Not every crack in a commercial pool deck is a crisis, but every crack needs a decision. This guide walks you through how to identify what type of crack you are dealing with, which repairs you can handle in-house, and when the damage requires a licensed concrete contractor before your deck becomes a liability.
A cracked commercial pool deck in San Antonio is not just a cosmetic problem. It is a liability exposure, an ADA compliance concern, and the early warning sign of a repair bill that grows with every season you wait. Hotel pools, apartment complexes, HOA common areas, and aquatic centers all face the same reality: concrete in direct Texas sun expands, contracts, and eventually cracks. The question is not whether to repair it, but how to do it correctly.
This guide covers everything a property manager or facilities team needs to know about fixing cracks in a commercial pool deck, from the initial assessment that determines what kind of crack you are actually dealing with, to the step-by-step repair process for each crack type, to the cost expectations and the decision point between a DIY patch and a professional repair.
The single most common mistake in commercial pool deck crack repair is skipping assessment and going straight to a filler product. Surface patching a structural crack does not fix the problem. It hides it. Within one to two seasons, the crack reopens, often wider, and the patch separates, creating a new trip hazard on top of the original one. Before any repair material is applied, you need to know whether the crack is cosmetic shrinkage, active movement, or a symptom of base failure. That determination changes everything about the repair method, the materials used, and whether a licensed contractor needs to be involved.
Walk the entire deck surface before you commit to any repair approach. Cracks rarely appear in isolation, and the pattern they form tells you more about the cause than any single crack measurement. Mark every crack with chalk and photograph the full deck from above before you start. This documentation matters for insurance purposes and for tracking whether cracks are growing.
Hairline cracks (under 1/8" wide): Almost always cosmetic shrinkage cracks from the original cure or normal thermal cycling. No vertical displacement. Common in San Antonio due to the temperature swings between summer heat and cooler evenings. These can be surface-filled.
Medium cracks (1/8" to 1/4" wide): Require more thorough preparation and a flexible polyurethane or epoxy filler. Check carefully for vertical displacement before deciding on a DIY repair versus professional work.
Wide or structural cracks (over 1/4"): Mandatory professional assessment before any repair. Likely indicates base failure, soil settlement, or rebar corrosion. Surface patching alone will not hold.
| Crack characteristic | What it indicates | Repair path |
|---|---|---|
| Under 1/8" wide, flat, stable | Normal shrinkage or thermal cycling | DIY surface filler, then seal |
| 1/8" to 1/4" wide, no vertical offset | Moderate movement, drying shrinkage, or joint failure | Professional prep and flexible epoxy or polyurethane injection |
| Over 1/4" wide, any width | Probable structural or base failure | Licensed contractor assessment required before repair |
| Vertical displacement (one side higher) | Soil movement, erosion, or rebar-driven heaving | Structural repair, potential slab lifting or mudjacking |
| Radial or star pattern | Impact damage or point load failure | Remove damaged section, patch or partial slab replacement |
| Cracks running parallel to pool edge | Hydrostatic pressure or pool shell movement | Pool structural engineer evaluation before concrete repair |
| Network of small connected cracks (map cracking) | Alkali-silica reaction or poor original mix design | Full resurfacing, not individual crack filling |
- Full deck walk-through completed, all cracks marked and photographed
- Each crack measured for width: hairline, medium, or structural category confirmed
- Vertical displacement checked: place a straightedge across the crack to detect any height difference
- Crack pattern noted: linear, radial, map cracking, or parallel to pool edge
- Any cracks over 1/4" wide or with displacement flagged for licensed contractor assessment
- Pool area barricaded if any structural cracks or trip hazards are present
Pool decks are exposed to water, sunscreen, algae, pool chemicals, and foot traffic constantly. All of that contamination lives inside the crack, and if it is not removed before repair material is applied, the bond between the filler and the existing concrete fails quickly. Preparation is not the optional first step. It is the step that determines whether the repair holds for ten years or ten months.
Crack routing for hairline cracks: Hairline cracks are too narrow for most filler products to penetrate and bond properly. A crack router or angle grinder with a diamond blade is used to widen the crack to approximately 1/4" wide by 1/4" deep, creating a uniform channel that gives the repair material enough surface area to bond. This step is skipped by many DIY repairs, and it is one of the main reasons pool deck crack patches fail early.
Cleaning the crack interior: After routing, use a wire brush and compressed air to remove all dust, debris, and organic material from inside the crack. For pool decks with algae growth inside cracks, a diluted muriatic acid wash followed by thorough rinsing and drying may be needed. The interior of the crack must be completely dry before any filler product is applied. In San Antonio's summer heat, this typically takes one to two hours in direct sun after pressure washing.
