Pool Services Listings
The pool services listings housed on this site span the full spectrum of pool lighting work — from initial installation and wiring to ongoing maintenance, inspection, and system upgrades. Each listing entry points toward a licensed service provider whose work intersects with specific technical and regulatory requirements tied to aquatic electrical systems. Understanding how those listings are structured, what they contain, and how they map to geography helps locate the right type of provider for a specific project scope.
How to use listings alongside other resources
Listings function as a locator layer, not a standalone reference. Before filtering for a contractor, reviewing the broader pool services directory purpose and scope page establishes what categories of work are covered and which provider types appear in the index. For readers unfamiliar with pool lighting service categories — such as the difference between a bonding and grounding specialist and a general electrical contractor — the pool-lighting-safety-standards and pool-lighting-bonding-and-grounding-services pages provide definitional grounding before a listing search begins.
Listings work best when cross-referenced with cost and qualification data. The pool-lighting-service-cost-guide documents typical price ranges by service type, and the pool-lighting-service-provider-qualifications page identifies the license classes, certifications, and bonding requirements that differ by state. Using those reference pages before contacting a listed provider reduces the risk of scope mismatch — for example, hiring a general pool technician for work that requires a licensed electrician under National Electrical Code (NEC) Article 680 jurisdiction.
The how-to-use-this-pool-services-resource page offers a step-by-step orientation to the full site structure, including how listings interlock with topic pages, glossaries, and regulatory reference material.
How listings are organized
Listings are organized along two primary axes: service type and installation context.
Service type categories reflect distinct scopes of licensed work:
- Installation services — new fixture placement, conduit runs, transformer installation, and initial commissioning (see pool-lighting-installation-services)
- Replacement and repair services — lamp swaps, lens and gasket replacement, housing repairs, and fixture retrofits (see pool-lighting-replacement-services and pool-light-lens-and-gasket-replacement-services)
- Conversion services — technology upgrades such as LED pool light conversion, which typically requires re-evaluating transformer capacity and fixture niche compatibility
- Electrical infrastructure services — wiring, GFCI device installation, bonding grid work, and conduit inspection (see pool-lighting-wiring-and-electrical-services and pool-lighting-gfci-requirements)
- Inspection and compliance services — pre-permit inspections, annual safety audits, and code compliance verification (pool-lighting-inspection-services)
- Design and consultation services — lighting layout planning, fixture specification, and photometric analysis (pool-lighting-design-consultation-services)
- Seasonal and maintenance services — winterization checks, bulb cycling schedules, and moisture intrusion assessments (pool-lighting-seasonal-maintenance-services)
Installation context categories separate providers by the physical and regulatory environment they work in:
- Residential vs. commercial — Commercial pools are subject to stricter inspection cycles under standards such as ANSI/APSP-11, while residential installations are governed primarily by NEC Article 680 and local authority having jurisdiction (AHJ) requirements. Separate listing tracks exist for commercial-pool-lighting-services and residential-pool-lighting-services.
- Inground vs. above-ground — Inground pools involve conduit embedment in concrete or gunite, a structurally permanent intervention. Above-ground pools use surface-mounted or clip-on fixture systems with different bonding requirements. See inground-pool-lighting-services and above-ground-pool-lighting-services for distinctions.
- Spa and hot tub — These environments operate at higher water temperatures and often at higher bather density per square foot, with specific low-voltage or GFCI requirements distinct from standard pool installations (spa-and-hot-tub-lighting-services).
What each listing covers
Each listing entry in the directory contains a standardized set of fields to support provider evaluation:
- Provider name and primary service category — categorized against the service type taxonomy above
- License type and issuing state authority — reflecting the specific credential required for the listed work type (e.g., C-10 Electrical Contractor in California vs. Master Electrician in Texas)
- Service area — defined by county or metro region, not broad regional labels
- Technology specializations — such as fiber optic, low-voltage systems, color-changing LED systems, or smart pool lighting integration
- Permit-pulling history — whether the provider has a record of obtaining required permits through the local AHJ, a key indicator of code-compliant practice
- Manufacturer certifications — relevant where fixture brands require factory-trained installers for warranty validity (see pool-lighting-brands-and-manufacturers)
- Warranty and service agreement terms — summarized from disclosed documentation (pool-lighting-warranty-and-service-agreements)
Listings do not include unverified review scores or aggregated star ratings. Provider information reflects publicly available license data and self-reported service scope submitted through a structured intake process.
Geographic distribution
Listings span all 50 states, with denser coverage in the 10 states with the highest registered pool counts — Florida, California, Texas, Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and New York — where the pool services industry sustains a larger licensed contractor base. Florida alone accounts for approximately 1.7 million in-ground residential pools according to Pool & Hot Tub Alliance industry data, which produces a proportionally larger share of licensed aquatic electrical contractors.
Coverage in colder-climate states reflects a narrower provider base concentrated around commercial aquatic facilities, indoor pool installations, and spa environments rather than outdoor seasonal pools. Providers in those states often carry dual credentials covering both pool electrical work and general low-voltage systems.
Urban metro areas typically show the highest listing density. Rural counties in states such as Montana, Wyoming, and North Dakota may have 1–3 listed providers per county, reflecting actual licensed contractor availability rather than a gap in the directory's indexing methodology. Filtering by zip code within the listing interface narrows results to providers with documented service area coverage for a specific location.