Pool Removal · San Jose, CA · Santa Clara County
Full & Partial Pool Demolition — All San Jose Neighborhoods, PBCE Permits Managed. CSLB #1075979 · (510) 990-7349.
San Jose has one of the largest residential pool inventories in Santa Clara County — thousands of in-ground pools built between 1965 and 1990 in neighborhoods like Willow Glen, Cambrian, Blossom Hill, and Almaden Valley. As these pools age past their service life, pool removal and backyard conversion has become one of the city’s most popular home improvement projects. Souza & Son’s Inc performs full and partial pool removals throughout San Jose, managing all PBCE permits and completing demolition, backfill, and grade preparation in a single coordinated project.
Thiago personally manages every San Jose project — no subcontracting, no handoffs. We pull all required San Jose PBCE permits, manage every inspection, and clean up completely before we consider a job done.
Maria C.
“Pool removal and paver patio conversion in Evergreen. PBCE permits handled, pool demolished in two days, new patio installed. The backyard is completely transformed. Zero stress throughout.”
Every pool removal application handled with full San Jose PBCE permit management throughout all San Jose neighborhoods.
Complete demolition and removal of the pool shell, gunite, plaster, tile, coping, and all equipment. The excavation is backfilled with engineered imported fill compacted in lifts to 90% relative density, with a licensed geotechnical inspector on-site for compaction testing. A final grading inspection with the city building inspector closes the permit. Recommended for all Santa Clara County properties and required for properties with future ADU or construction potential.
The pool shell is perforated with holes for drainage, filled with gravel and compacted soil, and the top 18–24 inches is removed and replaced with engineered fill to allow surface landscaping. Less expensive than full removal but limits future use of the space — not recommended for properties with construction potential. A building permit and final inspection are still required in all Santa Clara County cities.
The most popular post-removal project in Santa Clara County — converting the pool footprint to a paver patio, outdoor kitchen, or entertainment area with artificial turf surrounding. We coordinate pool removal and patio installation as a single project, minimizing total project time and coordination complexity.
Converting the pool footprint and surrounding deck to artificial turf creates a seamless, low-maintenance backyard that’s safe for children and pets. Popular in San Jose, Santa Clara, Sunnyvale, and Campbell where families have outgrown the pool but want a usable, green backyard.
Every pool removal project in San Jose follows the same disciplined process — from permit-ready planning through final inspection sign-off.
We assess pool size, access conditions, soil type, and any structures adjacent to the pool. We identify required permits — building permit in all cases, plus hazardous materials assessment for pools with lead-based paint or asbestos-containing materials (common in pools built before 1980). We develop the permit strategy and submit applications to your city’s building department.
Pools built before 1980 may contain lead-based paint or asbestos-containing materials in the plaster, coping, or deck surfaces. We arrange hazardous materials testing through certified industrial hygienists and, if required, licensed abatement before demolition begins — ensuring full regulatory compliance and protecting your property and neighbors.
Pool demolition begins with equipment removal (pumps, filters, heaters, lighting) and utility disconnection. The shell is broken with hydraulic hammer attachments, and all concrete, gunite, rebar, tile, and coping are sorted and hauled to licensed recycling and disposal facilities. We capture all concrete for recycling — typically crushing it to aggregate for road base.
The excavation is backfilled with clean imported fill in maximum 8-inch compacted lifts. A licensed geotechnical inspector is on-site during backfill to conduct nuclear density testing at each lift, certifying compaction at 90% relative density — the standard required by all Santa Clara County building departments. The compaction report is submitted to the building department as part of permit closeout.
The surface is graded to positive drainage away from structures, topsoil is added for planting areas, and the site is prepared for the homeowner’s chosen finish — pavers, turf, landscaping, or bare grade. The final building inspection is scheduled and passed to close the permit.
