Quick Answer
A pool in Melbourne costs $35,000–$90,000+ fully installed. A fibreglass pool with basic paving and fencing starts around $35,000–$55,000. A concrete (gunite) pool with premium surrounds and heating costs $70,000–$120,000+. VBA permits, mandatory pool safety fencing, and Melbourne’s clay soil all affect the final price significantly.
A backyard pool is Melbourne’s most aspirational home improvement — and one of the most expensive. Costs have risen sharply since 2020 as demand surged during COVID and materials costs jumped. This guide gives accurate 2026 installed costs for fibreglass, concrete, and above-ground pools in Melbourne’s south-eastern suburbs, where clay soil and estate lot sizes create specific challenges.

Complete Pool Cost Breakdown
Pool Type Cost Comparison
| Pool Type | Shell Cost | Installed Total* | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fibreglass (plunge, 5–6m) | $12,000–$22,000 | $35,000–$55,000 | 4–8 weeks |
| Fibreglass (family, 8–10m) | $20,000–$35,000 | $45,000–$70,000 | 4–8 weeks |
| Concrete (gunite, basic) | $25,000–$45,000 | $60,000–$90,000 | 12–20 weeks |
| Concrete (premium with features) | $45,000–$80,000 | $90,000–$150,000+ | 16–24 weeks |
| Above-ground (Aquamaster style) | $3,000–$12,000 | $5,000–$18,000 | 1–3 days |
| Swimspa (combination pool/spa) | $15,000–$35,000 | $20,000–$45,000 | 2–4 weeks |
*Installed total includes excavation, fencing, basic paving, filtration, and commissioning.
Additional Cost Components
| Component | Cost Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Excavation (standard backyard) | $3,000–$8,000 | Clay soil adds 20–40% to excavation costs |
| Safety fencing (glass, 20m run) | $4,000–$10,000 | Mandatory under Victorian law — glass or tubular steel |
| Pool paving/surrounds (per m²) | $80–$200/m² | Concrete, pavers, travertine, bluestone options |
| Pool heating (heat pump) | $4,000–$9,000 | Extends swimming season May–October in Melbourne |
| Pool heating (solar) | $3,000–$7,000 | Solar panels for heating — good for spring/autumn |
| Pool lighting (LED) | $500–$2,000 | Colour-changing LED systems now standard |
| Concrete/pebblecrete resurfacing | $8,000–$20,000 | For concrete pools, typically needed every 10–15 years |
| VBA building permit (pool) | $800–$2,500 | Required for all pools in Victoria — via your council |

Running Costs: Melbourne Pool Maintenance
| Cost Item | Annual Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Electricity (pump, 8hr/day) | $800–$1,600 | Variable speed pumps save 50–70% vs fixed speed |
| Pool chemicals | $400–$800 | Chlorine, pH adjusters, algaecide, shock treatment |
| Heat pump electricity (if fitted) | $400–$1,000 | Running costs to heat pool spring/autumn/early winter |
| Professional pool service (fortnightly) | $1,500–$2,500/yr | Including chemicals — some owners do their own |
| Pool filter media (sand/cartridge) | $200–$500 | Replace every 3–5 years |
| Pool inspection (council) | $80–$200 | Mandatory pool safety barrier inspection in Victoria |
Melbourne Pool Regulations You Must Know
Victorian pool regulations are among the strictest in Australia:
- Building permit: Required for all in-ground pools and above-ground pools with walls over 300mm high
- Safety barrier: All pools and spas must be surrounded by a compliant barrier (fence or wall) under the Building Act 1993 and AS 1926.1-2012
- Mandatory registration: All pools and spas in Victoria must be registered with your local council
- Barrier inspection: Pool safety barriers must be inspected by a council inspector every 4 years
- Self-closing gate: Pool gates must be self-closing and self-latching, with the latch on the inside

