No matter how carefully you maintain your hot tub water chemistry, the water eventually reaches a point where it needs to be replaced entirely. Dissolved solids build up over time that no chemical treatment can remove — and starting fresh periodically is the best way to maintain comfortable, manageable water.

TL;DR

  • Most hot tubs should be drained and refilled every 3 to 4 months
  • High bather load or water quality issues may require more frequent changes
  • Salt water system users may extend the interval slightly with good TDS management
  • Draining in New Brunswick requires attention to freeze risk during the process
  • The drain and refill is a good opportunity to clean the shell, jets, and filter

Why Regular Draining Is Necessary

Hot tub water accumulates dissolved solids over time — minerals from the source water, chemicals from sanitizing treatments, and organic compounds from bathers. These dissolved solids are measured as Total Dissolved Solids (TDS).

As TDS rises, water becomes harder to balance, chemicals become less effective, and the water may develop an irritating quality for bathers. No chemical treatment can reverse rising TDS — the only solution is to drain and replace the water.

How Often to Drain and Refill

The standard recommendation for most hot tubs is a complete drain and refill every 3 to 4 months. This timeframe assumes moderate bather load — a couple or family using the spa several times per week.

Spas with higher bather loads accumulate dissolved solids faster and may need draining every 2 to 3 months. Spas used infrequently by a single person may be able to extend the interval slightly, though the 3-month guideline is a reasonable default for most New Brunswick owners.

Salt Water System Considerations

Salt water system users produce chlorine from dissolved salt rather than adding chlorine directly — which means no chlorine compounds accumulate in the water over time. However, salt itself and other dissolved solids still accumulate. Salt water system users should monitor TDS levels and drain when they reach the threshold recommended for their system, which may be slightly longer than the standard interval but is not indefinite.

The Drain and Refill Process

Before draining: add a plumbing flush product and run the jets for 15 to 30 minutes to clean biofilm from the internal plumbing lines. This is done before the water is removed so the flush product can do its work before the pipes are empty.

Drain the spa completely through the drain valve or with a submersible pump. Clean the shell surfaces, headrests, and jets while the spa is empty. Rinse all surfaces thoroughly before refilling.

Refill with clean water, adding a metal sequestrant at startup if your source water has high mineral content. Balance pH and alkalinity before adding sanitizer, then allow the spa to heat before use.

Freeze Risk During Draining in New Brunswick

In New Brunswick, draining your hot tub in winter requires careful timing and attention to freeze risk. A spa that is drained in cold weather must be refilled and the heating system reactivated before temperatures drop enough to freeze residual water in the plumbing.

The safest approach for winter draining: choose a mild day when temperatures are above 0C, drain and clean quickly, and refill within a few hours. Do not drain and leave the spa empty overnight in freezing conditions.

Some owners prefer to schedule their drain and refill for spring and fall to avoid the winter freeze risk entirely.

Cleaning During the Drain

An empty spa is the opportunity to perform cleaning tasks that are impractical with water in the spa: cleaning the waterline ring from the shell with appropriate cleaner, cleaning individual jets, cleaning headrests, and rinsing the filter thoroughly or replacing it if it is due for replacement.

This is also the time to inspect the shell for any cracks, chips, or abnormalities that should be addressed before the spa is refilled and operational again.

First Fill After Draining

After filling, allow the spa to heat to operating temperature before adding sanitizer chemicals. Once at temperature, balance pH first (target 7.2 to 7.8), then total alkalinity (80 to 120 ppm), then add your sanitizer to initial dose. Wait several hours and test again before using the spa.

With salt water systems, add the recommended salt charge after filling, allow it to dissolve, and then activate the salt cell according to your system startup procedure.

Disposal of Spa Water

Drained hot tub water should not be discharged into storm drains or directly onto natural areas. In New Brunswick, municipal wastewater systems are typically the appropriate destination for drained spa water — through a laundry sink drain, clean-out access, or similar connection to the sanitary sewer.

If discharging to a yard or garden is the only option, ensure the water is dechlorinated before disposal. Chlorinated water at concentration will harm soil microbiota and plants.

New Brunswick Perspective

Owners who maintain a regular drain and refill schedule — every three months, on a calendar — consistently report easier water chemistry management and fewer problems between changes. The water simply behaves better when it is fresh, and the chemical investment between changes is more effective. Skipping drain cycles to avoid the effort usually costs more in chemical consumption and frustration than the drain and refill would have.

Frequently Asked Questions

Draining through the standard drain valve takes 1 to 2 hours for most models. Using a submersible pump speeds the process to 30 to 45 minutes. The complete drain and refill process, including cleaning and refilling, typically takes a full afternoon.
Yes, but with care. Choose a mild day above 0C, complete the process quickly, and have the spa refilled and heating within a few hours. Leaving a spa empty and unpowered overnight in freezing temperatures risks freeze damage to residual water in the plumbing.
Discharge to the municipal sanitary sewer system through a laundry sink or appropriate connection. If discharging to a yard, dechlorinate the water first. Do not discharge directly to storm drains, ditches, or water bodies.
Not necessarily. Salt water system users still accumulate TDS over time and should monitor TDS levels and drain when they reach the recommended threshold. The interval may be similar to or slightly longer than the standard 3-to-4-month guideline.
Signs include: difficulty maintaining proper chemistry despite correct chemical additions, persistent cloudiness, increasing TDS readings on a test meter, or water that feels irritating to skin or eyes despite balanced chemistry. When in doubt, drain and start fresh.
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