Which pool removal method is right for your Santa Clara County property?
| Factor | Full Removal | Partial / Abandon-in-Place |
|---|---|---|
| Shell demolition | Complete — all concrete and rebar removed | Top portion only — floor perforated |
| Backfill | Engineered import fill, compacted in lifts | Gravel + compacted soil over shell |
| Geotechnical inspection | Required — compaction report issued | Not always required |
| Future construction | Unrestricted — ADU, addition, any use | Restricted — no structural loads |
| Settlement risk | Minimal — engineered fill | Moderate — shell voids can collapse |
| Santa Clara County permit | Building permit + final inspection | Building permit + final inspection |
| Recommended for | All properties, especially ADU candidates | Properties with no future plans |
| Project time | 3–5 business days | 2–3 business days |
| Typical cost | $9,000 – $20,000 | $5,000 – $10,000 |
Our recommendation: We recommend full removal for all Santa Clara County properties. The compaction report it produces becomes a valuable permit-record document for future ADU or addition projects — and eliminates any settlement risk from shell voids.
Professional-grade materials with manufacturer warranties, selected for San Jose’s soil conditions and architectural character.
All backfill material is clean imported structural fill — sand, gravel, or crushed aggregate — free of organic material, debris, or expansive soil. We never use the demolished pool concrete as backfill due to the risk of long-term settlement as broken concrete voids collapse.
A licensed geotechnical engineer’s inspector is on-site during all backfill operations to conduct nuclear density gauge testing at each lift. The final compaction report is submitted to the building department and becomes part of the property’s permit record — important for future buyers, lenders, and building permit applications.
Positive surface drainage away from structures is established during final grade. In some cases, we install a French drain system within the former pool footprint to manage groundwater that may accumulate in the compacted fill — particularly important on Santa Clara County’s flat valley floor where drainage gradients are minimal.









Maria C.
“Pool removal and paver patio conversion in Evergreen. PBCE permits handled, pool demolished in two days, new patio installed. The backyard is completely transformed. Zero stress throughout.”
Pool Removal + Patio · EvergreenKevin D.
“Old 1982 pool removed in Cambrian. Souza & Son’s handled the PBCE permit, geotechnical inspection, and the compaction report. The new turf and paver space is exactly what we wanted.”
Pool Removal + Conversion · CambrianTom R.
“Full pool removal in Willow Glen. The crew was efficient, respectful of the property, and finished in 4 days. The compaction report was delivered promptly for our ADU permit application.”
Pool Removal · Willow GlenWe provide pool removal services in every San Jose neighborhood with full permit management and free on-site estimates.
Permit Management
We manage every required San Jose PBCE permit — included at no additional charge on every project in San Jose.
Local Soil Expertise
We engineer every pool removal system for San Jose’s specific soil conditions — no generic approach that ignores local geology.
Rebate Assistance
We assist San Jose homeowners with Santa Clara Valley Water District (SCVWD) rebate applications at no additional charge — maximizing your project ROI.
Owner On Every Job
Thiago personally manages every San Jose project. No subcontracting — you deal with the same person from estimate to final walkthrough.
4.9★ Google Rating
80+ verified Google reviews from Silicon Valley homeowners. Quality you can verify independently before you call.
1–2 Week Mobilization
Most San Jose pool removal projects mobilize within 1–2 weeks of permit approval. On time, on budget, every project.
Yes — every city in Santa Clara County requires a building permit for pool demolition, both full removal and partial abandonment-in-place. The permit process requires plans showing the demolition scope, backfill specifications, and drainage design. Full removals additionally require a licensed geotechnical inspector’s compaction report as a condition of permit closeout. We manage the entire permit process at no additional charge.
Full removal (exhumation) involves complete demolition of the pool shell and removal of all material from the site, followed by engineered fill compaction. Partial removal (abandonment-in-place) perforates the pool floor for drainage, fills with gravel and compacted soil, and removes only the top portion of the shell. Full removal is recommended for all Santa Clara County properties — it allows unrestricted future use of the space and eliminates settlement risk. Partial removal costs 40–60% less but limits future use.
