Pool demolition in progress
Licensed & Insured
500+ Projects

Pool Removal Company Serving Fremont & the Tri-City Area

Remove your unused pool and reclaim your backyard. Full-service from permits to cleanup throughout Fremont and nearby communities.

Licensed & Insured
500+ Projects
28+ Years
BBB Accredited
License #756605 | C-8 · C-12 · C-21

Why Fremont Homeowners Are Removing Their Pools

Fremont's residential neighborhoods — from Mission San Jose and Irvington to Centerville and Warm Springs — were built largely between the 1950s and 1980s, and many of those homes came with in-ground pools that are now 40 to 70 years old. At that age, the question is rarely whether to repair but how much longer it makes sense to keep doing so. If your pool is unused, cracked, or simply taking up space you could use better, get a ballpark removal estimate in about 60 seconds using our calculator — no phone call needed to see where your project lands.

Reclaim Valuable Backyard Space

Whether you are in a compact Irvington lot or have room to expand in Warm Springs, removing an unused pool returns usable space to your yard. Fremont homeowners are trading aging pools for outdoor kitchens, drought-tolerant gardens, play areas, and expanded patios that get used year-round.

Avoid the Spiral of Aging Pool Repairs

Most Fremont neighborhoods — Mission San Jose, Centerville, Irvington, Niles, and Warm Springs — were built between the 1950s and 1980s, and many still have original concrete pools. At 40 to 70 years old, these pools are reaching the end of their service life. Cracked shells, failing plumbing, and outdated equipment can trigger a repair cycle that quickly exceeds the cost of removal.

Stop Paying for a Pool You Do Not Use

Between Alameda County water rates, electricity for the pump, chemicals, and regular cleaning, a pool that sits unused still costs hundreds every month. In Fremont, where the swimming season runs long but busy schedules often keep pools idle, those recurring expenses add up fast. Once the pool is gone, those costs stop immediately.

Prepare for an ADU on Your Fremont Property

ADU development is increasingly common in Fremont, and a backyard pool is one of the most common obstacles between a homeowner and a permitted accessory dwelling unit. An engineered full removal provides the compaction testing and documentation the City of Fremont Building Division typically requires before issuing construction permits over or near a former pool area. We coordinate the removal timeline with your architect or contractor so the project stays on schedule.

Design a Backyard That Fits How You Actually Live

Many Fremont homes were designed around the pool as the centerpiece of the backyard — a layout that made sense decades ago but often feels limiting today. With 300 days of sunshine a year, a flexible outdoor space designed for dining, relaxing, gardening, or entertaining delivers far more daily value than a pool that sits under a cover for most of the year. Removal gives you a blank canvas.

Peace of Mind for Families and Pet Owners

Even a fenced and covered pool requires ongoing vigilance. For Fremont families with young children, grandchildren, or pets in family-oriented neighborhoods like Mission San Jose, Centerville, and Warm Springs, an unused pool represents a low-grade worry that never fully goes away. Removal eliminates the risk entirely and makes the backyard a space everyone can enjoy without concern.

Comparing Your Options

Pool Removal Options

Three removal methods, each designed for different goals. We will help you determine the right approach during your free site assessment.

Partial Pool Removal

Budget-Friendly

The most affordable option. We remove the top two feet of pool coping, drill drainage holes into the bottom, and backfill the cavity. For Fremont homeowners on tighter lots where heavy equipment access is limited — common in older neighborhoods like Niles and Irvington — partial removal can also simplify logistics since less debris needs to be hauled out.

Best for:

  • Homeowners seeking the lowest-cost option
  • Landscaping projects
  • Lawn and garden areas
Landscaping Use Only

The backfilled area is intended for landscaping purposes only and is not designed to support structures.

Full Pool Removal

Complete Demolition

The entire pool shell, concrete, rebar, and debris are removed and hauled off-site. This is a common choice in Fremont neighborhoods like Mission San Jose and Warm Springs where larger lots allow full equipment access and homeowners want no buried structure remaining. The backfilled area is suitable for landscaping without engineering oversight.

