Short answer: removing an in-ground pool in the Bay Area runs $10,000 to $25,000, with most homeowners landing in the $14,000-$18,000 range. The big variable is whether you choose a partial removal (cheaper, but the lot is no longer buildable on that footprint) or a full removal (more expensive, but the lot is fully restored).
Partial vs full pool removal: the most important decision you’ll make
Partial pool removal: $8,000-$15,000
The pool is partially demolished, drainage holes are punched in the bottom, the deck and equipment are removed, and the pool is filled with the rubble plus dirt and compacted. You end up with a usable yard area suitable for grass or shallow landscaping.
Drawback: the lot is not buildable on that footprint. You can’t put a house, ADU, garage, or any structure where the pool used to be. And in California, you legally must disclose the partial pool removal to any future buyer when you sell the home.
Full pool removal: $15,000-$25,000+
The entire pool is demolished and hauled offsite. The hole is backfilled with engineered fill, compacted in lifts, and re-graded. You can build a structure on the lot. No disclosure issue when selling.
This is the right choice if: you want a usable buildable lot, plan to build an ADU or addition, or just want the property fully restored.
What drives the price
1. Pool size and construction
A standard 14×28 gunite pool is the baseline. Larger pools, vinyl-liner pools, fiberglass pools, and pools with attached spas or features add cost. Concrete shotcrete pools are the most expensive to demolish because of the thickness and rebar density.
2. Access
If the pool is in a flat backyard with a side-yard gate wide enough for a mini-excavator, you get the lowest number. Tight access requiring hand-demolition or crane work adds $3,000-$8,000.
3. Fill material
Partial removal uses the broken pool itself plus on-site soil – low fill cost. Full removal requires imported engineered fill, which is the second-largest line item in a full removal quote. Budget $1,500-$4,000 for fill alone.
4. Permits
Every Bay Area city requires a demolition permit for pool removal. Fees are $200-$800. Permitting takes 1-3 weeks in most cities.
5. Deck, fence, and equipment
Pool decking (concrete patio around the pool), pool fencing, and pool equipment (pump, heater, filter, plumbing) are typically removed as part of the scope. Add cost for hot tubs, water features, automatic covers.
Bay Area pricing snapshot
| Project | Partial | Full |
|---|---|---|
| Small pool (12×24, gunite, easy access) | $8,000-$11,000 | $14,000-$18,000 |
| Standard pool (14×28, gunite) | $10,000-$14,000 | $16,000-$22,000 |
| Large pool (16×32+ or with spa) | $12,000-$18,000 | $20,000-$28,000 |
| Difficult access (tight side yard, hillside) | + $3,000-$8,000 | + $3,000-$8,000 |
How long does it take?
- Permitting: 1-3 weeks
- Pool drain and equipment removal: 1 day
- Demolition: 1-2 days
- Fill, compact, and grade: 1-2 days
- Total: 3-5 days of work after the permit is in hand
Common questions
Do I have to pay for water disposal? No – we drain pool water to the sanitary sewer (the city does require notification, which we handle). Free.
Will it affect my landscaping? Yes – the immediate area around the pool will be disturbed. We re-grade and clean, but new landscaping is a separate scope.
What about the gas line for the heater? We cap it. PG&E may require a final inspection on their side.
Can I just fill it in myself? Legally, no. Pool removal in California requires a permit, and unpermitted pool fill-ins create huge problems when you sell.
Ready to remove your pool?
Mavco runs in-ground pool demolition projects across the Bay Area and Sacramento. We walk your property, recommend partial vs full based on your plans, pull the permit, and quote the work as a single fixed price.