Selling a Florida home with a pool leak is one of the most common scenarios where small problems become expensive ones. Buyers inflate pool problems in their mental math. The leak you'd have fixed for $500 becomes a $5,000 credit at closing if it's discovered during inspection. Here's how to handle it.
The key question: fix it, or price it in?
Pool leaks come up during Florida home sales in two ways. Either the seller knows about the leak before listing, or the buyer's inspector discovers it during due diligence. The right approach is different in each case, but the underlying math is the same: pool leaks almost always cost more to negotiate than to fix.
If you know about the leak before listing.
Option 1: Fix it first, document everything
This is our recommendation for most sellers. A repaired leak with a warranty transfer is a non-issue in the sale. It costs you the repair amount (typically $500-$2,500 residential) and the diagnostic ($350-$650 if separate). In exchange, you avoid a negotiation that will likely cost 2-5x the repair amount.
Ask your specialist for a written inspection report post-repair — not just an invoice. A professional report formatted for real estate transactions becomes part of your disclosure package and heads off most buyer concerns.
Option 2: Disclose and price accordingly
Some sellers prefer not to fix it — either because they're selling "as-is," because they don't want to invest in a property they're leaving, or because the repair timeline conflicts with their listing schedule. This can work if you price appropriately. Two things to get right:
Get a written diagnostic and repair quote before listing. This gives you the specific repair cost to disclose. Saying "the pool has some kind of leak" in disclosures is a red flag to buyers. Saying "the pool has a skimmer fitting leak; written diagnostic available; repair quoted at $850" is transparency that buyers can work with.
Price the deduction conservatively. Even with a documented quote, buyers tend to mentally double the number. If the fix is $850, expect to give up $1,500-$2,500 in negotiated price reduction. This is why fixing often wins.
If the buyer's inspector finds a leak you didn't know about.
This is more complicated, because now the buyer has leverage. They can request the repair, a credit, or termination of the contract depending on the language of the inspection contingency. Your position depends on how quickly you can get a specialist diagnostic and repair quote.
Step 1: Get your own specialist out immediately
Do not rely on the buyer's inspector's diagnosis. General home inspectors are not pool specialists, and they frequently overstate pool issues because they lack the diagnostic tools to identify the specific problem. Get a licensed leak specialist on site within 48 hours of the buyer's inspection finding.
Step 2: Determine actual scope
A specialist diagnostic gives you three things: confirmation that there is (or isn't) a leak, identification of the specific source, and a written repair quote. Often the buyer's inspector flagged "evidence of leaking" that turns out to be something minor like a fitting rather than a major shell issue.
Step 3: Decide your negotiating position
| Situation | Typical seller move |
|---|---|
| No actual leak (inspector error) | Provide written "no-leak" report, no credit needed |
| Minor leak, quick fix ($500-$1,500) | Offer to repair before closing; faster than credit negotiation |
| Medium leak ($1,500-$4,000) | Credit at closing often easier than coordinating repair |
| Major leak ($4,000+) | Depends on deal; sometimes worth saving the deal, sometimes better to re-list |
| Inspector flagged shell crack but specialist confirms injectable (not drain-and-replace) | Offer credit for the specialist cost, not the full replacement estimate |
Florida disclosure requirements.
Florida's seller disclosure rules require sellers to disclose material facts that affect the value of the property. A known pool leak qualifies. Failure to disclose known defects can result in lawsuits after closing — Florida courts have ruled against sellers in cases where they failed to mention known pool problems.
This means: if you know about a leak, you must disclose it. You cannot hide it by not calling a specialist. "I didn't know the exact problem" is not a legal defense if you observed the symptoms.
Buying tip: watch for discovered-but-not-disclosed
If you're buying, and the pool has water at normal level but the auto-fill runs constantly, that's a signal the seller knew. Same for landscape repair, fresh deck patch, or new plaster spots. These can indicate recent leak-related work.
The buyer's perspective (useful to understand).
Buyers see pool leaks as enormous scary problems. Most of them have never dealt with one. When they hear "leak," they imagine $30,000 drain-and-replace quotes (which, as covered in our second-opinion case studies, are often wrong). This is why even small leaks become big negotiation points.
Sellers who can present a documented, specialist-diagnosed, affordable repair quote can usually reset buyer expectations. Buyers who see a $950 documented repair stop panicking. The work of the seller is often less about the actual repair and more about reframing the buyer's mental model.
Pre-listing pool inspections.
Some Florida sellers proactively get a pool inspection before listing — same way they might do a pre-listing home inspection. This has two benefits:
It surfaces problems before a buyer does. If something's wrong, you find out on your timeline with time to fix it at your cost. If nothing's wrong, you have documentation to head off buyer concerns.
It accelerates closing. A pre-listing pool inspection report attached to the disclosure package reduces what the buyer needs to investigate. It's a signal of transparent dealing that often moves deals faster.
Our pre-purchase / pre-listing pool inspection runs $395-$695 depending on pool complexity and delivers a same-day written report suitable for real estate packages. See our inspection services for detail.
Listing a home with a pool?
Get ahead of it.
Pre-listing inspection or pre-listing leak repair — either one costs less than negotiating a pool issue during due diligence. Most appointments scheduled within 1-3 business days.
Schedule Inspection → Volusia & Flagler(386) 226-0078Brevard(321) 384-6963