How San Antonio Heat Damages Commercial Pool Decks

How San Antonio Heat Damages Commercial Pool Decks

How San Antonio Heat Damages Commercial Pool Decks | Affordable Concrete San Antonio
Commercial Pool Deck Guide | San Antonio, TX

San Antonio averages over 220 sunny days per year and routinely hits surface temperatures above 150 degrees Fahrenheit on unshaded concrete. If your commercial pool deck is cracking, fading, or flaking, the heat is almost certainly to blame, and understanding exactly how it works is the first step toward stopping it.

Commercial pool deck repair San Antonio Heat damage concrete pool deck UV damage · Thermal cracking · Spalling Hotels · Apartment Complexes · HOAs Updated 2026
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Affordable Concrete San Antonio | Editorial Team
With over 10 years of residential and commercial concrete experience in San Antonio and the surrounding areas, our team has completed thousands of driveways, patios, pool decks, and commercial slabs across Bexar County. Every guide we publish reflects real on-the-ground expertise, not generic contractor advice.
· affordableconcretesanantonio.com · Licensed & Insured · $2M Liability Coverage
Part of our complete commercial pool deck guide
Commercial Pool Deck Guide: Repair, Resurface & Design (2026)
100+°F
Air temperature San Antonio routinely exceeds during peak summer months
150+°F
Concrete surface temperature on an unshaded pool deck in direct San Antonio sun
220+
Average sunny days per year in San Antonio, one of the highest totals in Texas
3–5yrs
Typical window before heat-related damage becomes visible on an unsealed commercial deck

Commercial pool decks in San Antonio are exposed to one of the most punishing combinations of climate stress in the entire United States. The combination of extreme heat, intense UV radiation, repeated thermal cycling, and frequent water contact creates a set of damage mechanisms that work together to degrade concrete faster than almost any other environment in the country.

Property managers at hotels, apartment complexes, and HOAs often assume that cracking and surface deterioration are simply signs of old age. In most cases, the damage is heat-driven and preventable. Understanding exactly what is happening to your deck at the surface and structural level makes the difference between a $3,000 repair today and a $30,000 full replacement in three years.

The core principle: heat damage is cumulative, not sudden

Commercial pool deck deterioration in San Antonio does not happen overnight. Every summer season adds thermal stress, UV degradation, and moisture intrusion that compounds on the previous year's damage. A deck that looks acceptable at year three may be structurally compromised at year five and require full replacement by year seven. Catching heat damage early, and understanding which type of damage you are dealing with, determines whether you spend a few thousand dollars on targeted repair or tens of thousands on demolition and repour. This guide breaks down each damage mechanism in plain terms so you can identify what you are seeing and act at the right time.

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Five ways heat destroys commercial pool decks
How San Antonio's climate attacks concrete from every angle
01
Thermal expansion and contraction cracking
The daily heating and cooling cycle tears concrete apart from within
Thermal Damage

Concrete expands when it heats up and contracts when it cools down. In San Antonio, the daily temperature swing between an early morning low and a peak afternoon high during summer can exceed 30 degrees Fahrenheit. On the surface of an unshaded pool deck, that swing translates to a surface temperature change of 60 to 80 degrees or more between sunrise and mid-afternoon.

Concrete moves a measurable amount with every one of those cycles. A 100-foot pool deck expands and contracts by roughly half an inch across its length with every major temperature change. If that movement has nowhere to go, the concrete builds up internal stress until it cracks. This is why expansion joints exist, and why decks poured without adequate joint spacing, or with joints that were never properly maintained, crack predictably within a few years of installation in this climate.

⚠️ San Antonio-specific risk: The thermal cycling on a commercial pool deck here is far more aggressive than in most U.S. cities. A pool deck in Chicago experiences freeze-thaw cycling in winter but relatively mild summer temperatures. San Antonio's pool decks cycle aggressively for nine or more months per year, with no real seasonal rest period for the concrete to recover. The cumulative stress adds up quickly.
Symptom: Straight cracks running across the deck surface at regular intervals Symptom: Cracks appearing near the edges of the slab first Symptom: Cracks that widen slightly in the morning and close in the afternoon heat Root cause: Insufficient expansion joints or failed joint sealant

The fix for thermal cracking depends on severity. Hairline cracks under a quarter of an inch are typically addressed with polyurea or epoxy injection and a fresh sealer coat. Wider cracks with displacement indicate that the underlying joint system has failed and require saw-cutting new control joints, filling the damaged area, and resealing the entire deck surface.

