal with higher organic input — pollen, airborne debris, tannins, and organic matter from surrounding natural areas — that raises phosphate levels and creates conditions where algae has more to work with. The same chemistry that holds in a Palm City subdivision may not hold as long in a Hobe Sound property adjacent to the state park or the river. We factor this into how we approach chemistry for pools in this part of the county.
My filter seems to need cleaning more often than it should — is that normal for Hobe Sound?
It can be. Properties with significant natural landscaping or preserve adjacency deal with more fine debris — pine needles, oak pollen, seed pods, and airborne organic material — than pools in more developed settings. That debris load runs through filtration systems continuously, which can shorten the interval between cleanings compared to what you might expect based on manufacturer recommendations or experience in a less vegetated environment.
I’m on the Intracoastal side of Hobe Sound — does the salt air affect my equipment the same way as in Jensen Beach?
To a degree, yes — though Hobe Sound’s Intracoastal exposure is generally less intense than directly beachside Jensen Beach properties on Hutchinson Island. Equipment on waterfront lots along Bridge Road and the Intracoastal communities does show corrosion patterns consistent with coastal air exposure, and warrants the same attention to equipment condition that we apply to more directly coastal pools. It’s a factor we pay attention to on waterfront Hobe Sound routes.
Is there a contract required to start service?
No. No contracts, no minimum commitment, no paperwork. We look at your pool, set a weekly service day, and go from there. You stay because the service works — not because you signed something.
We Also Serve These Nearby Communities
Hobe Sound is a regular part of our southern Martin County route. We also serve communities throughout the county and into northern St. Lucie County.
Ready for Consistent Pool Service in Hobe Sound?
Tell us about your pool and we’ll take it from there. No contracts, no pressure — just local service that keeps your pool ready to use.