Pool Resurfacing in Peoria, AZ — Free Estimates · Local Crew
Serving Peoria and the greater Phoenix metro · We call back within 1 hour
Rough Plaster, Stubborn Algae, Staining That Won't Quit — Sound Familiar?
If you've been fighting the same pool problems season after season — rough surface, persistent staining, algae that won't quit no matter how much you treat it — the issue isn't your chemistry routine. It's the surface.

Plaster breaks down. In the Phoenix area, where heat, UV, and alkaline water work against pool surfaces year-round, it breaks down faster than most homeowners expect. Once the surface goes porous, it traps algae, absorbs chemicals instead of reflecting them, and starts shedding chips into your equipment.
Most Peoria homeowners we talk to have been managing these symptoms for 2–3 seasons before they call. By then, they've spent hundreds more on chemicals than necessary and often have early equipment wear from plaster debris. The surface was always the problem.
What a Failing Pool Surface Is Costing You Right Now
A deteriorating pool surface doesn't sit still — it compounds:
- Every month you run the pool on failing plaster, chemistry costs climb as the porous surface absorbs sanitizer
- Plaster chips travel through the pump and filter, adding wear to equipment that costs $500–$1,500 to replace
- A rough surface tears at swimsuits and scratches feet — especially hard on kids
- A pool in visible disrepair affects your enjoyment of your backyard and your home's resale value
- Pool season in Phoenix is long — a delay means more months of the same problem
You're already paying for the failing surface. The question is whether you keep paying or fix it.
How It Works — From First Call to Swimming
Call or Request a Quote
We serve Peoria and respond within 1 hour — no waiting days for a callback.
Free In-Person Estimate
We come to your Peoria home, inspect the surface, and tell you exactly what it needs. Honest assessment: full resurface, patch, or acid wash — whatever the condition warrants.
Written Quote, Your Decision
You get everything in writing, itemized. No verbal estimates, no pressure, no deposit until you sign and schedule.
We Do the Work
Drain, prep, new surface, fill, startup chemistry. 4–7 days depending on pool size and finish type. You don't need to be home for most of it.
What Homeowners Are Saying
We're out in Vistancia and I had multiple contractors ghost me or not bother coming out this far. These guys showed up on time, gave me an honest assessment — turned out I didn't need a full resurface yet, just an acid wash and some tile repair. They told me the truth instead of upselling me. I'll absolutely call them when it is time.
Our home near Lake Pleasant had a pool that came with serious hard water scaling — the surface looked almost white from calcium buildup. After the resurface with a quartz finish and their startup chemistry protocol for our local water, the pool has stayed clean and clear all season. No more weekly scrubbing.
Pool Resurfacing Cost in Peoria — What to Expect
Resurfacing a residential pool in the Phoenix area typically runs $4,500–$12,000 depending on surface type and pool size:
- Plaster (7–12 year lifespan): most affordable, classic white or colored
- Quartz aggregate (10–15 years, stain-resistant, sparkle finish): mid-range
- Pebble aggregate (15–20 years, premium finish, lowest maintenance): highest upfront
Your free estimate will include the exact quote for your specific pool and finish choice. No ranges, no surprises.
Serving Peoria — and We Know the Area
Peoria's newer master-planned communities like Vistancia are still relatively young, but the Lake Pleasant area has older properties where pool surfaces have been hammered by the NW Valley's harder water. If you're in a newer Peoria subdivision and your pool surface is already showing staining under 10 years old, hard water calcium scaling is usually the culprit — and a surface upgrade to quartz will dramatically extend the next service interval.
If you've had other contractors give you vague answers or estimates that felt off, it's often because they don't know the local conditions. We do.