Pro tip

Inspect expansion joints every spring before pool season opens: Joint sealant in San Antonio degrades faster than the manufacturer's rated lifespan because of the UV intensity here. A joint that was filled with quality sealant three years ago may be cracked, hardened, or missing entirely by now. Refilling joints with fresh backer rod and polyurethane sealant before the summer season costs very little and prevents the cracking that leads to expensive structural repairs.

Thermal cracking warning signs
  • Straight cracks running perpendicular to the length of the deck, spaced 8 to 15 feet apart
  • Cracked, missing, or hardened expansion joint sealant along control joint lines
  • Cracks that appear every spring after the first major heat surge of the season
  • Vertical displacement along a crack line, with one side of the crack higher than the other
  • Cracks that have widened since the last inspection season
02
UV radiation damage and surface degradation
220-plus days of direct sun breaks down sealers, coatings, and the concrete paste itself
UV Damage

Ultraviolet radiation does not just fade colors. At the intensity levels San Antonio receives year-round, UV breaks down the polymer chains in concrete sealers and decorative coatings, degrading their ability to repel water and protect the surface below. An acrylic sealer applied to a commercial pool deck in San Antonio has a real-world effective lifespan of 18 to 24 months, not the 3 to 5 years listed on the product label, because the label was written for average U.S. sun exposure, not south Texas.

Once the sealer is compromised, UV begins acting directly on the concrete paste itself. The cement matrix that binds the aggregate together slowly carbonates and weakens under prolonged UV exposure, causing the surface to become chalky and powdery. This process is called dusting, and it accelerates sharply once the sealer fails. A dusty, chalky surface is not just a cosmetic problem. It means the concrete's protective skin is eroding, and every gallon of pool water, chemical splash, or rain event now penetrates deeper into the slab than it should.

Symptom: Faded, washed-out color on a previously stained or colored deck Symptom: Chalky white powder residue on the surface that rubs off on hands or shoes Symptom: Sealer peeling in sheets or flaking at the edges of the deck Symptom: Water no longer beads on the surface when poured on the deck

The repair approach for UV degradation depends on how far the damage has progressed. If the sealer has failed but the concrete surface is still intact, cleaning the deck, applying a light diamond grind to remove the degraded paste layer, and resealing with a commercial-grade penetrating sealer will restore protection. If the surface has dusted significantly, resurfacing with a cementitious overlay or spray texture coat before resealing is the correct approach.

Product tip

Not all sealers are equal for San Antonio conditions: Consumer-grade acrylic sealers from hardware stores are formulated for average climates. For a commercial pool deck in Bexar County, specify either a penetrating silane-siloxane sealer for raw concrete surfaces or a commercial-grade polyurethane topcoat for decorative or resurfaced decks. Both outperform standard acrylics by a wide margin under continuous UV and heat exposure. Ask your contractor for the specific product name and spec sheet, not just "a good sealer."

UV damage warning signs
  • Deck color has faded significantly since original installation or last resurfacing
  • Surface feels chalky or powdery when rubbed with a dry hand
  • Water applied to the deck soaks in immediately rather than beading up
  • Sealer is flaking, peeling, or showing whitish haze in direct sun
  • Sealer was last applied more than two years ago on a south-facing or fully exposed deck
03
Spalling: when the surface begins to pop, flake, and delaminate
Heat-driven moisture cycling causes the top layer of concrete to separate and break away
Spalling

Spalling is the condition where chunks, flakes, or layers of the concrete surface break away from the slab. On a commercial pool deck, it is one of the most common and most misdiagnosed forms of heat damage. Most property managers assume spalling is caused by freeze-thaw damage, which is the leading cause in northern climates. In San Antonio, the mechanism is different: it is driven by the combination of water penetration and rapid heat evaporation.

Here is what happens. Pool water, rain, and chemical overspray penetrate an unsealed or under-sealed deck surface and saturate the top inch or two of the concrete. When the summer sun heats the deck surface to 140 or 150 degrees Fahrenheit, that absorbed moisture converts to steam faster than it can escape through the concrete's pores. The trapped steam pressure builds up below the surface and forces off pieces of the concrete skin above it. The result is the cratered, pitted, or flaking surface that property managers across San Antonio know well.

