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Got Sand In Your Pool? Common Causes And Easy Fixes

Getting Sand Back in your Pool?

The Sandbar is open!

If you’re reading this then there may be a sand berm big enough to threaten shipping lines at the bottom of your pool. Ok, maybe that was a little dramatic, but a dusting of sand around a return line can cause a panic in any pool owner’s mind. Sadly, this is an all too common problem with sand filters but luckily there are some usual culprits that are easy fixes.

Cracked Lateral

If you ask a pool tech about a sandy pool bottom, his first question to you will be, “Did you check for a cracked lateral?” There is a good chance you did not and there are two main reasons why. First, laterals are a pain in the neck to get to, and second most homeowners don’t even know what they are.

Located at the bottom of your filter, this array of 6 – 8 perforated tubes are the last line of defense keeping sand from pouring into your pool. In a sand filter tank, water pours into the sand from the top where it filters its way down through the couple hundred pounds of sand to the bottom of your filter. This is where the little laterals come in. The now filtered water is collected by the laterals and is rushed through the center pipe and and back to the pool. The perforated holes are just big enough to allow water but prevent sand from seeping through.

If there is a crack in one of these laterals sand will find the gap and shoot happily to your pool, to ruin your day. Or at least that’s what it will feel like when you see it pouring into your pool.

The hard part is figuring out it was the laterals, the easy part is actually fixing the problem. For step by step by step instruction, review our guide How To Replace a Lateral in a Pool Sand Filter.

Did You Know?

Sand will leave a telltale streak pattern on the pool floor around the return line.  If your pool has a wide dispersal of sand then it may be getting in your pool from an outside source.

Spider Gasket

A multiport valve is like a highway interchange for your water as it routes and diverts the flow to achieve your desired setting. If water is flowing from the waste line when it is not supposed to be then the spider gasket has likely gone bad. Shaped like a wagon wheel, this gasket seals the diverter to the base of the valve preventing leaks into unselected portholes. If the water is allowed to leak into unintended ports then it may accidentally backwash debris and sand into your return.

The spider gasket wears out depending on use and water chemistry. Hard water is hard on rubber. Also, always turn your multiport’s selector handle in the same direction, whether it is clockwise or counterclockwise. If the handle is turned both ways it is more likely to warp the gasket or unseat it from its groove.

For step by step by step instructions, review our guide How To Replace a Spider Gasket on  a Multiport Valve.

Don’t Be Dense, Please Rinse.

Would you take a shower by soaping up, then lathering your hair with shampoo just to turn off the water and walk out before rinsing it off?  No, I did not think so. The same principle goes for washing out your sand filter. When a filter is backwashed, it is an absolute must that it be rinsed before returning to normal filtering mode.

During backwashing the water’s normal flow is reversed to flush out or loosen heavy dirt particles that clog the filter. Once the backwash is done those particles are deposited in the lines of the filter for the Rinse.  If the rinse step is skipped  after the backwash all that dirt and nasty stuff goes right back into your pool. Don’t be dense, please rinse.

Can’t Teach Old Sand New Tricks

If you take sand down to its singular property, it is just tiny grains of sediment and when enough is clumped together, it makes one heck of a filtering media. The bad thing is that, just like the three month old milk in the fridge, it has an expiration date. Sand can last approximately 3-5 years in a filter before it needs to be changed.  A sign of sand turning is usually high pressure  that does not subside even after a repeated backwashes. A signifier that goes along with that symptom is fine sand at the bottom of the pool.

Like water does to large rocks in a river, it smooths and wears down the size of the sand granules.  Eventually this wearing gets the sand down to a size where it small enough to fit through the perforated holes in the laterals. Next stop is the bottom of your pool. If your sand has been filtering for a few years and there is returning sand to your pool in congruence with high pressure, this may be the cause.

As usual our pool techs have a guide covering the steps to replacing your sand. If there are some steps you’re fuzzy on, check our How To Change Sand In a Sand Filter guide.

author avatar
Matthew Simmons Technical Writer & Pool Product Expert
Swimming pool expert at InyoPools and host of Poolside Chat, brings over a decade of experience in the pool industry.

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77 responses to “Got Sand In Your Pool? Common Causes And Easy Fixes”

  1. Mary C Avatar

    I have sand in the bottom of my pool, we have installed new laterals. Could the sand be coming from the parameter pcv lines that surround my pool and move water from filter to jets?

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      It could, but it is unlikely. Usually, the water will go out of a hole like that, not let dirt in. Also you would see a drop in pressure from whichever jet the dirt is coming from.

  2. Charlie Avatar

    So I’m like everyone else,sand in bottom of pool . Second season and have changed sand. Yes have changed laterals and main tube, o-rings, spider gasket. Even went from 1/12 hp to 1.I never heard of putting D E in sand filter. Should I add 5 or 10 lbs.

