💲 Flat-Rate

Affordable Pool Pump Repair & Replacement in Frisco, TX

Transparent flat-rate pricing — no surprises for Frisco families.

Whether your pump is humming, leaking, tripping the breaker, or just plain dead — we diagnose, quote, and repair on the spot when possible.

Call now: (469) 655-4552From $129 diagnostic · Same-day available
What's included

Affordable Pool Pump Repair & Replacement for Frisco homeowners

Every pool pump repair & replacement visit in Frisco runs the same checklist — no shortcuts, no surprise upsells. Here's exactly what you get when our crew rolls into your driveway.

On-site diagnostic & test
Seal, gasket & capacitor replacement
Impeller & basket service
Motor amperage check
Variable-speed upgrade quote
1-year labor warranty
Why Frisco, TX

Local pool conditions we plan around

One of the fastest-growing cities in America, Frisco is packed with master-planned communities, custom estates, and resort-style backyard pools that demand premium weekly care. From the rolling streets of Phillips Creek Ranch to the gated luxury of Newman Village and Starwood, our local route techs know every neighborhood, every gate code, and every pool builder in town. We deliver consistent, photo-documented service so busy Frisco families can come home to a sparkling pool — every single week, year-round.

Frisco sits in Collin/Denton County. We service the 75033, 75034, 75035, 75036 ZIP codes weekly, with stops in Phillips Creek Ranch, Newman Village, Starwood, Stonebriar and other established neighborhoods. Local pool conditions — hard water from municipal supplies, summer heat lift on chlorine demand, and pop-up storm runoff from The Star — shape exactly how we run a pool pump repair & replacement visit here.

Neighborhoods we cover in Frisco
  • Phillips Creek Ranch
  • Newman Village
  • Starwood
  • Stonebriar
  • The Trails
  • Richwoods
  • Frisco Lakes
ZIPs: 75033 · 75034 · 75035 · 75036
FAQ

Affordable Pool Pump Repair & Replacement in Frisco — common questions

My pump is humming but not starting — what's that?+

Usually a failed start capacitor or stuck impeller. Both repairable on first visit.

Should I repair or replace?+

Pumps over 7 years old with major repairs usually justify replacement, especially with energy savings.

How long does a pump last?+

Single-speed: 8–10 years. Variable-speed: 10–15 years.

Are variable-speed pumps worth it?+

In Texas, yes — typical savings $400–$700/year, payback in 18–30 months.

Can you match my existing horsepower?+

We'll right-size to your plumbing and turnover, not blindly match HP.

Do you offer warranty?+

1-year on labor, full manufacturer warranty on parts (2–3 years typical).