Time prep around the weather, not around convenience: In San Antonio, the best time to schedule commercial pool deck crack repairs is early morning on a day with no rain forecast for 48 hours. The concrete needs to be dry at repair time and stay dry through initial cure. Afternoon repairs in summer are workable but require faster-setting products because the heat accelerates cure time, which can reduce bond strength if the material skins over before it has fully penetrated the crack.
- Full deck pressure-washed, crack interiors cleaned of all debris and organic growth
- Hairline cracks routed or ground to 1/4" wide by 1/4" deep using a crack router or grinder
- All loose or delaminating concrete removed with a chisel; edges are sound and clean
- Wire brush used on crack interior, followed by compressed air to remove all dust
- Surface allowed to dry completely before any filler is applied, minimum two hours in direct sun
- No rain in the forecast for at least 48 hours from repair time
Using the wrong repair product is as damaging to your outcome as skipping prep. Rigid cementitious patching compounds applied to cracks that are still moving will crack again within a season. Flexible polyurethane sealants applied to deep structural cracks do not provide adequate load transfer. Material selection must match the crack type identified in Step 1.
Application process for polyurea or epoxy crack filler: Pour or inject the material from one end of the crack to the other in a single continuous pass. Overfill slightly and let it cure to the manufacturer's specified time. Once cured, use a grinder or belt sander to knock the filler flush with the surrounding deck surface. The crack should be invisible at walking height. If the repair area will receive a coating or resurfacer, apply that over the filled crack within the coating product's recoat window.
- Repair product selected based on crack type: polyurea for hairlines, epoxy for stable medium cracks, polyurethane for moving joints
- Product verified as compatible with pool environment (check product data sheet)
- Bonding agent or primer applied to crack interior per manufacturer instructions, where required
- Filler applied in one continuous pass, slightly overfilled to allow for grinding flush
- Cure time observed per product data sheet before grinding or sanding flush
- Repaired area checked for flush finish at standing height before moving to sealing
When a crack has vertical displacement, when sections of the deck have settled or heaved, or when the crack pattern covers more than 15 to 20 percent of the deck surface, surface repair alone is not the right answer. These conditions indicate that the problem is in the base or subgrade, not just the concrete surface. Filling the visible crack without addressing what caused it is a temporary fix that will cost more in the long run.
Slab lifting and foam injection (polyjacking): For settled sections where one side of a crack is lower than the other, polyurethane foam is injected through small drilled holes beneath the slab. The foam expands and lifts the settled section back to grade. Faster than mudjacking and less disruptive to the surrounding deck. Standard turnaround for commercial pools is one day with a 15-minute reopen window after injection.
Mudjacking (slabjacking): A cement-soil-water slurry is pumped beneath the settled slab to lift it. More affordable than polyjacking but heavier, which can cause issues in areas with poor subgrade. Effective for large settled sections.
Partial slab replacement: When a section of deck is beyond repair, that section is saw-cut at the nearest control joints, the old concrete is removed, the base is inspected and corrected, and new concrete is poured to match the surrounding deck thickness. Color matching is imperfect on partial replacements, but it is the correct structural fix when a section has failed. In San Antonio's climate, partial replacements are common around pool equipment pads and at the pool edge where water infiltration is highest.
Full resurfacing as structural repair: When cracking is widespread and the underlying slab is still structurally sound but the surface is deteriorated, a bonded concrete overlay or polymer resurfacing system applied over the full deck addresses both the aesthetic and the water infiltration issues at once. This is typically the most cost-effective option when more than 20 percent of the deck surface shows cracking or spalling.
The repair versus replace decision point for San Antonio commercial decks: If individual crack repairs cost more than $4 to $5 per square foot over more than a third of the deck, full resurfacing at $6 to $10 per square foot typically makes more financial sense. You get a uniform surface, a fresh warranty, and you address all of the cracks at once rather than chasing them one by one each season.
- Licensed contractor assessment completed for any crack over 1/4" or with vertical displacement
- Subgrade condition evaluated before any surface repair begins
- Slab lifting option evaluated if settled sections are present and the concrete is otherwise sound
- Saw-cut replacement considered for localized sections with severe cracking or rebar corrosion
- Full resurfacing evaluated if widespread cracking covers more than 20% of deck area
- Pool closure timeline confirmed with operations team before structural repair begins
Every commercial pool deck crack repair, regardless of the method used, should be finished with a penetrating sealer or surface coating appropriate for wet environments. Unsealed repairs allow water to re-enter the repaired crack immediately, beginning the freeze-thaw and chemical deterioration cycle again. In San Antonio, even with mild winters, pool chemicals and UV exposure are aggressive enough on unsealed concrete to degrade a repair within two to three seasons.
