The equipment that fails — and what it costs
A pool's equipment pad is a small system doing hard work in the summer heat, and a handful of parts account for most Burbank repair calls: the pump and its motor, the filter, the heater, and — on salt pools — the chlorine generator cell, with automation controllers not far behind. These are realistic 2026 ranges for the area:
| Component | Typical repair / replace cost |
|---|---|
| Pump motor repair or replacement | $150 – $450 |
| New variable-speed pump, installed | $1,100 – $1,800 |
| Filter service (cartridge / DE clean) | $90 – $180 |
| Cartridge or DE grid replacement | $150 – $450 |
| Heater repair | Varies widely — get a quote |
| Salt cell replacement | $400 – $900 |
| Automation / controller repair | Quoted per job |
Rule of thumb: if a single-speed pump motor fails and the pump is more than about eight years old, replacing it with a variable-speed pump usually beats a repair — the energy savings on your BWP electric rate often pay back the difference within a couple of seasons.
Warning signs, part by part
Equipment rarely dies without notice. Learn the signals and you can act before a small fault becomes a green pool:
- Pump & motor: a loud grinding or screeching, a pump that won't prime, water leaking at the shaft seal, or noticeably weak flow.
- Filter: a pressure gauge stuck well above normal, water that won't clear, or shorter and shorter runs between cleanings.
- Heater: no heat, short cycling, error codes on the display, or a burner that lights then quickly shuts down — usually a scaled exchanger, a sensor, or an ignition fault.
- Salt cell: low or no chlorine output, a "check cell" or low-salt warning, or heavy scale visible on the plates.
Diagnose vs. replace — and always get a quote
The right move depends on the part, its age, and the fix cost relative to a new unit. A five-year-old pump with a bad capacitor is worth repairing; a fifteen-year-old single-speed pump with a seized motor is a replacement. Heaters are the trickiest call — a minor sensor fix is cheap, but a corroded heat exchanger can cost nearly as much as a new heater. The one constant: get an up-front, written quote before any work, so you can weigh repair against replacement with real numbers.
Why Burbank is hard on equipment
Two local realities age pool gear faster here. First, the water: Burbank Water and Power supplies the city with hard, mineral-rich water, and that calcium scales heater heat exchangers and salt-cell plates sooner than it would in a soft-water region — a heater that might run a decade elsewhere can need descaling years earlier here. Second, the heat: Burbank summers get genuinely hot, and long swim seasons mean pumps run more hours per year, so more runtime is more wear. Pools on the hillside lots up in Burbank Hills, often with an extra pump for a spa spillover or a water feature, simply have more equipment to maintain. And because BWP provides your electricity too, an efficient variable-speed pump is the single biggest lever on your pool's power bill.
Get a firm repair quote
Equipment problems are easier and cheaper to fix early, before a failing pump takes the water with it. If something sounds off, won't heat, or is throwing a code, a quick diagnostic look gets you a firm, written quote and an honest repair-versus-replace recommendation for your Burbank pool — no obligation.
Burbank Pool Service FAQs
How much does it cost to fix a pool pump in Burbank?
A pump motor repair or replacement typically runs $150–$450 depending on the part and the pump. If the motor has seized on an older single-speed pump, replacing the whole unit with a variable-speed pump — about $1,100–$1,800 installed — is often the smarter buy, since the energy savings on your BWP rate offset the cost over time.
When should I replace my pool pump instead of repairing it?
As a general guide, if the pump is more than about eight years old and needs a significant repair, replacement usually wins — especially swapping an old single-speed unit for a variable-speed pump. On newer pumps, a simple part like a capacitor or seal is worth fixing. We give you both numbers up front so you can decide.
Why does my heater keep failing in Burbank?
Burbank's hard BWP water scales the heater's internal heat exchanger with calcium, one of the most common causes of poor heat and short cycling here. Keeping calcium hardness in range and descaling on schedule extends heater life. When a heater throws error codes or won't hold a flame, get it diagnosed before the exchanger corrodes.
Do salt cells wear out faster in Burbank?
They can. The hard BWP water deposits calcium on the hot cell plates faster than soft water would, so cells here need regular inspection and acid baths to keep producing chlorine. A neglected cell scales up and stops working; a well-maintained one lasts years. Replacement runs $400–$900 when it's time.
Should I always get a quote before pool equipment repair?
Yes — always insist on an up-front, written quote. Pool equipment costs vary widely, and the repair-versus-replace decision hinges on real numbers: the cost of the fix, the age of the unit, and what a new one runs. A quick diagnostic gets you that quote with no obligation before any work starts.
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