Best for:

  • Homeowners who want the entire pool removed
  • Future landscaping projects
  • Properties where local requirements prohibit partial removal
Landscaping Use Only

Unless compaction testing and engineering oversight are performed, the backfilled area is intended for landscaping purposes only and is not designed to support structures.

Most Popular

Engineered Full Pool Removal

With Engineering Oversight

Complete removal with soils engineering oversight, compaction testing in 6-inch to 12-inch lifts, and documentation. Given the growing ADU interest across Fremont, this is our most frequently requested option. The City of Fremont Building Division typically requires this level of documentation before issuing construction permits for ADUs, garages, or home additions over or near a former pool site.

Best for:

  • ADUs
  • Home additions
  • Garages
  • Workshops
  • Future construction projects
  • Buildable lot requirements
Buildable Site Potential

With soils engineering oversight, compaction testing, and documentation, this option may support future structures, subject to local requirements and approvals.

Not Sure Which Option You Need?

We’ll evaluate your pool, site access, future plans, and local requirements during a free site assessment. Our team will explain your options and recommend the removal method that best fits your goals and budget.

Understanding Costs

What Affects Pool Removal Costs?

Every pool removal project is unique. These are the key factors that influence the final cost of your project.

Pool Size

Larger pools require more demolition, debris hauling, backfill material, and labor. Pools in Fremont vary widely — from compact pools in older Niles and Irvington neighborhoods to larger pools in Mission San Jose and Warm Springs.

Pool Depth

Deeper pools require additional excavation, backfill material, and labor compared to shallower pools. Many of Fremont’s older pools, built during the city’s 1950s–80s expansion, were designed with deeper diving ends than typical modern pools — which increases the volume of backfill material needed.

Access Conditions

Narrow side yards, retaining walls, steep driveways, or limited equipment clearance can affect logistics. This is particularly relevant in older Fremont neighborhoods like Niles and Irvington, where homes are closer together and side yard access is often tight.

Removal Method

Partial removal is the most affordable. Full removal costs more due to additional demolition and hauling. Engineered full removal includes soils engineering oversight, compaction testing, and documentation — an additional investment that is often required for ADU construction in Fremont.

City of Fremont Permit Requirements

Permit fees are set by the City of Fremont Building Division and vary by project scope. We handle all permit applications for you and will explain the expected costs during your free site assessment. Union City and Newark each have their own building departments with different fee schedules. Properties in unincorporated Alameda County follow a different fee schedule.

Engineering & ADU Documentation

If you plan to build an ADU or other structure on the former pool site, the City of Fremont will typically require compaction testing and a soils engineer’s report. This documentation adds cost but is essential for obtaining your building permit. We coordinate directly with your engineer to keep the process moving.

Important:

This is an approximate estimate and does not include permit fees, which vary depending on whether your property is located within a city jurisdiction or an unincorporated county area. For an accurate, no-obligation written estimate, we're happy to schedule a free site visit.

Use our calculator above to receive a personalized estimate in under 60 seconds.

Communities We Serve

Serving Fremont and Nearby Communities

Select a community below to learn more about pool removal services in your area.

Fremont is the fourth-largest city in the Bay Area, stretching from the foot of the East Bay hills to the southern edge of the San Francisco Bay. Neighborhoods like Mission San Jose, Centerville, Irvington, Niles, and Warm Springs each have their own character, with many homes built during Fremont's major growth periods from the 1950s through the 1980s. Pools installed during those decades are now aging, and homeowners across Fremont are weighing removal against renovation. Pool removal permits are issued through the local building department, and we manage the full permit process.

Union City sits between Fremont and Hayward, with many residential neighborhoods developed in the 1960s and 1970s. Older pools in Union City are reaching the end of their practical lifespan, and homeowners often find removal makes more sense than ongoing repairs. Permits are issued through the local building department, and we handle all applications for Union City homeowners.

Newark is a smaller city wedged between Fremont and the Bay, with a strong residential community and many homes built from the 1950s onward. Pools in Newark tend to be older and are increasingly becoming a maintenance burden for homeowners. Newark permits are processed through the local building department.