Anti-slip requirements for commercial pool decks: Texas Health and Safety Code and local Bexar County requirements mandate slip-resistant surfaces on all commercial pool decks. Any sealer or coating applied to a commercial pool deck must include an anti-slip additive, typically aluminum oxide or silica sand broadcast into the wet coating. This is not optional on a commercial facility. If you are having crack repair work done professionally, confirm in writing that the contractor's sealer spec includes an approved anti-slip treatment.
Preventing future cracks: The best crack prevention on a commercial pool deck in San Antonio is a combination of a well-maintained sealer schedule, functional expansion joints, and control over pooling water. Water that sits on the deck surface instead of draining finds its way into existing micro-cracks and accelerates deterioration. Confirm that all deck drains are clear and flowing, and that the deck slope toward drains is at least 1/8 inch per foot. Standing water on a commercial pool deck is both a crack accelerant and a slip liability.
- All repaired areas cured to manufacturer spec before sealer is applied
- Penetrating sealer or surface coating appropriate for wet/pool environments selected
- Anti-slip additive confirmed in the sealer spec (required for commercial pool decks in Texas)
- Full deck sealed, not just the repaired areas, to maintain uniform protection
- All deck drains verified clear and functional; standing water eliminated before reopening
- Deck slope toward drains confirmed at minimum 1/8" per foot
- Resealing schedule set on calendar: every 2 to 3 years for coated surfaces, 3 to 5 years for penetrating sealers
Commercial pool deck repair costs in San Antonio vary significantly based on crack severity, deck size, accessibility, and whether the pool must be taken offline. The table below reflects typical professional contractor pricing in Bexar County for 2026. DIY material costs are noted where applicable.
| Repair type | Crack category | Professional cost (San Antonio) | DIY material cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| Polyurea hairline crack fill and seal | Hairline, stable | $3–5/sqft or $150–400 minimum call | $30–80 for filler kit |
| Epoxy injection, medium cracks | Medium, stable | $5–10/linear ft per crack | $50–120 per kit (2-part) |
| Polyurethane joint re-sealing | Moving joints | $3–6/linear ft | $15–40 per tube |
| Polyjacking (slab lifting) | Structural, settled | $5–25/sqft of lifted slab | Not DIY-appropriate |
| Partial concrete replacement | Structural, severe | $12–20/sqft of replaced section | Not DIY-appropriate |
| Full deck resurfacing (bonded overlay) | Widespread cracking | $6–12/sqft of full deck | Not DIY-appropriate |
| Sealing after repair (penetrating) | All types | $1–2/sqft | $40–120 per gallon (covers 200–400 sqft) |
Minimum call-out fees apply for commercial concrete repair in San Antonio: Most licensed concrete contractors in Bexar County have a minimum service call fee of $150 to $400 for commercial work, regardless of the repair size. If you have multiple small cracks to address, it is almost always more cost-effective to schedule all repairs in a single visit rather than calling a contractor out separately for each crack as it appears. Preventive annual inspections with a repair contractor before the busy summer pool season are the standard approach for HOA pools, hotel pools, and apartment complexes with 20 or more units.
- Full deck photographed and all cracks marked before any repair work begins
- Each crack categorized: hairline, medium, structural, or spalling
- Any crack over 1/4" wide or with vertical displacement flagged for licensed contractor assessment
- Trip hazards barricaded and pool area closed to the public during repair
- Insurance and incident documentation completed if any trip hazard was identified
- Full deck pressure-washed and crack interiors cleaned of all debris
- Hairline cracks routed to 1/4" wide and 1/4" deep using appropriate equipment
- All loose concrete removed, crack edges sound and clean
- Surface completely dry before any filler product applied
- No rain forecast for at least 48 hours from repair start time
- Repair product selected based on crack type and movement status
- Product verified as safe for use adjacent to pool environments
- Structural cracks referred to a licensed contractor, not patched with surface filler
- Repaired areas ground flush with surrounding deck surface after curing
- Anti-slip sealer or coating applied over all repaired areas and full deck
- Anti-slip additive confirmed in sealer specification (required for commercial pools in Texas)
- All deck drains clear and functional; standing water eliminated
- Texas DSHS notification confirmed if structural repair or resurfacing altered drainage or barriers
- Resealing schedule documented and set on the facility maintenance calendar
Get a free commercial pool deck repair quote in San Antonio
Tell us about your deck, the cracks you are seeing, and the size of the affected area. We will assess the damage, identify the correct repair method, and give you a detailed written quote at no cost.









