Miami Pool Services Providers

The providers assembled on this page catalog commercial pool service providers operating within Miami, Florida, organized by service category, facility type, and compliance function. Each provider is structured to help facility managers, property operators, and procurement staff identify qualified contractors without needing to evaluate raw search results. The scope spans maintenance, repair, inspection, equipment, chemical treatment, and renovation — covering the range of operational needs a commercial aquatic facility encounters under Florida regulatory requirements.


How Currency Is Maintained

Provider accuracy degrades over time when contractor licensing status, service scope, or contact details change. Florida contractor licenses are administered by the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR), which maintains a public license search tool that reflects active, expired, suspended, and revoked credentials in near-real time. Providers in this network are cross-referenced against DBPR records to flag providers whose licenses appear inactive or whose registered trade name differs from their public-facing identity.

Miami-Dade County's Department of Regulatory and Economic Resources (RER) administers local permitting, and contractor eligibility to pull permits in the county is a secondary verification point applied to providers in the construction and installation categories. A provider that cannot pull permits in Miami-Dade County cannot legally execute structural pool work, resurfacing, or equipment installation under Florida Building Code (FBC) Chapter 4 aquatic facility provisions.

Providers are reviewed on a rolling basis tied to DBPR license renewal cycles, which for pool contractor classifications run on a 24-month renewal schedule. Providers are removed or flagged when:

  1. DBPR license status shows "null and void," "delinquent," or "revoked"
  2. Miami-Dade RER records show an open code violation or permit non-compliance
  3. Florida Department of Health (FDOH) records reflect a pending enforcement action against a facility associated with the provider

No provider constitutes an endorsement. Currency verification is structural, not qualitative.


How to Use Providers Alongside Other Resources

Providers function as a starting point, not a complete due-diligence workflow. A facility operator sourcing a commercial pool maintenance provider should cross-reference the provider against DBPR's public database before initiating any contract discussion. For facilities subject to Florida Administrative Code Rule 64E-9 — which governs public swimming pools statewide — verification against FDOH inspection records adds a second independent data layer.

The Miami Commercial Pool Compliance and Regulations resource explains the regulatory framework that licensed providers must operate within, which helps operators understand what credentials and compliance documentation to request before signing a service contract. Providers verified under inspection services — see Miami Commercial Pool Inspection Services — hold separate certification requirements from maintenance contractors, and treating those two categories interchangeably is a common procurement error.

For capital projects — renovation, resurfacing, new equipment installation — the Miami-Dade County Pool Permit Requirements resource clarifies which project types require a permit pull and which licensed contractor classifications are authorized to apply for each permit type. Using a provider to identify a candidate contractor is only step one of a process that includes license verification, permit eligibility confirmation, insurance certificate review (Florida requires general liability minimums for commercial contractors), and scope-of-work alignment.


How Providers Are Organized

Providers are organized across four primary classification layers:

  1. Service type — maintenance, repair, inspection, chemical treatment, equipment installation, renovation, emergency services
  2. Facility type — hotel/resort, condominium association, gym/fitness center, school, municipal, resort/waterpark
  3. Compliance function — ADA compliance, drain and antivortex compliance, FDOH regulatory compliance, permit support
  4. Equipment category — filtration, pump and motor, heater, automation, lighting, salt chlorination, UV/ozone treatment

A provider may appear in more than one category if its documented service scope spans multiple classifications. Providers are not ranked within categories; alphabetical ordering by trade name is the default within each subcategory. Providers appearing under Miami Commercial Pool Contractors are those holding a certified pool/spa contractor license under Florida Statute 489, Part II — a distinct classification from specialty subcontractors who work under a general contractor's license.

The distinction between a certified contractor and a registered contractor is operationally significant: certified contractors hold statewide licensure valid in all Florida jurisdictions, while registered contractors hold local licensure valid only in the issuing jurisdiction. Facility operators in Miami hiring a registered contractor must confirm that the registration is specific to Miami-Dade County, not a neighboring county such as Broward or Palm Beach.


What Each Provider Covers

Each provider entry is structured to present the following discrete data points where verified:

  1. Trade name and legal entity name — as registered with DBPR or Miami-Dade RER
  2. License classification and number — citing the Florida statute section governing that license type
  3. License status — active, inactive, or flagged, per DBPR at time of last review
  4. Primary service categories — mapped to the four classification layers described above
  5. Facility types served — drawn from provider documentation, not self-reported claims
  6. Permit-pulling eligibility — confirmed against Miami-Dade RER contractor registration records
  7. Insurance status note — whether general liability coverage documentation is on file, not a coverage verification

Providers under specialty compliance categories — including Miami Commercial Pool ADA Compliance, Miami Commercial Pool Drain and Antivortex Compliance, and Miami Commercial Pool Safety Standards — include a notation of which specific regulatory standard the provider's services address. Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety Act (VGB Act) compliance, for example, is a federal requirement enforced at the facility level and is distinct from FDOH Rule 64E-9 state requirements; a provider under drain compliance will specify which standard the provider's scope addresses.

Providers do not include pricing, customer reviews, or performance ratings. The Miami Commercial Pool Service Cost Guide provides independent cost benchmarking separate from the provider index, and the Miami Commercial Pool Service Contracts resource covers contract structure considerations relevant to any provider engagement.


Scope, Coverage, and Limitations

This provider network covers commercial pool service providers operating within the City of Miami and Miami-Dade County, Florida. Florida Administrative Code Rule 64E-9 and the Florida Building Code are the primary regulatory instruments governing facilities and contractors within this scope. Providers or facilities located in Broward County (Fort Lauderdale area), Palm Beach County, or Monroe County are not covered by this provider network, even if those providers advertise Miami-area service. The geographic scope limitation reflects the jurisdictional specificity of Miami-Dade permitting records and FDOH district inspection data.

Residential pool contractors, pool supply retailers, and aquatic staffing agencies whose primary function is lifeguard placement rather than facility maintenance are outside the scope of this index. Facilities classified as private residential pools — including single-family and duplex properties — do not fall under Rule 64E-9 public pool requirements and are therefore not addressed by providers organized around commercial compliance categories. The Miami Commercial Pool Staffing and Lifeguard Services section addresses staffing providers as a distinct subset, separate from maintenance and repair contractor providers.

📜 2 regulatory citations referenced  ·  ✅ Citations verified Feb 25, 2026  ·  View update log

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