Quick Answer

Running a standard single-speed pool pump in Melbourne costs approximately $600–$1,200 per year in electricity. Switching to a variable-speed pump (VSP) reduces this to $150–$350 per year — saving $400–$900 annually. Pool pump running costs depend on pump wattage, daily run hours, electricity tariff and season. This guide covers all the numbers so you can calculate your exact cost and decide whether upgrading is worth it.

How Pool Pump Running Costs Are Calculated

Pool pump running cost = Wattage (kW) × Daily run hours × Days per year × Electricity rate ($/kWh)

Example for a typical Melbourne pool with a 1.1kW single-speed pump running 8 hours per day:

1.1 kW × 8 hours × 365 days × $0.30/kWh = $964 per year

Melbourne electricity rates from major retailers (AGL, Origin, EnergyAustralia) typically range from $0.27–$0.38 per kWh on a standard tariff. Using off-peak rates (if your pool pump is on a timer) can reduce costs by 15–30%.

Pool Pump Running Cost by Type

Pump Type Typical Wattage 8 hrs/day Annual Cost 6 hrs/day Annual Cost Notes
Single-speed (old, 1.1kW) 1,100W $964 $723 Most common in older Melbourne pools
Single-speed (modern, 0.75kW) 750W $657 $493 Smaller pools or newer installs
Variable-speed (low setting) 200–400W $175–$350 $130–$263 Run longer but use far less power
Variable-speed (full speed) 1,100W $964 $723 Only needed for backwash/vacuuming
Robotic pool cleaner (add-on) 200–400W $35–$70 N/A — 1–2 hrs/use Run 3–4x per week in summer
Pro tip: Variable-speed pumps should run 10–14 hours per day at low speed rather than 6�8 hours at full speed. This filters the same volume of water for 60–70% less electricity, and keeps the water cleaner because filtration is more continuous.

Seasonal Running Cost in Melbourne

Pool pumps in Melbourne typically need longer run times in summer due to higher water temperature, algae growth risk, and increased bather load. In winter, the pool can be filtered for fewer hours.

Season Recommended Daily Run (Single-Speed) Recommended Daily Run (Variable-Speed) Monthly Cost Estimate
Summer (Dec–Feb) 8–10 hours 12–14 hours $60–$110 (single-speed)
Autumn/Spring 6–8 hours 10–12 hours $45–$80
Winter (Jun–Aug) 4–6 hours 8–10 hours $30–$55

Is a Variable-Speed Pump Worth the Upgrade Cost?

Factor Single-Speed Variable-Speed
Upfront cost (supply and install) $600–$1,200 $1,200–$2,500
Annual running cost $600–$1,200 $150–$350
Annual saving vs single-speed $400–$900
Payback period 1.5–4 years
Noise level Loud (60–70dB) Quiet (45–55dB at low speed)
Lifespan 5–10 years 10–15 years
VEU rebate eligible? No Yes ($100–$300)

For most Melbourne pools running more than 6 months per year, a variable-speed pump pays itself back within 2–3 years. Over a 10-year life, the saving over a single-speed pump is typically $4,000–$8,000.

How to Reduce Pool Running Costs Without Upgrading the Pump

  1. Use a timer — run the pump during off-peak tariff hours (usually 10pm–7am)
  2. Reduce run time in winter — Melbourne pools in June–August can safely run 4–5 hours per day
  3. Use a pool cover — reduces evaporation (which increases salt/chlorine concentration, requiring more filtration) and keeps debris out
  4. Service the filter — a dirty filter forces the pump to work harder, using more power for the same flow
  5. Check for air leaks — air in the pump basket reduces efficiency significantly
  6. Match pump size to pool — an oversized pump on a small pool is one of the most common causes of unnecessarily high running costs
Safety warning: Never work on pool pump wiring yourself in Victoria or any Australian state. All electrical connections to pool pumps require a licensed electrician — pool electrical work is classified as high-risk due to the proximity of water and conductive ground conditions.

Pool Pump Running Cost Calculator

To calculate your exact annual pool pump running cost:

  1. Find your pump’s wattage on the motor nameplate (usually 750W, 1,100W or 1,500W)
  2. Check your electricity bill for your per-kWh tariff (typically $0.27–$0.38 in Melbourne)
  3. Multiply: Watts ÷ 1000 × daily hours × 365 × tariff rate

Example: 750W pump × 7 hours × 365 days × $0.30/kWh = $575/year

Top Tips and Gotchas

  1. Check your pump’s actual wattage — not the HP rating. A “1HP pump” can draw anywhere from 600W to 1,400W depending on age and make.
  2. Hayward, Pentair and Davey are the main brands in Melbourne — all have VSP options with good local parts availability.
  3. Don’t oversize the replacement — a smaller, slower pump on a VSP often outperforms a larger single-speed for filtration quality and cost.
  4. VEU rebate on VSP — if using an accredited installer, ask about VEU rebates for variable-speed pool pumps ($100–$300 depending on size).
  5. Pool salt systems run continuously — if you have a salt chlorinator, it draws additional power (50–200W) every hour the pump runs, adding $50–$120/year.
  6. Solar-powered pool pumps — dedicated solar DC pumps are an option for SE Melbourne homes with solar panels; running cost drops to near zero in summer.
  7. Pool heating is a separate, larger cost — gas or heat pump pool heating adds $200–$800/year depending on heating season length.
  8. Scheduled maintenance — backwashing the filter weekly adds only 10–15 minutes of full-speed run time; include this in weekly habit.

Local Melbourne Resources

Frequently Asked Questions

How many hours a day should I run my pool pump in Melbourne?

In summer, 8–10 hours for a single-speed pump, or 12–14 hours for a variable-speed pump at low speed. In winter, 4–6 hours (single-speed) or 8–10 hours (VSP) is usually sufficient. The goal is to turn over the full pool volume at least once per day.

Should I run my pool pump during the day or at night?

Running at night on an off-peak tariff (10pm–7am) saves 15–30% on electricity costs if your retailer offers time-of-use pricing. However, running during the day while solar panels are producing is the most cost-effective option if you have a solar system — effectively free electricity.

How much does it cost to replace a pool pump in Melbourne?

Single-speed replacement: $600–$1,200 supply and install. Variable-speed pump: $1,200–$2,500 supply and install. Prices vary by brand, pool size and whether the existing plumbing connections need adapting.

Do variable-speed pool pumps need special installation?

VSPs use standard single-phase 240V power but require a licensed electrician to connect. Most pool pump replacements in Melbourne are done in a half-day by a pool service company with an electrical licence, or by an electrician who also does pool work.

Why is my pool pump running but the pool looks cloudy?

Cloudy water despite the pump running usually means insufficient filtration time, a dirty or channelled filter, incorrect chemical balance, or a dead algae bloom. Increase run time by 2 hours and backwash the filter first — if still cloudy after 48 hours, check your pH and chlorine levels.