How Much Shock for a 27,000-Gallon Pool
How much shock a 27,000-gallon pool needs to reach 10 ppm free chlorine: about 3.4 lbs of cal-hypo or 2.26 gallons of liquid chlorine.
To reach a 10 ppm shock level in a 27,000-gallon pool, add
3.38 lbs
of 73% cal-hypo, or 2.26 gallons of 12.5% liquid chlorine
Shocking a 27,000-gallon pool to a 10 ppm free chlorine level takes about 3.38 lbs of 73 percent cal-hypo, or about 2.26 gallons of 12.5 percent liquid chlorine. The method is the same as any chlorine dose: it takes roughly 2.0 ounces of cal-hypo or 10.7 fluid ounces of 12.5 percent liquid chlorine to raise free chlorine by 1 ppm per 10,000 gallons. Multiply by 10 ppm and scale to 27,000 gallons for the amounts above.
| Shock product | Amount to reach 10 ppm FC |
|---|---|
| Cal-hypo 73% (granular) | 3.38 lbs (54 oz) |
| Liquid chlorine 12.5% | 2.26 gal (289 fl oz) |
Ten ppm is a sensible general shock target for routine maintenance and light cloudiness, but real shocking is tied to your CYA. To truly clear algae you raise free chlorine to a shock level set by your stabilizer (the FC/CYA ratio) and hold it there until the water clears and chlorine holds overnight. The higher your CYA, the more chlorine a proper shock takes. Test your CYA and free chlorine first, then dose the gap up to your shock number.
Shock in the evening so the sun does not burn it off, run the pump while and after dosing so it circulates, and retest before swimming. Wait until free chlorine drops back to about 5 ppm or lower before getting in. Liquid chlorine is the easiest shock to pour and leaves no residue, while cal-hypo is strong and economical but adds calcium hardness. These are estimates based on standard formulas, so confirm with your own test kit.
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
Strong, economical 73% granular shock.
Easy-pour liquid chlorine, no residue.
Confirm free chlorine and CYA before shocking.
Get the exact number for your water
The figures above are computed for a 27,000-gallon pool using standard formulas. To dose to your real test readings, open the Shock 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 27,000-gallon pool guide, browse all pool answers, or return to the PoolCareCalculator home page.
Frequently Asked Questions
How was the number for a 27,000-gallon pool calculated?
Every figure on this page comes from standard pool-care formulas applied to 27,000 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 27,000-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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