Not all calcium scale in Cyprus is removable.
Treating them the same is how pool surfaces get destroyed
Most pool owners think scale is a single problem with a single solution.
If there is scale, acid must be the answer.
That assumption is one of the most common reasons pool surfaces end up permanently damaged.
Most pool owners think scale is a single problem with a single solution.
If there is scale, acid must be the answer.
That assumption is one of the most common reasons pool surfaces end up permanently damaged.
Scale is not one thing
Pool scale is a broad category.
There are different types of mineral deposits, formed under different water conditions.
• Some scale responds to acid
• Some does not
• Some looks white, others yellow, beige, or even grey
Treating all scale as “just calcium” is where problems begin.
There are different types of mineral deposits, formed under different water conditions.
• Some scale responds to acid
• Some does not
• Some looks white, others yellow, beige, or even grey
Treating all scale as “just calcium” is where problems begin.
Two calcium-based scales most often confused
Among the many types of scale, two calcium-based forms are responsible for most surface damage:
• Calcium carbonate scale – white, chalky, reacts to acid
• Calcium sulphate scale – yellow or beige, dense, resistant to acid
They may look similar, but chemically they behave differently.
Treating both the same way leads to etched surfaces, failing grout, and returning scale.
• Calcium carbonate scale – white, chalky, reacts to acid
• Calcium sulphate scale – yellow or beige, dense, resistant to acid
They may look similar, but chemically they behave differently.
Treating both the same way leads to etched surfaces, failing grout, and returning scale.
What calcium sulphate scale really is
Calcium sulphate forms when calcium combines with sulphates in the water and crystallizes on pool surfaces.
It:
• does not dissolve with acid
• forms hard, abrasive deposits
• bonds tightly to tile, grout, and finishes
• continues developing even when routine tests appear normal
Aggressive cleaning often removes surface material instead of the scale itself.
It:
• does not dissolve with acid
• forms hard, abrasive deposits
• bonds tightly to tile, grout, and finishes
• continues developing even when routine tests appear normal
Aggressive cleaning often removes surface material instead of the scale itself.
Why it forms in “well-maintained” pools
Many pools in Paphos with calcium sulphate scale appear well cared for:
pH in range, chlorine stable, routine service done.
The problem is high LSI (Langelier Saturation Index), not calcium alone.
A high positive LSI over time makes water oversaturated, and minerals start depositing on surfaces.
Sulphates in the water accelerate calcium sulphate formation—even when standard tests look fine.
Learn more about LSI and why it matters in this post.
pH in range, chlorine stable, routine service done.
The problem is high LSI (Langelier Saturation Index), not calcium alone.
A high positive LSI over time makes water oversaturated, and minerals start depositing on surfaces.
Sulphates in the water accelerate calcium sulphate formation—even when standard tests look fine.
Learn more about LSI and why it matters in this post.
Where sulphates come from
Sulphates quietly accumulate over time from:
Once present, sulphates do not break down or evaporate, quietly contributing to scale or corrosion of cementitious surfaces.
- Sulphuric acid ( generally used by the technicians diluted fir the automatic pH dosing systems)
- Dry acid (sodium bisulphate) – adds sulphates directly to the water
- Oxyshock (non-chlorine shock)
- Fill and top-up water – municipal or borehole water may contain sulphates
- Chemical overcorrection – frequent pH or water adjustments increase sulphate levels
Once present, sulphates do not break down or evaporate, quietly contributing to scale or corrosion of cementitious surfaces.
How to reduce sulphates
Sulphates cannot be neutralized or filtered with normal pool chemicals. Real strategies:
- Partial water replacement – drain some water, refill with low-sulphate water, rebalance chemistry
- Reverse osmosis (RO) – removes sulphates without draining, used mainly for high-end or commercial pools
- Preventive chemistry management – avoid sulphuric acid or dry acid (use instead muriatic acid, it leaves no by products), choose chemicals carefully, manage LSI, reduce unnecessary corrections
How to clean calcium sulphate scale
Proper cleaning is mechanical + chemistry, never DIY acid:
1. Professional mechanical removal
• Carefully scrape or sand scale with tools suited for the surface
• Avoid grout and tile damage
• Often done with surface specialists
2. Water chemistry correction
• Balance LSI to prevent new scale
• Control calcium, alkalinity, and sulphates
• Adjust top-up and evaporation practices
3. Preventive maintenance after cleaning
• Regular professional water testing
• Avoid chemicals that add sulphates
• Monitor LSI over time
Key point: No quick chemical solution exists. Attempting DIY acid treatments usually worsens the problem.
1. Professional mechanical removal
• Carefully scrape or sand scale with tools suited for the surface
• Avoid grout and tile damage
• Often done with surface specialists
2. Water chemistry correction
• Balance LSI to prevent new scale
• Control calcium, alkalinity, and sulphates
• Adjust top-up and evaporation practices
3. Preventive maintenance after cleaning
• Regular professional water testing
• Avoid chemicals that add sulphates
• Monitor LSI over time
Key point: No quick chemical solution exists. Attempting DIY acid treatments usually worsens the problem.
Not all scale is removable.
Not all scale is the same.
Misidentifying calcium sulphate as “normal calcium” and treating it aggressively is how pool surfaces get destroyed.
When scale is yellow, dense, and unresponsive to acid, it’s a sign that water chemistry has been working against your pool.
Understanding the difference protects your surface.
Not all scale is the same.
Misidentifying calcium sulphate as “normal calcium” and treating it aggressively is how pool surfaces get destroyed.
When scale is yellow, dense, and unresponsive to acid, it’s a sign that water chemistry has been working against your pool.
Understanding the difference protects your surface.