Serving New Braunfels and all Comal County communities · We call back within 1 hour
📞 (726) 268-5597
If you've been fighting the same pool problems season after season — rough plaster, staining that returns two weeks after treatment, algae that won't quit no matter how much you shock — the issue isn't your chemistry. It's the surface.
Plaster breaks down. In New Braunfels, where Comal County's spring-fed hard water and a long pool season work against pool surfaces year-round, it breaks down faster than most homeowners expect. The Comal Springs system produces consistently hard, alkaline water that deposits calcium on pool surfaces constantly. Once plaster goes porous, it traps algae, absorbs chemicals, and starts sending chips through your pump.
New Braunfels is also one of the fastest-growing cities in Texas — which means a large stock of 2000s-era homes whose original pool plaster is now due for replacement. Most homeowners manage the symptoms for 2–3 seasons before calling. By then, they've spent significantly more on chemicals than a resurface would have cost.
Your free estimate includes the exact quote for your specific pool. No surprises at invoice time.
We're about 35 minutes from New Braunfels and serve Comal County regularly. The Comal Springs aquifer produces consistently hard water that accelerates plaster degradation and calcium scale at the waterline faster than most markets. We calibrate our startup chemistry protocol specifically for local water conditions — not a generic template.
We work throughout New Braunfels, Gruene, and the surrounding communities. If you've gotten vague answers from other contractors about why your pool keeps staining, we'll give you a straight answer at the estimate.
No pressure, no obligation. Honest assessment of what your pool actually needs. The estimate is free and takes about 30 minutes on-site.
📞 (726) 268-5597Learn about pool resurfacing cost in San Antonio or view our before & after gallery.
New Braunfels pools are fed by the Comal Springs / Edwards Aquifer system — extremely hard water, 280–380 ppm calcium hardness, some of the hardest in the state. Standard plaster rarely survives past 7–8 years here.
Read our Edwards Aquifer Pool Water Guide →