Permits

We Handle the Permit Process for You

Permit requirements vary between cities and counties. Rather than navigate it alone, our team manages the entire process from start to finish.

Identify Your Jurisdiction

During your free site assessment, we determine whether your property falls under the City of Fremont, Union City, Newark, or unincorporated Alameda County jurisdiction — each has its own building department with different requirements.

Explain What's Required

We walk you through exactly what your local building department requires. The City of Fremont Building Division, Union City, Newark, and Alameda County each administer their own permit processes, and we know the differences so you do not have to figure it out yourself.

Prepare & Submit the Application

We handle all paperwork and submit the permit application to the correct department — whether that is the City of Fremont, Union City, Newark, or Alameda County — on your behalf.

Track Through Approval

We monitor your application status with the relevant building department and keep you updated until the permit is issued. No chasing down city offices or checking portals on your own.

Permit fees vary by city and county and are not included in the preliminary estimate provided by our calculator. During your free site assessment, we'll review the permit requirements for your property and explain any expected permit costs before work begins.

Simple Process

How Pool Removal Works

Six steps from your first call to a clean, graded yard ready for your next project.

01

Free Site Assessment

We visit your property, evaluate access, pool type, depth, and surrounding conditions. You get a firm written estimate with no obligation.

02

Permits & Scheduling

We pull all necessary demolition permits and coordinate utility disconnects. You pick a start date that works for your schedule.

03

Draining & Demolition

We drain the pool and break up the shell, removing everything per the agreed method — engineered or non-engineered — with all debris loaded for haul-off.

04

Debris Hauling

All concrete, rebar and debris are loaded and hauled away if we are doing a full removal. We leave the site clean and ready for the next phase.

05

Backfill & Compaction

We backfill in 6″–12″ lifts with the soil, wetting down each lift. Every layer is compacted using specialized equipment before the next is added. For engineered pool removals, a soils engineer performs periodic inspections and compaction testing. Upon completion, the engineer issues a compaction report presented to the local building official at the final inspection.

06

Final Walkthrough

We walk the site together, confirm everything meets your expectations, and provide your permit, inspection card, and final compaction report with testing results, when applicable.

FAQ

Common Pool Removal Questions

Pool removal costs in Fremont depend on your pool's size and depth, site access conditions, the removal method you choose, and City of Fremont permit requirements. Partial removals are the most affordable option, while full and engineered full removals involve more scope. Use our calculator for a starting estimate, then schedule a free on-site assessment for a written quote.

Yes. Pool removal in Fremont requires a permit through the local building department. Requirements for Union City and Newark vary by jurisdiction. We handle all permit applications as part of our service and determine the correct process for your property during the site assessment.

Partial removal removes the upper portion of the pool while leaving most of the shell in place. Drainage holes are created and the area is backfilled — suitable for landscaping only. Full removal takes out the entire pool structure and hauls it away, leaving no buried structure. Engineered full removal adds soils engineering oversight, compaction testing, and documentation. When the removal follows the soils engineer’s recommendations and a compaction report is completed and approved, the backfilled area may support a new structure — subject to your local Building Department’s requirements.

In most cases, an engineered full removal is required before a building permit will be issued for construction over or near the former pool area. This applies to ADUs, garages, home additions, and covered structures. Our engineered full removal includes the compaction testing and documentation required for City of Fremont building permits.

Most pool removal projects in Fremont complete in 3 to 5 days of active work once permits are issued. Permit timelines vary by jurisdiction — we will give you a realistic estimate during the site assessment. We submit applications promptly and keep you updated throughout.

No. Preliminary estimates from our calculator and site assessment do not include permit fees. Permit fees are set by each city and vary by jurisdiction and project scope. We'll explain expected permit costs during your free on-site assessment.

Ready to Reclaim Your Backyard?

Get a free pool removal estimate for your Fremont property. We will evaluate your pool, site access, future plans, and local requirements before providing a written quote.

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