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How to Fix an Off-Level Above Ground Pool: Expert Tips

off level above ground pools

An off-level above ground pool isn’t just an eyesore; it can lead to structural problems, water imbalance, and even potential safety risks. If your pool is uneven, it’s crucial to address the issue before it worsens. In this guide, we’ll show you how to Fix an Off-Level Above Ground Pool with practical tips to ensure your pool is stable, functional, and safe for years to come.

With the invention of YouTube, I have seen a lot of above ground pool installations done by do-it-yourselfers. I have also seen a lot of installation attempts as people call me halfway through for help. Some of these self-installations are done well, but most are not. I have occasionally been amazed at the ability of some to do a nice job on the not so easy job of building an above ground pool. Though, most really struggled with the project and barely got it together, lost friends and destroyed marriages.

So What Then Makes for a Poor Above Ground Pool Installation?

unsafe above ground pool

There are a number of ways an above ground can come out badly installed. The most common one is having wrinkles in the liner. Another is when the pool is misshapen or the uprights are not vertical. There is also equipment that leak and/or the skimmer and return fitting that is not tightly installed.

Another fairly common shortcoming do-it-yourselfers make is the groundwork. Pool bottoms can be “off level”, lumpy, “foot printy” (official term), rocky, and rough. Some bypass the very physically demanding, but necessary, step of removing the sod. They just lay down some sand on top of the grass for leveling and then build the pool. Big mistake!

All of the above mistakes in building an above ground pool are annoying and shouldn’t be accepted, if you are paying for an installation. However, to me the biggest indicator of a poorly built pool is when it is “off level”. Getting an above ground at least fairly level can be difficult, but it’s worth the effort. Here’s why:

Water Has to Be Level – It Has to Be!

Take a half-full (or half-empty depending on your life outlook) glass of water and tilt it. Notice that the glass becomes “off level”, but the water does not. Now take the glass and shake and swirl the water. Try to disrupt the water in any creative way you want and then tilt the glass again. That’s right. The water stays level regardless. This is because it is liquid and has a weight so the water will always distribute evenly against the pull of the earth or gravity. Did I overexplain? Sorry.

Now think of an above ground swimming pool as a giant glass of water. Tilt the pool and the water stays level. I know this sounds obvious, but it’s not to some. Many things that are built can be “off level” and some wouldn’t notice but something that holds water can’t get away with being too “off level”. This is why it’s kind of important to build a pool so that it is level.

How Level Does an Above Ground Pool Have to Be?

As a quality installer, I go through a lot to make my pools as level as I can. Above ground pools are not Swiss watches. There is nothing precise about them so it can be a challenge to get them close to perfectly level. Despite my high level of knowledge, fancy equipment, and strong desire to get the thing level, I’m happy to get my pools to within an eighth of an inch level. With oval shapes, I’m happy with a quarter of an inch off as they suck to install.

Most instruction manuals for above grounds are poor. If they do manage to tell you, they usually say to level the pool to within an inch. A pool being off by a full inch is OK and won’t cause any structural issues, but you may notice it is “off level” at its waterline. Remembering that water will always be level (see over-explanation above), your eye may pick up the difference between the perfectly level waterline against the “off level” liner that has a tile print.

Above Grounds That Are Too “Off Level”

Pools that are “off level” by more than an inch start to look tilted. If it’s two inches off, you can start to notice from the outside of the pool. It can be tough to tell sometimes if the yard is “off level”, but at two inches, the mind picks up the difference and you’ll know something is not right. Two inches off usually won’t cause any structural issues so you can (and a lot do) just live with your “off level” pool for years. If it’s off more than that though, there can be a problem.

Above grounds that are three inches off or more often don’t last. Not only does the thing look bad and sometimes it can be dangerous, the uneven wall creates extra outward pressure on one side. This extra pressure will eventually push the pool out of shape more and more and in extreme cases will cause the water to spill over and collapse the pool. Done.

Just to be clear, if your above ground pool is off by three inches or more, it needs to be taken down, leveled and reinstalled.

Can You Fix an “Off Level” Pool?

can you fix an off level above groiund pool
photo Deltapoolsspaca

Usually severely “off level” pools have to be taken completely down, leveled properly, and then reinstalled. When this is done, you’ll have to spring for a new liner as they don’t like to be reused. Some of you will reuse the liner because you are cheap and stubborn, but it’s not the right way to do the fix. And that’s what probably got you to have to rebuild your pool in the first place. Just sayin’!

