Licensing & compliance

Done right, by the book.

In Southern Nevada, how a pool is serviced and how its water is handled are regulated for good reasons — your safety and the valley's drinking water. Here's how we stay compliant, in plain English. It's also a quiet way to spot the difference between a real company and an unlicensed competitor.

Contractor licensing
NV State Contractors Board · Lic.# on request (placeholder)
Insurance & bond
Licensed, bonded & insured
Operator certification
CPO-qualified for HOA & commercial
Water handling
SNWA-compliant, sewer-safe draining

Note: license and policy numbers above are placeholders for this launch build and will be replaced with the company's verified credentials before go-live.

Pillar 1 · Contractor licensing

NSCB licensing & the $1,000 line.

In Nevada, building, repairing, altering, or improving a pool or spa for a fee requires a Nevada State Contractors Board (NSCB) license under NRS/NAC 624.

  • Routine cleaning is our lane. Sanitizing, balancing pH and chemicals, skimming, brushing, and emptying baskets generally don't require a contractor license — and that's exactly what we do every week.
  • Repairs go to a licensed pro. Equipment repair or replacement and structural pool work require a licensed contractor. The relevant classifications are A-10 (Commercial & Residential Swimming Pools — construction) and A-10E (Maintenance and Repair of Pools and Spas).
  • The $1,000 threshold. Any work where labor plus materials exceeds $1,000 must be done by a licensed contractor — that's the ceiling on Nevada's "handyman" exemption.
  • Written contracts. Residential pool/spa contracts over $1,000 must be written with plans, a phase schedule, and costs, with the down payment capped at the lesser of $1,000 or 10%.
  • We use licensed contractors for repairs and never quietly do over-threshold work unlicensed.

Verify any license. Use the NSCB online License Search, or call the Southern Nevada office at (702) 486-1100. We encourage you to check — it builds trust and protects you.

A friendly pool technician skimming the surface of a clean residential Las Vegas pool.
Pillar 2 · Water disposal

Drain to the sewer — never the street.

When a pool needs to be drained, where the water goes is the law in Southern Nevada — and it protects everyone's drinking water.

  • To the sanitary sewer. Pool and spa water must be drained to the sanitary sewer through the property's sewer clean-out, so it's recycled and treated.
  • De-chlorinated & controlled. Water is de-chlorinated and discharged at a controlled rate, following SNWA water-waste rules.
  • Streets & storm drains are off-limits. Draining to the street, gutter, or storm drain is illegal across the valley — Las Vegas, Clark County, Henderson, North Las Vegas, and Boulder City. Storm drains flow untreated to Lake Mead, the region's drinking-water source.
  • Real penalties. Fines range from about $40 up to $5,000 for repeat violations (for example, North Las Vegas can assess $500 per incident).

Our team drains to the clean-out, de-chlorinates, and follows SNWA rules on every job — no shortcuts that put your neighborhood or the lake at risk.

A pool technician testing pool water chemistry with a test kit beside crystal-clear water.
Pillar 3 · HOA & commercial

Qualified & CPO-certified operators.

Public and commercial pools answer to the Southern Nevada Health District (SNHD) Aquatic Health Program — and that means certified people on the job.

  • A qualified operator is required. HOAs, apartments, hotels, gyms, and community pools must be maintained by a Qualified Pool Operator — a certification meeting the CDC Model Aquatic Health Code, commonly the CPO® credential.
  • SNHD registration. Companies and operators servicing SNHD-permitted venues must register with SNHD.
  • Only a qualified operator may adjust water quality or equipment at those facilities.
  • We're ready for it. For HOA and commercial work, our service is led by CPO-qualified operators and proper SNHD registration.
Close-up of clean pool tile and waterline in a bright Las Vegas backyard pool.
Pillar 4 · Business basics

Licensed, bonded & insured.

01

Business licensed

We carry the required Clark County / City of Las Vegas business license to operate legally in the valley.

02

Bonded & insured

Licensed pool/spa contractor work is backed by the consumer-protection bond/cash deposit NSCB requires, and we carry liability insurance.

03

Trained handling

Our technicians are trained in safe chemical storage, transport, and handling — protecting your family and ours.

Good to know

Compliance questions.

Routine chemical maintenance — sanitizing, balancing, skimming, brushing, and emptying baskets — generally doesn't by itself require an NSCB license. But pool and equipment repair, replacement, or construction for a fee does. We clean in-house and route repair work to licensed A-10/A-10E contractors.
Under NRS/NAC 624, any work where labor plus materials exceeds $1,000 must be performed by a licensed contractor — the ceiling on Nevada's handyman exemption. Residential pool/spa contracts over $1,000 must be written with plans, schedule, and costs, and the down payment is capped at the lesser of $1,000 or 10%.
To the sanitary sewer through your sewer clean-out — de-chlorinated and at a controlled rate, per SNWA rules. Draining to the street, gutter, or storm drain is illegal valley-wide because storm drains flow untreated to Lake Mead. Repeat violations can be fined up to $5,000.
Yes. SNHD-permitted public and commercial pools must be maintained by a Qualified Pool Operator (commonly the CPO credential), and servicing companies must register with SNHD. Only a qualified operator may adjust water quality or equipment at those facilities.
Use the NSCB online License Search or call the Southern Nevada office at (702) 486-1100. We're happy to provide our license number on request — and we encourage every homeowner to verify before hiring any pool company.
Compliance you can trust

Work with a company that does it right.

Licensed, insured, sewer-safe, and CPO-ready. Get a free quote from a pool company you can verify.