Why a clean filter matters
The filter is what actually keeps your water clear, and a dirty one costs you quietly in three ways: cloudy water that won't clear no matter the chemistry, weak circulation that lets algae and debris settle, and a pump working harder - and drawing more power - against a clogged element. In West Hills' heat, a neglected filter is often the real reason a pool stays hazy despite plenty of chlorine. Keeping it clean is one of the cheapest ways to protect both the water and the pump.
Filter cleaning cost by type
What you pay depends on the filter you have, since each takes different work. These are realistic 2026 ranges for West Hills:
| Filter type | Typical cost | How often |
|---|---|---|
| Cartridge - standard clean | $75 - $150 | Every 3 - 6 months |
| DE - breakdown, clean & recharge | $120 - $200 | Every 3 - 6 months |
| Sand - backwash & service | $75 - $130 | Backwash monthly; media every 3-5 yrs |
| Cartridge replacement (worn out) | $150 - $400 | Every 2 - 5 years |
Rule of thumb: clean the filter when the pressure gauge climbs 8-10 psi above its clean baseline - not on a fixed date. In West Hills, exposed to canyon wind and dust, you'll usually reach that mark sooner than the standard six-month advice implies.
How often to clean in West Hills
The general rule is every three to six months, but the western valley pushes that shorter. West Hills backs up against the Santa Susana and Simi Hills, and when a dry Santa Ana funnels through the canyons it carries fine grit straight into pools - loading a filter far faster than a still, coastal setting would. Canyon-edge pools near Valley Circle and Hidden Lake, out in the wind, tend to need cleaning at the short end of the range. Heavy-use pools, pools under trees, and any pool recovering from cloudiness need it more often too. The gauge settles it: when pressure runs 8-10 psi over clean, it's time no matter the calendar.
DIY vs. a pro clean
Hosing off a cartridge is easy enough to do yourself, and doing it between deep cleans helps flow. But a real clean is more than a rinse: cartridges need a soak in filter cleaner to cut the oils and fine calcium a hose leaves behind, DE filters have to be fully broken down, backwashed, and recharged with the right media amount, and sand filters occasionally need fresh media. A pro clean also spots worn cartridges, torn DE grids, and cracked laterals before they let debris back into the pool - things a quick rinse hides. On our hard LADWP water, that periodic deep clean matters, since calcium works into the element and a surface rinse won't remove it.
Signs your filter is overdue
The pool signals it: a high pressure gauge, weak flow at the returns, water that stays cloudy despite balanced chemistry, or debris settling on the floor that should be filtering out. If you spot any of these in a West Hills summer - particularly after a windy, dusty canyon stretch - check the filter before adding more chemicals.
Get your filter cleaned right
Whether it's a routine cartridge clean or a full DE breakdown, a quick look tells us the filter type and condition and gets you a firm price - no obligation. If a cartridge or grid is worn out, we'll show you before replacing anything.
West Hills Pool Service FAQs
How much does a pool filter cleaning cost in West Hills?
A standard cartridge filter clean runs about $75-$150. A DE filter costs more, roughly $120-$200, because it has to be fully broken down, cleaned, and recharged with media. Sand filters are backwashed and serviced for about $75-$130, with occasional media replacement.
How often should I clean my pool filter in West Hills?
Every three to six months is the baseline, but dust funneling off the western hills loads filters faster, so many West Hills pools need it sooner. The reliable signal is the pressure gauge: clean when it reads 8-10 psi above its clean baseline, regardless of the calendar.
Can I clean my pool filter myself?
You can hose off a cartridge between deep cleans, and it helps. But a full clean means soaking cartridges in filter cleaner to remove oils and calcium a hose misses, or fully breaking down and recharging a DE filter. On West Hills' hard water, that periodic deep clean is what keeps flow strong.
Why does my filter clog so fast in West Hills?
Canyon-driven dust is the main reason. When a dry Santa Ana funnels through the Santa Susana and Simi Hills, fine grit settles into pools near Valley Circle and Hidden Lake and loads the filter quickly. Heavy use, nearby trees, and clearing a cloudy pool speed it up too.
What happens if I never clean my filter?
A clogged filter causes cloudy water that won't clear with chemistry, weak circulation that lets algae and debris settle, and higher energy use as the pump strains against it. Left long enough it can damage the pump. Cleaning on schedule - or when the gauge climbs - costs far less than the problems it prevents.
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