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Ask five spa owners how often they test and you’ll get answers from “every day” to “when it smells weird.” The right answer depends on one variable more than any other: how many person-hours your water absorbs per week. Every bather adds sweat, oils, and cosmetics that consume sanitizer — an empty spa barely changes day to day, while a busy weekend can flatten your chlorine overnight.

The baseline schedule

UsageTestWhy
Daily or near-daily soaksEvery 1–2 daysHeavy bather load burns sanitizer fast
2–4 soaks a weekTwice a weekThe sweet spot for most owners
Occasional / weekends onlyWeekly, plus before each soakIdle water drifts slowly, but still drifts
Vacation / not in useWeekly if possibleSanitizer still depletes in hot water

At minimum, check sanitizer and pH at each test — those two move fastest and matter most. Alkalinity and hardness change slowly; a close look once a week is plenty, and hardness mostly only moves when you add fresh water.

Always test at these moments

Whatever your baseline, some moments earn a test regardless of the calendar:

Why consistency beats precision

A single test tells you where the water is; a series of tests tells you where it’s going. If pH reads 7.6 three tests in a row and then 7.9, you know something changed — heavy use, a depleted feeder, alkalinity drifting. Owners who test on a rhythm catch problems while they’re still a one-scoop fix. Owners who test reactively meet every problem at full size, usually as cloudy water.

This is also the argument for keeping a log: memory flattens details (“pH was fine-ish last week”), but a written trend line makes drift obvious at a glance.

Make it stupidly easy. The whole test takes 15 seconds. Keep the strip bottle within arm’s reach of the spa — in a dry spot, tightly closed — and pair testing with something you already do, like your morning coffee or flipping the cover open. Friction, not laziness, is why testing habits die.

What about test strip accuracy?

Strips are accurate enough for routine spa care when they’re fresh and stored dry — and the consistency of testing matters far more than lab-grade precision. Use a quality strip (we like the AquaChek Select 7-way), read it at the time the bottle specifies, and replace the bottle yearly or by its expiration date, whichever comes first. If a reading seems wild, retest with a second strip before dosing anything.

Never miss a test day

SpaCheckup reminds you when it’s time to test, logs every reading automatically, and — if you’d rather skip the math — calculates the exact amount to add based on your readings.

Coming soon to the App Store