  3. Fran Avatar

    I replaced my import valve this summer. I think I have everything piped the right way. But when I vaccum the pool it throws the debre back in to the pool. I have to put a sock over the hole where the water returns to catch the debre. It’s like the dirt is not going into the filter. I have my import valve set on filter. Somebody please help me

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      How old is your sand? Old or clumpy can cause channeling, which allows dirt to slip through the sand, and then back to your pool. Or you have broken laterals or any other of the things mentioned to check in the article.

  4. Dhall33000 Avatar

    I’ve had sand in my pool since last season. I have replaced the lateral and stand pipe, sand and spider gasket. But still sand. I have replaced the hayward S244T multiport valve…….. still sand. Also I have a paramount in floor cleaning system, the control module is now clogged with sand……I think. Can it be disassembled and cleaned without opening a pandoras box of small peices? Its hard enough just getting the jets out of the bottom of the pool to clean. I can only think of 2 more things. 1. I cracked the new latteral on installation…..doubtful as i took my time. 2. My pump is oversized.
    Help! PLEASE!

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      Though you say the cracked laterals or standpipe are doubtful, that is the only thing that would explain why you have a persistent sand trap in the bottom of your pool. The Hayward S244T Sand Filter can be disassembled pretty easily. Buti n-floor cleaners are a different story, there usually are a lot of moving parts.

  5. Dave Avatar

    Matthew just killing it. haha thanks for all the info man.

    So its ok to suck a ‘reasonable” amount of sand on the filter setting?

    I assume the filter basket has to be removed 1st right?
    Even if set to waste, youd still have to remove the filter basket.
    Lost a lateral last year, all fixed, but now I gotta get the sand out the pool.

    clogged the basket last year and now my pump sounds like garbage and getting no pressure..
    Dude at the pool store said sucking sand into your filter even on waste is like sandblasting the internal parts.

    he suggested a “nylon sock”?

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      I’m not sure how much sand was in your pool from the previous bad lateral, but generally it should be safe to vacuum the sand without removing the pump basket. If you ran the pump for an extended period of time without the pump basket, there is likely debris stuck in your impeller. This would explain the sudden drop in pressure.

      Also, vacuuming the sand to waste would still mean the sand would have to pass through pump and valve to reach the waste port. I don’t think the person at the pool store was explaining the situation correctly.

  6. Chris Avatar

    I used a filter cleaner in my filter about two weeks ago. Ever since I have sand on the bottom of my pool. I can vacuum it out and it is back in three to four hours. Did the filter cleaner I used mess something up? Didnt have this problem before the cleaner

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      The first two things I would do: check sand for channeling, and use some clarifier. Remove the valve or tank lid to check if the sand has begun to channel or open up fissures. This is common with old sand. The clarifier will clump the sand into larger clusters making it easier for the cartridge to catch it.

  7. Sam Avatar

    I just moved in my new home. And found out that the filter and pump were not working. Someone came to intall a new one but when I first turn it on sand comes out to the pool. Is this normal?

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      Have you backwashed and rinsed the system since the filter was installed? During the pouring in of the sand, it can find its way into the standpipe, causing some sand issues in the beginning.

  8. Dave S Avatar

    How do I remove sand from the bottom of the pool ? Is it ok to Vacuum it to Waste ?

    1. Matthew Simmons Avatar

      If you haven’t fixed the issue on why the sand is in your pool, vacuum to waste. But sand is just going to find its way in the pool again.

      If you have fixed the lateral or standpipe, You can vacuum while the filter is on filter mode. The sand won’t have a way to bypass the filter.

  9. DHall33000 Avatar

    I’ve had sand in my pool since last season. I have replaced the lateral and stand pipe, sand and spider gasket. But still sand. I have noticed that I have to fidget with the hayward S244T multiport valve now or while in filter it sends water out the backwash port. Can the whole of the multiport valve be bad? Also I have a paramount in floor cleaning system, the control module is now clogged with sand……I think. Can it be disassembled and cleaned without opening a pandoras box of small peices? Its hard enough just getting the jets out of the bottom of the pool to clean.
    Help! PLEASE!

  10. Brent Avatar

    Update: I couldn’t get reasonable cost replacement sand (HTH) in my area and the quikrete sand looked uniform so I rinsed all the dirt and organic particulates out of it using a spray gun in a bucket, about a 1/5 bucket of sand at a time. Put everything back together, backwashed, resumed normal operation, and pressure started 5 psi lower than it had been before reassembly and cleaning, and it went up 10 psi in less than an hour. Backwashed again and had similar results although I got a few hours of operation before had to backwash. My pool is looking better but water is still cloudy (very unusual for my pool) so continuing to filter with a little DE added for finer filtering, just enough to boost pressure slightly. Had no sand come through sight glass (or into pool) after backwashing or vacuuming, like it would before, everytime. Not sure what was wrong with my filter or how I can prevent re-occurrence of the problem, but it seems to be functioning normally now. Cautiously optimistic that I’m on the path to clear water and low maintenance, time will tell.

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