Full pool removal in Santa Clara County typically runs $9,000–$20,000 for a standard 15×30 foot residential pool, including permits, demolition, hauling, engineered fill, compaction testing, and final grade. Partial removal typically runs $5,000–$10,000 for the same size pool. Hillside properties and pools with limited access add a premium. Free detailed written quotes after on-site assessment.
Most standard pool removals in Santa Clara County take 3–5 business days for the physical work — demolition, hauling, and backfill. Permit processing adds 5–15 business days depending on city. Geotechnical inspector scheduling adds 1–2 days to the backfill phase. Total project timeline from permit submittal to final inspection closeout is typically 3–5 weeks.
Yes — if full removal is performed with engineered fill compacted to 90% relative density and documented with a geotechnical compaction report, the former pool footprint can support future construction including ADUs, room additions, and outbuildings. This is one of the primary reasons we recommend full removal over partial for all Santa Clara County properties — the compaction report becomes a valuable document for future building permits.
San Jose has one of the largest residential pool inventories in Santa Clara County — thousands of in-ground pools built between 1965 and 1990 in neighborhoods like Willow Glen, Cambrian, Blossom Hill, and Almaden Valley. As these pools age past their service life, pool removal and backyard conversion has become one of the city’s most popular home improvement projects. Souza & Son’s Inc performs full and partial pool removals throughout San Jose, managing all PBCE permits and completing demolition, backfill, and grade preparation in a single coordinated project.
San Jose pool removal requires a building permit through PBCE regardless of removal method. Full removals additionally require a licensed geotechnical inspector’s compaction report as a condition of permit closeout. The PBCE permit process for pool demolition typically takes 5–10 business days. Souza & Son’s manages the entire PBCE process — permit application, geotechnical inspector coordination, and final inspection scheduling — as part of every San Jose pool removal project.
The most popular post-removal project in San Jose is converting the pool footprint and surrounding deck to a combination of paver patio and synthetic turf. This transformation is particularly dramatic in Cambrian, Blossom Hill, and Almaden Valley, where 1970s–1990s pools occupy large portions of the backyard. A typical San Jose pool removal + patio + turf conversion takes 7–10 business days total and delivers a completely transformed, maintenance-free outdoor living space.
San Jose has been one of California’s most active ADU markets since SB 9 and local ADU ordinances simplified the approval process. Full pool removal with engineered compaction creates a documented, building-department-cleared foundation for future ADU construction on the former pool footprint. The geotechnical compaction report issued at permit closeout becomes a key document for the ADU building permit application. We recommend full removal for all San Jose properties with any future construction potential.
Full pool removal in San Jose typically runs $9,000–$20,000 for a standard 15×30 foot residential pool, including PBCE permit, demolition, hauling, engineered fill, geotechnical compaction testing, and final grade. Partial removal (abandonment-in-place) runs $5,000–$10,000 for the same size pool. Adding paver patio and synthetic turf conversion runs $18,000–$40,000 total for a standard combined project. Free detailed written quotes after on-site assessment throughout San Jose.
Typical installed pricing for pool removal projects in San Jose, based on recent completed projects.
| Project Type | Typical Price Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Full Pool Removal — standard 15×30 ft | $9,000 – $20,000 | PBCE permit, demo, fill, compaction report |
| Full Pool Removal — large 20×40 ft | $14,000 – $28,000 | PBCE permit, demo, fill, compaction report |
| Partial / Abandon-in-Place | $5,000 – $10,000 | Permit, perforation, fill, grade |
| Pool-to-Patio Conversion (pavers) | +$9,000 – $18,000 | Add paver installation to removal |
| Pool-to-Turf Conversion | +$8,000 – $16,000 | Add turf installation to removal |

CSLB #1075979 · Serving all San Jose neighborhoods · Free on-site estimates