Fibreglass vs Concrete: Which Is Right for Melbourne?
| Factor | Fibreglass | Concrete |
|---|---|---|
| Upfront cost | Lower by $15,000–$30,000 | Higher |
| Installation time | 4–8 weeks | 12–24 weeks |
| Ongoing maintenance | Lower — smooth surface resists algae | Higher — porous surface needs more chemicals |
| Shape flexibility | Limited to manufacturer mould shapes | Completely custom |
| Clay soil performance | Good — shell flexes with soil movement | Risk of cracking — requires soil testing |
| Resurfacing | Not required (shell lasts 20–25 years) | Required every 10–15 years ($8,000–$20,000) |
| Added features (spa, beach entry) | Limited — manufacturer dependent | Unlimited customisation |

Top 10 Tips and Gotchas
- Get a soil test first — in Casey, Cardinia, and Frankston areas, clay soil movement can crack concrete pools. A geotechnical report ($500–$1,500) tells you what type of pool construction is appropriate.
- Check easements — pools cannot be built over drainage easements or within certain distances of boundaries. Get a Section 32 and title search before designing your pool.
- Budget 20% contingency — pool projects routinely run over budget. Unexpected rock, high water table, council delays, and variations all add cost.
- Variable speed pump is essential — mandatory under Victorian energy efficiency requirements from 2025. If your quote includes a fixed-speed pump, query it.
- Register your pool with council — compulsory in Victoria. Your builder should handle this but confirm it’s included in the contract.
- Winter pool cover — Melbourne winters are harsh. A solar or thermal cover reduces heating costs by 50–70% and keeps debris out.
- Pool builder contract — insist on a written contract with a fixed price, payment schedule tied to milestones (not dates), and detailed specification of all finishes.
- Check insurance during construction — confirm your home builder’s insurance covers the construction site. A collapsed excavation or site accident can be expensive if cover is unclear.
- LED lighting from the start — retrofitting pool lighting later is expensive. Specify LED colour-changing lights in the original quote.
- Heat pump for year-round swimming — Melbourne’s climate is too cold for a pool without heating from May–October. A heat pump extends the season to 8–9 months vs 3–4 months unheated.

Local Melbourne Resources
- VBA Victoria — Pools and Spas — Building permit requirements and safety barrier rules
- SPASA Australia — Find accredited pool builders in Melbourne
- Reece Pool & Spa — Pool equipment, chemicals, and accessories
- Bunnings — Above-ground pools, pool maintenance supplies
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it take to get council approval for a pool in Melbourne?
Building permits for pools take 2–6 weeks from submission for most Melbourne councils (Casey, Cardinia, Frankston). Some councils are slower. Budget 6–8 weeks from contract signing before excavation begins, accounting for design, permit application, and approval time.
Can I build a pool on an easement?
No. Pools and pool fencing cannot be built over drainage or sewerage easements. Your title plan shows all easements — check this before finalising pool design. Building over an easement can force you to demolish the pool at your cost if the authority needs access.
Is a fibreglass or concrete pool better for Melbourne’s clay soil?
Fibreglass is generally better in clay soils — the shell flexes with soil movement rather than cracking. Concrete pools can crack in reactive clay soils without proper geotechnical design and reinforcement. Get a soil test and discuss the findings with at least two pool builders before deciding.
How much does it cost to run a pool in Melbourne per year?
Expect $2,500–$5,000 per year for electricity (pump + heating), chemicals, and occasional professional servicing. Variable speed pumps and a solar or heat pump cover can reduce annual costs by $500–$1,500. Professional monthly servicing adds $1,500–$2,500 per year if you prefer not to manage chemicals yourself.
What is the mandatory pool inspection in Victoria?
All pools and spas in Victoria must be registered with your local council and their safety barriers (fences) inspected every 4 years. Councils send an inspector who checks barrier height, gate latching, self-closing hinges, and CPR sign. Non-compliant barriers must be fixed within a specified timeframe.
Final Thoughts
A pool in Melbourne is a long-term investment — one that adds genuine lifestyle value but comes with significant ongoing costs. For most SE Melbourne families in Casey or Cardinia, a fibreglass pool in the $45,000–$65,000 range is the most cost-effective choice: lower upfront cost, lower maintenance, and better performance in clay soils than concrete.
- Get a soil test before committing to concrete — clay soil in the SE suburbs is not forgiving
- Register with council and get your barrier inspected — non-compliance fines are steep
- Invest in a variable speed pump and heat pump from day one
- Budget a 20% contingency — pool projects almost always find surprises underground