⚠️ Pool chemical accelerant: Chlorine, bromine, and pH-adjustment chemicals that splash or drain onto the deck surface worsen spalling significantly. These chemicals are mildly corrosive to concrete and degrade the cement paste that holds aggregate in place. Over time, the combination of chemical attack and steam pressure causes spalling to progress much faster on pool decks than on other concrete surfaces exposed to the same heat levels.
Early
stage 1
Surface pitting and hairline pop-outs: Small craters less than half an inch across. The concrete surface looks rough and pitted but no large sections have broken away. Repairable with patching compound and reseal.
Mid
stage 2
Surface delamination in patches: Sections of the top quarter to half inch have broken away in irregular patches, exposing the aggregate below. The deck surface is uneven and a trip hazard. Requires resurfacing with cementitious overlay before resealing.
Advanced
stage 3
Structural spalling with rebar exposure: Spalling has penetrated deep enough to expose rebar or reinforcing mesh. Rust staining is visible on the surface. Requires full-depth patching or section replacement. If widespread, full demolition and repour may be the only viable option.

The timeline from early pitting to structural spalling in San Antonio is typically three to five years on an unmaintained deck. Regular sealing, prompt patching of early-stage craters, and keeping chemical splash areas clean extends that window significantly. Once rebar is exposed, the clock moves faster because moisture is now rusting the steel, which expands and accelerates the spalling from below.

Spalling warning signs
  • Small craters or pop-outs across the deck surface. Even a handful are a warning that more are coming
  • Irregular patches where the top layer of concrete has flaked away and the aggregate is visible
  • Rust-colored staining on the deck surface, which signals rebar corrosion below
  • Any section where the deck surface sounds hollow when tapped with a hard object
  • Ongoing use of deck without any sealer application in the last two years
04
Pool chemical deterioration accelerated by heat
Chlorine and pH chemicals attack concrete faster when temperatures are high
Chemical Damage

Concrete is alkaline by nature. Pool chemicals, particularly chlorine products and pH-down chemicals like muriatic acid, are either mildly acidic or chemically aggressive to the calcium compounds in concrete. At normal temperatures, this reaction is slow enough that a well-sealed deck can resist it for many years. In San Antonio's summer heat, the chemical reaction rate increases significantly, and the combination of high temperature and frequent chemical contact accelerates surface deterioration in ways that are rarely obvious until the damage is already extensive.

The most common pattern is along the pool coping edge and any areas where overflow water drains across the deck. These zones see concentrated chemical contact and are also the hottest parts of the deck in direct sun. Etching, roughening of the surface texture, and accelerated color fading all appear in these areas first before spreading across the rest of the deck.

High-risk zones: Pool coping edges and overflow drain paths High-risk zones: Areas below pool chemical storage or mixing stations High-risk zones: Any section with a drainage slope issue where water pools High-risk zones: Shallow end steps and tanning ledge surrounds
Chemical type Effect on concrete surface Heat multiplier effect
Chlorine (liquid or tablet) Gradual bleaching of sealers and decorative coatings; surface etching with repeated contact Reaction rate roughly doubles for every 18 degrees Fahrenheit of temperature increase
Muriatic acid (pH down) Direct chemical etching of the cement paste; removes surface material with each contact event Even dilute concentrations act more aggressively on hot surfaces than on cool ones
Algaecides and clarifiers Generally low concrete impact; some formulations can stain unsealed surfaces Faster evaporation on hot deck surfaces leaves concentrated residue behind
Calcium hypochlorite (shock) Strong oxidizer; can bleach and degrade polymer-based coatings rapidly Granules that land on a hot dry deck surface can cause localized etching within hours
Management tip

Rinse the deck immediately after any chemical addition to the pool: The most effective and cheapest protection against chemical deterioration is a simple operational practice. Any time shock, pH chemicals, or algaecide is added to the pool, a brief rinse of the surrounding deck surface with fresh water dilutes any splash or overspray before it can sit on hot concrete and etch the surface. This takes about two minutes and costs nothing. It extends the life of both the sealer and the underlying concrete significantly.

Chemical damage warning signs
  • Roughened or etched texture along the pool coping edge that differs from the rest of the deck surface
  • Accelerated color fading concentrated near pool edges compared to the far perimeter of the deck
  • White calcium deposits or staining that cannot be removed with standard deck cleaning
  • Pitting concentrated in areas where overflow water regularly crosses the deck
  • Sealer in the coping zone failing at a faster rate than the rest of the deck
05
Subbase failure from heat-driven soil shrinkage
San Antonio's expansive clay soils shrink during drought and create voids that collapse concrete
Structural

Every other damage mechanism on this list attacks the concrete from the surface down. Subbase failure attacks it from the bottom up, and it is the most expensive category of heat-related damage because it cannot be fixed with resurfacing or resealing. When the soil beneath a commercial pool deck fails, sections of the slab lose support, flex under load, and eventually crack or collapse entirely.