If the pool is off just a little more than it should be, you can level the wall without taking down the pool, but it’s not easy. Most seasoned pool installers don’t even know how to do this so keep that in mind.

Drain the pool (but not so that it is completely empty). Pull out the leveling blocks from under the uprights on the low side of the “off level” pool. Using a shovel, pry up the wall from each bottom connector to the desired level and reinstall the blocks. Repeat around the low side of the pool. Add and pack earth under where you have jacked up the wall. Refill the pool and hope you packed the earth well. Do not try to lower the high side of the pool. It’s too technical. Good luck!

author avatar
Dan Dougher

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126 responses to “How to Fix an Off-Level Above Ground Pool: Expert Tips”

  1. Dan B Avatar

    I have a 16 x32 Doughboy oval . One of the wider four flat side supports is leaning 5-6 inches out, .This Just happened with warm weather. It was installed in November. Is there a way to fix this, and will it cause a major problem ? Could I use a come along to a tree on the other side and pull it back in place and the fix the bottom of support some how ? I will greatly appreciate your help. Thanks

    1. Dan Dougher Avatar

      If you are talking about along the straight side of the pool, then it sounds like it wasn’t installed right and something failed. With a Doughboy, this could be that they didn’t use a concrete block for a non-strapped pool OR they didn’t use the right kind of paver or something to support under the strapped buttress. Ether way, you’ll want to drain the pool down at least half way to relieve some of the outward pressure so you can fix this.

      Pulling it back upright and in place with a come-along and a tree sounds dangerous. Instead, drain the pool down and then push the wall in place to look underneath the outside part of the buttress and fix. Hopefully, you’ll be able to see what happened. The last time I saw this was when an installer used just a thick cap stone instead of a filled cinder block and it failed after a couple months. The funny part was that he used cinder blocks on all the buttresses except one. I guess he was short one and didn’t want to go to Home Depot for one. What a bozo!

  2. Louise Avatar

    I’m looking for advice on a sloped yard. We have dug a hole – digging down on the higher side – to create a level ’round’. It’s almost identical to the delta image in the article. What do we do with the soil wall on the higher side? There will be a gap and we are concerned about the soil wall crumbling away and kids twisting ankles in the gap.

    Thanks!

    1. Dan Dougher Avatar

      Backfill the high side after the pool is filled. Then there will be no gap.

      1. Nick Avatar

        Ok to fill back fill this area with dirt? Or would rock or sand work better so it doesn’t wash out?

  3. Jewel Avatar

    I have a summer waves pool 17×52 we tried very hard to level ground. The pool appears to be tipping in from two sides when you stand back in look just slightly. Is this going to be a problem!

    1. Dan Dougher Avatar

      That depends on what “slightly” means to you. If off more than two inches, the pool may gravitate to the low area and eventually lose its shape and get worse.

  4. Gail Avatar

    I just installed the intex 14×42 elite, single mom doing all this myself. I had someone level a spot. Well we thought it was level. It was not, so I had2 tons of sad brought in. It’s about3 to4 inches too low on one side. I cant really afford to dump what I’ve put in already. Is there anyway to fix this without wasting all that water. Not but anout a quarter of the way filled. But still money lost if i dump it. Please help. It’s always been my dream to have a pool of my own, it’s been mentally draining so far. Help please

    1. Dan Dougher Avatar

      At 3-4 inches off, you’ll have to dump the water to fix this. And this time when you try it again, use this device called a “level”. They come in a couple different ways. Research how to use one and use it to do a better job leveling your earth. Being off 3-4 inches over only 14 feet means you didn’t even get close.

      1.  Avatar

        What a condescending answer!

        1. Paul Avatar

          Well, it was her dream to have a pool, spent money on sod and other supplies, yet didn’t use a LEVEL to LEVEL the ground 😂😂. I’d say he answered the concern quite accurately.

        2.  Avatar

          Really.mine is same but the sand sunk on one side tarp and all

  5. Jus Avatar

    Is it ok to build a wooden base to level the ground for an intex 12ft pool as it will be going on a slope?

    1. Dan Dougher Avatar

      Yes it is ok. Make sure the frame is strong enough to not come apart in six months. And make it far enough away from the pool.

