How much does it cost to run a pool pump? (2026–27)

At typical draw · official state tariffs

$0.27$0.42 per hour at 1,000 W

Typical household use — 7 h/day, 365 days a year at 1,000 W — runs $702$1,071 a year depending on your state's tariff.

Wattage basis: Canstar Blue average-draw table spans 513 W (small pool) to 1,605 W (very large); variable-speed pumps at optimal filtration run 200–500 W, old single-speed 1,800–2,500 W.

Pool pump running cost by state at typical draw (2026–27 reference tariffs)
StateTariff c/kWhPer hourTypical year
New South Wales33.1c$0.33$847
Victoria27.5c$0.27$702
Queensland28.0c$0.28$715
South Australia41.9c$0.42$1,071
Western Australia33.3c$0.33$850
Tasmania28.0c$0.28$714
Australian Capital Territory37.0c$0.37$944
Northern Territory31.7c$0.32$809

Appliance running-cost calculator

NSW

Pool pump: 3002,500 W typical range.

Filtration typically 6–8 h/day, longer in summer.

$0.33 per hour · $847/year at your settings
Per day (7 h)
$2.32
Per month
$70.52
Per year (365 days)
$846.66

Tariff: 33.1c/kWh — AER Default Market Offer 2026–27 (DMO 8) for the Ausgrid network, effective 1 July 2026. Wattage basis: Canstar Blue — pool pump running costs. Full pool pump costs in NSW

Cutting the cost

The pump is often the second-biggest load in the house. Run it during daylight if you have solar, or on any cheaper off-peak period, and split filtration into shorter blocks rather than running flat out all day. A variable-speed pump on a low setting cleans the same water for much less. Trim the run time through the cooler months when the pool sees little use.

Frequently asked questions

How is the running cost calculated?
Watts ÷ 1,000 × your electricity rate = cost per hour. A pool pump drawing 1,000 W on a 33.1c/kWh tariff costs $0.33 an hour — the calculator above lets you change every input.
Does a higher star rating cut the cost?
Yes — the star rating compresses the power draw or energy per use, which scales this page's figures directly. The low–high band in the table (3002,500 W) roughly spans efficient to inefficient models.
Why does the state matter?
The appliance draws the same power everywhere — but each state's reference usage rate differs, so the same hour of running costs $0.27 in the cheapest state and $0.42 in the dearest. Pick your state above for exact figures.

Related

Sources — figures current as at 17 July 2026.

Costs use each state's representative-zone reference usage rate, effective 1 July 2026. Filtration typically 6–8 h/day, longer in summer.