That above-ground pool that seemed like such a great idea five summers ago is now a green, mosquito-breeding eyesore taking up a third of your backyard. You’re not alone — across Southern California, homeowners from Long Beach to Riverside are tearing out neglected above-ground pools to reclaim yard space, lower insurance premiums, and stop paying for maintenance on a pool nobody swims in anymore.
But before you grab a sawzall and start cutting metal panels, there are a few things you need to know. California has some of the strictest pool water disposal rules in the country, and a wrong move can land you a fine from your local stormwater agency. Here’s the full 2026 breakdown of what above-ground pool removal really costs in SoCal, what’s involved, and how to do it the right way.
In 2026, most Southern California homeowners pay between $800 and $3,000 to fully remove an above-ground pool. The wide range comes down to four big factors:
For comparison, in-ground concrete pool demolition starts around $7,000 and climbs into the $15,000+ range. Above-ground removal is dramatically cheaper because there’s no excavation, no concrete breaking, and no permit-heavy backfill.
Most above-ground pool removals in SoCal take 4 to 8 hours for a standard pool. Larger pools with decks can run a full day. The job breaks down into six steps:
A good crew leaves you with a flat patch of bare ground ready for sod, gravel, decomposed granite, or whatever you’ve got planned next.
This is where DIY pool removals go sideways. California treats pool water as a regulated discharge, and dumping it in the wrong place can trigger fines from your local stormwater authority — Los Angeles, Orange County, Riverside, San Bernardino, and Ventura all enforce this aggressively.
The basic rules:
If you don’t want to navigate this yourself, professional pool removal crews in SoCal handle the discharge as part of the job and document it for you.
We’re seeing a steady uptick in pool removal calls across our service area. The drivers:
You can remove a small Intex-style pool yourself if you’ve got a pickup truck, a few free weekends, and a plan for the water. Tools needed: utility knife, socket set, sawzall for stuck bolts, and a way to haul roughly 500 pounds of metal and vinyl to a scrap yard and landfill.
You probably shouldn’t DIY if your pool has:
The crew time, dump fees, scrap yard runs, and water disposal trips usually add up to more than the $900-1,800 a pro charges by the time you’re done.
A reputable junk hauler doesn’t just landfill everything. The metal frame and wall panels are 100% recyclable steel and aluminum and go straight to a scrap recycler. The pump and filter motor are e-waste and get processed for copper recovery. Wood decking gets sorted — clean lumber goes to mulch or reuse, pressure-treated wood goes to the landfill (it can’t be recycled or burned). Only the vinyl liner is genuinely waste.
Done right, 70-80% of an above-ground pool gets recycled or repurposed.
We’ve been removing above-ground pools across Los Angeles, Orange County, Riverside, and the Inland Empire for years. We handle the disconnect, the disassembly, the legal water discharge, the deck if you’ve got one, and the full haul-off — all in a single appointment, usually same-day or next-day.
Call 911 Junk CA at (657) 333-3733 or request a free quote online. Tell us the pool size, whether there’s a deck, and your nearest cross street, and we’ll give you a flat upfront price — no surprises, no per-pound nonsense, no extra trip charges.
That backyard is waiting. Let’s get it back.
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