In San Antonio, the primary driver of subbase failure is the clay-heavy Vertisol soil that dominates Bexar County. These soils are highly expansive: they swell significantly when wet and shrink substantially when dry. During extended heat and drought periods, which San Antonio experiences regularly, the soil beneath a pool deck can shrink enough to create voids several inches deep directly under the slab. The concrete spans those voids for a while, but concrete is not designed to bridge unsupported spans under foot traffic and furniture loads. The slab eventually cracks, settles unevenly, or collapses into the void.

⚠️ 2023 drought impact still being felt: The severe drought conditions that gripped San Antonio and Bexar County in 2022 and 2023 caused significant subbase shrinkage across the region. Many commercial pool decks that cracked in 2024 and 2025 are showing damage that originated in those drought years, when the clay beneath them shrank and created the voids that are now causing structural failures. If your deck was poured before 2022 and has never had a professional assessment, the subbase condition should be evaluated before the next repair or resurfacing decision.
Symptom: Sections of deck that sound hollow when tapped Symptom: Cracks with vertical displacement (one side higher than the other) Symptom: Visible settlement or unevenness across the deck surface Symptom: Cracks that reappear quickly after being filled

Diagnosing subbase failure requires a professional inspection. An experienced contractor will sound the deck by tapping sections with a steel rod to identify hollow areas, and may use ground-penetrating radar on larger commercial decks to map void locations without breaking anything open. If the voids are limited in scope, slab lifting with polyurethane foam injection can fill them and stabilize the deck at a fraction of the cost of demolition. If the subbase has failed across a significant portion of the deck, full removal and repour with a properly engineered compacted limestone base is the only durable solution.

Subbase failure warning signs
  • Sections of the deck that produce a hollow sound when tapped with a hard object
  • Cracks where one slab section sits higher or lower than the adjacent section
  • Visible unevenness or rocking in the deck surface when weight shifts across it
  • Cracks that were filled in a previous season but have reopened in the same location
  • The deck was installed before 2022 with no professional subbase inspection since the regional drought
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What repairs cost in San Antonio
Heat damage repair cost guide for commercial pool decks

The earlier damage is caught, the lower the repair cost. The table below reflects typical commercial pool deck repair pricing in the San Antonio market as of 2026. Final costs vary based on deck size, access conditions, and the extent of damage found during inspection.