  6. Jason Avatar

    Looking for advice with frost. I am in Wisconisn and considering building an above ground next season. I am worried about frost heaving the pavers that are recommended for all install. I am looking at 2 reputable builders in the area and one says pavers is the way to go and is a platinum Doughboy retailer and the other says absolutely not to pavers and is a Certified Pool Builder through the APSP. I am concerned about 2 professionals having such polar opposite certainties on their installation process

    1. Dan Dougher Avatar

      First off, I live in Florida and know little about frost heaving. BUT, I don’t think pavers will cause or prevent heaving as the pavers themselves have little to no structural value. I will default to the guy’s opinion who has built more above grounds partially in the ground in your area. That could be the only guy who really knows the answer to this.

      1. Misty Avatar

        Are you close to Largo? We have struggled severL times to get our pool level and seems to not be successful. It’s stays at about 4 inches difference. I have poured tons of money in a tiller, sand and dirt , scared for the safety of my kids while in it. Please help

        1.  Avatar

          How big is your pool? We are in process of installing an Intex 22’ x 52” and after filling half way we are between 2-3 inches off level. I am concerned that it will be unsafe.

          1. Ale Avatar

            Same situation here with same exact pool. Landscaper “leveled” yard of 23 feet in diameter using top soil, no sand. We filled the pool half way with water and it seemed fine. Then continued to fill and the day after the pool was filled completely, we noticed the pool was approximately 2 inches unleveled. One side of the pool legs started to slant slightly. We’ve decided to drain the pool and have the landscaper come back to correctly level the pool area. Hopefully he will be able to level it. Dreading having to take down the pool and put back up.

  7. Steve k Avatar

    The side of my pool is 30inches in the ground and the other half is level. I was told to back fill with dirt. I’m worried about corrosion or having to damage landscape to make a repair over a few years. Or am I overthinking it.

    1. Debbie Avatar

      Our pool company won’t guarantee our pool if we back fill anything against it. We put 2X6’s against the pool walls. Ours is a rectangle. Well, 1 month after installation, the liner has indents all over the place under the liner, on top of sand. Read the warranty carefully. We have to empty 14,000 gallons of water to fix the problem.

    2. Dan Dougher Avatar

      I have found no relationship between corrosion and a pool being in the ground so you are good to go. Corrosion conditions can exist whether a pool is in the ground or not.

  8. Danielle Money Avatar

    Put my liner in now it’s raning help

    1. Wobblerlorri Avatar

      Enjoy the free fill!

  9. Dan L Avatar

    I have an 18′ x 33′ AG oval built on gravel and I yes agree, ovals suck to build. After filling, I noticed one “corner” is about 2 inches too high (at it’s highest). It’s quite an eyesore – especially considering I plan to build a deck around it, so it will be even more noticeable. I’d be curious to hear about the technical method of lowering the high part of the wall. I’d rather not raise the rest of the pool wall, mainly due to the trouble of back-filling those stupid pressure plates.

    I’m thinking I could very carefully and slowly excavate under the rails and blocks. First an inch or so, then do it again another inch after the initial pass – just so it’s not a sudden drop. I have foam coves in place under the liner.

    1. Dan Dougher Avatar

      By you describing the raised area as “the corner”, I’m thinking the pool lifted due to a poor design. There is an oval model by Swim n Play that does this unless you build a ridiculous amount of coving up the straight sides of the pool. I refuse to build that model for that reason.

      f your corner did lift for this reason, chances are the other corners could lift as well. The problem is, how do you repair this? Because it’s an oval, you can’t just jack up or lower an upright or two and you’re done. The only real way I know of fixing this is to drain the pool, peel back the liner, dig up and re-level the buttresses on the raised side. Now, if you do all of this and put the pool back together and re-fill, guess what? It will lift again and you would’ve done it all for nothing. That’s what happened to me and it sucked, but I learned.

      You could do the above repair, and then add a lot of extra coving on top of the bottom metal plates and it will stay down. But your pool will have a huge cove(12″ high tapered down and out at least 12″) in your pool which can cause some wrinkles. AND, I would suggest you do the other straight side because it can happen over there too. My advice is, if you can, live with it. This repair is too extensive to be worth it.

      1. Pool Boy Avatar

        Dan, you are one of the most negative, unhelpful douche bags that blogging has ever seen!!

  10. Herb&Peaches Avatar

    I am awesome. But not as awesome as this article is written. As my grand pappy used to say… if you didn’t do it right the first time, keep doing it until you get it right, otherwise you will never enjoy it… of course, he was a sniper… but I think it is still applicable. 😉

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