How Much Chlorine for a 2,000-Gallon Pool
How much chlorine to add to a 2,000-gallon pool to raise free chlorine by 2 ppm: about 4.3 fl oz of liquid chlorine or 0.8 oz of cal-hypo.
To raise free chlorine by 2 ppm in a 2,000-gallon pool, add
4.3 fl oz
of 12.5% liquid chlorine, or 0.8 oz of 73% cal-hypo
For a 2,000-gallon pool, raising free chlorine by 2 ppm takes about 4.3 fl oz of 12.5 percent liquid chlorine, or roughly 0.8 oz of 73 percent cal-hypo. The math is simple: it takes about 10.7 fluid ounces of 12.5 percent liquid chlorine, or about 2.0 ounces by weight of cal-hypo, to raise free chlorine by 1 ppm per 10,000 gallons. Scale that to 2,000 gallons and multiply by the 2 ppm bump and you get the doses above.
| Free chlorine increase | Liquid chlorine 12.5% | Cal-hypo 73% |
|---|---|---|
| +1 ppm | 2.1 fl oz | 0.4 oz |
| +2 ppm | 4.3 fl oz | 0.8 oz |
| +3 ppm | 6.4 fl oz | 1.2 oz |
Two ppm is a common everyday top-up, the kind of dose you add in the evening after a hot, sunny day or a crowd of swimmers. Use the mini table to dial in a different bump: a +1 ppm nudge needs about 2.1 fl oz of liquid chlorine, while a +3 ppm push needs about 6.4 fl oz. Liquid chlorine adds nothing but a trace of salt, so it is the cleanest choice for routine dosing. Cal-hypo is more concentrated but adds calcium hardness over time.
Remember that your real target free chlorine is tied to your CYA (stabilizer), not a fixed number. A good rule is to keep free chlorine near 7.5 percent of your CYA reading, so a pool with CYA of 40 wants free chlorine around 3 ppm. Test first, then dose the gap. These figures are estimates based on standard pool chemistry, so always confirm with your own test kit and retest before adding more.
Chemical safety. Never mix pool chemicals, including two chlorine products or chlorine and acid. Always add the chemical to the water, never water to the chemical. Run the pump while dosing so it circulates, dose a little under the calculated amount, then wait and retest before adding any more. Store chemicals separately, away from kids and pets.
Products for this dose
Clean free-chlorine top-up, adds no CYA.
Strong 73% granular boost for bigger jumps.
Dose to real readings, not guesses.
Get the exact number for your water
The figures above are computed for a 2,000-gallon pool using standard formulas. To dose to your real test readings, open the Chlorine Calculator and enter your current and target levels. Not sure of your volume? Start with the pool volume calculator, then come back. You can also see every chemistry and equipment number for this size on the 2,000-gallon pool guide, browse all pool answers, or return to the PoolCareCalculator home page.
Frequently Asked Questions
How was the number for a 2,000-gallon pool calculated?
Every figure on this page comes from standard pool-care formulas applied to 2,000 US gallons, not a guess. Dosing scales with volume, so the same method works for any pool size. Always confirm against your own water test before adding anything, since real pools vary.
Is this dose exact for my 2,000-gallon pool?
Treat it as a close estimate. Product strengths, your starting readings, and your CYA all shift the real amount. Add a little less than the calculated figure, run the pump to circulate, wait, and retest before topping up. It is always easier to add more than to undo an overdose.
Can I mix pool chemicals to save time?
No. Never mix two pool chemicals, including two different chlorine products or chlorine and acid, since the reaction can release toxic gas or cause a fire. Add one product at a time, pour chemical into the water, run the pump, and retest before adding anything else.
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