Repair type Typical cost range Best candidate
Expansion joint refill (full deck) $800 to $2,500 Joints cracked or missing sealant; no active structural cracking present
Crack injection and reseal $1,500 to $4,000 Hairline to quarter-inch cracks with no displacement; sealer failed or degraded
Spot patch and reseal $2,000 to $6,000 Localized spalling, pitting, or surface pop-outs covering less than 20 percent of deck area
Full deck resurfacing with overlay $5 to $10 per square foot Widespread surface degradation, UV fading, or early-stage spalling across the deck
Polyurethane foam slab lifting $3,000 to $8,000 Settled or hollow sections caused by subbase voids; concrete structurally intact
Partial section demolition and repour $12 to $20 per square foot Localized structural failure or rebar exposure in a defined deck zone
Full deck demolition and repour $18 to $30 per square foot Widespread subbase failure, structural cracking throughout, or advanced spalling with rebar exposure
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Commercial pool deck maintenance checklist for San Antonio property managers
Complete these tasks on schedule to prevent heat damage from becoming a replacement event
Spring (before pool season opens)
  • Walk the full deck perimeter and interior and note any new cracks, spalling, or surface changes since last inspection
  • Tap suspicious sections with a steel object to check for hollow spots indicating subbase voids
  • Inspect all expansion joints for cracked, missing, or hardened sealant and schedule refill if needed
  • Test the sealer condition by pouring a small amount of water onto the deck: if it soaks in rather than beading, resealing is overdue
  • Schedule any crack injection, patching, or resealing work before opening the pool to avoid losing revenue days mid-season
During pool season (monthly)
  • Rinse the deck surface immediately after any chemical addition to the pool to prevent hot-surface chemical etching
  • Keep the deck surface clean of algae, calcium deposits, and organic debris that hold moisture against the concrete
  • Note any new cracks or spalling that appear during the season for fall inspection and repair
  • Ensure deck drainage is functioning correctly and no water is pooling on the surface for extended periods
Fall (after pool season closes)
  • Conduct a full inspection of the deck before the end of the year and compile a repair list for winter scheduling
  • Apply a fresh coat of commercial-grade sealer if the water bead test indicates the current sealer has failed
  • Fill any cracks identified during the season before winter temperature changes widen them further
  • Document the deck condition with photos each fall to establish a baseline for tracking deterioration rate over time
Every 3 to 5 years
  • Schedule a professional concrete inspection that includes subbase sounding and a written condition report
  • Evaluate whether resurfacing with a cementitious overlay is appropriate before surface degradation requires full replacement
  • Review the original installation specs and confirm expansion joint spacing and slab thickness are adequate for the current usage level
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Common questions answered
Frequently asked questions about heat damage on commercial pool decks
Q
How do I know if my pool deck cracks are from heat damage or something more serious?
Hairline cracks that run straight across the deck at somewhat regular intervals are almost always thermal expansion cracks, a surface problem caused by the lack of adequate expansion joints or failed joint sealant. These are repairable. Cracks that show vertical displacement (one side of the crack is higher than the other), cracks that spread in a map or spider-web pattern, or cracks that reappear immediately after being filled all point to a structural issue, typically subbase failure from soil movement. The distinction matters because a surface crack costs a few hundred dollars to fill, while a structural crack may require section replacement or full demolition. When in doubt, have a professional tap the deck for hollow areas and give you a written assessment before committing to any repair approach.
Q
How often does a commercial pool deck in San Antonio need to be resealed?
More often than the sealer label says. Consumer and contractor-grade acrylic sealers are rated for 3 to 5 years in average climates. In San Antonio, with over 220 days of direct sun, UV radiation degrades most acrylic sealer products in 18 to 24 months on a fully exposed commercial deck. Penetrating silane-siloxane sealers last longer because they do not form a surface film that can peel. They penetrate and hydrophobe the concrete from within, but even these benefit from a fresh application every 2 to 3 years in this climate. The easiest test: pour a cup of water on the deck surface. If it soaks in within 30 seconds rather than beading up and sitting on the surface, the sealer has failed and it is time to reseal.
Q
Can a spalled commercial pool deck be resurfaced, or does it need to be replaced?
It depends on how deep the spalling has gone. Early-stage spalling (surface pitting, small craters, and localized flaking in the top quarter inch) is an excellent candidate for resurfacing with a cementitious overlay or a spray-applied texture coat. These products bond to the existing concrete and create a fresh, durable surface at a fraction of the cost of full replacement. Mid-stage spalling where large sections have broken away and the aggregate is widely exposed can also be resurfaced in many cases, though the preparation work is more extensive. Once spalling has progressed to the point where rebar is exposed and rust staining is visible, resurfacing alone is not sufficient. The compromised sections need to be cut out, the rebar treated for corrosion, and the area filled with structural-grade repair mortar before any overlay is applied. If rebar exposure is widespread across the deck, full replacement is usually the more economical long-term choice.
Q
My pool deck feels hot enough to burn feet in summer. Does that mean it is being damaged by heat, or just uncomfortable to walk on?
Both. Unshaded concrete in San Antonio can reach surface temperatures of 140 to 160 degrees Fahrenheit in peak summer, hot enough to cause burns on bare feet in seconds and hot enough to accelerate every damage mechanism described in this guide. A very hot surface temperature by itself does not mean the deck is currently damaged, but it does mean the concrete is under significant thermal stress every day. If your deck consistently reaches those temperatures, it is especially important to maintain the sealer in good condition, keep expansion joints filled, and inspect for early-stage spalling each spring. Light-colored sealers and concrete finishes absorb less heat than dark ones, which can reduce peak surface temperatures by 10 to 20 degrees. That is a meaningful difference for both safety and long-term concrete health.
Q
Is it worth resurfacing a commercial pool deck, or should we just replace it?
Resurfacing is worth it when the concrete slab below is structurally sound. If the subbase is stable, the slab is not heaving or settling, and the damage is limited to the top layer of the concrete (spalling, UV fading, surface cracking, or chemical etching), a quality resurfacing job with a cementitious overlay can add 10 to 15 years of service life to the deck at roughly 20 to 30 percent of the cost of full replacement. The decision point is the structural condition of the slab and subbase. A professional inspection that includes sounding for hollow areas, checking for heaving or settlement, and evaluating crack patterns will tell you whether resurfacing is a durable investment or just a cosmetic cover for a deck that needs to come out. We provide that assessment for free for commercial properties in the San Antonio area.
More from Affordable Concrete San Antonio
Explore more resources from Affordable Concrete SA with our related commercial pool deck guides. Find practical advice on repair, resurfacing, and design, learn how to fix common cracks, spot early signs your pool deck needs attention, and view our concrete pool deck services in San Antonio.

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Brandon Wyatt

Author: Home Improvement & Roofing Specialist

Brandon Wyatt is a home improvement specialist with extensive experience in residential roofing, storm damage restoration, and exterior home maintenance in San Antonio, Texas.

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