Removing Leaves from Winter Pool Covers

By mid-November in the US, most of the leaves have fallen as autumn comes to a close. For pools covered for winter, that means thousands of leaves, twigs and other debris that need to be removed, before a hard freeze. It’s not nearly as pretty as the picture above.

In-ground pools with safety covers don’t have to deal with leaves in most cases – they blow on, they blow off, as the cover is drum-tight and water drains through. Solid covers however, or above ground pool covers, seem to catch every airborne leaf in the neighborhood!

Today we talk about efficient methods of removing leaves from a winter pool cover. Having removed millions of leaves from pool covers during my pool service days, I feel uniquely qualified to teach the subject!

Removing Water from a Winter Cover

Pump-off most of the rain water off first to make removing pool cover leaves easier. Use a submersible pool cover pump to drain the water from the cover first.

using several pumps to remove pool cover water

Too much water on the cover not only makes it hard to remove leaves from a pool cover, but also puts stress on the cover, which can leak gunk into your pool. When deep water freezes over, sharp edges of the ice sheet can damage your pool cover. For solid covers, you need a good cover pump!

A leaf blower can be used to inflate the pool cover underneath, which moves all of the water toward the cover pump. Stick the blower under the cover, with the water bags or cable still in place. Very useful in springtime, not always necessary for a mid-winter cover cleaning.

inflating a pool cover with a leaf blower

A siphon hose can be used with above ground pools or in-ground pools with a sloping hillside near the pool. Fill a vacuum hose or garden hose full of water, weigh down one end onto the cover, cap the other end with your hand and quickly pull the hose to the lowest spot it will reach. Release your hand and gravity will do the rest, removing most of the water. You will still need a cover pump however, when it comes time to remove the cover.

Removing Leaves from a Winter Cover

Using a Leaf Blower

If you keep your pool cover mostly dry, you can simply blow the leaves off with a leaf blower. A large leaf blower can blow leaves all the way to the other side of the pool cover, or off the cover completely. Of course if the leaves are wet, a blower won’t work so well.

Using a Pool Brush

cleaning pool cover with a pool brush

As shown below, a pool brush can be used to push the leaves from one side of the pool cover to the other side, where they can be scooped up with a pool leaf rake, or pulled over the edge with a lawn leaf rake. Use only rakes with plastic tines, and pool brushes with nylon bristles, or you may puncture your pool cover.

Using a Pool Leaf Rake

pool leaf rake shown

A pool leaf rake is a large skimmer net with a deep bag. Push it slowly across the pool cover to scoop up leaves and debris. Keep a large trash can (or two) on the pool deck to dump the debris, and you can clean a pool cover in no time, even if there is water on the cover.

Using a Pool Leaf Net Cover

Leaf Catchers are sturdy leaf net covers that you lay on top of your regular pool cover, the best leaf removal solution. Once all the leaves have fallen, one person can easily remove every last leaf, in minutes! It’s too late to use one now unfortunately, but you can plan for next year!


And there you have it – when it comes to removing leaves from a pool cover, there’s a few methods to safely remove leaves and sticks, and even heavy branches, without damaging the pool cover.

Let us know how you remove leaves from your pool cover, leave a reply below for a prompt answer about cleaning pool covers, or any pool maintenance topic!

6 thoughts on “Removing Leaves from Winter Pool Covers

  1. Jane Newcomb

    Hi! Very limited funds here! If I put a Japanese bridge across my 8 years-closed safety-covered 20 x 40 pool I would have Monet’s Garden….How hard/expensive would it be to pull off cover and replace with inexpensive cover for potential resale of house, or just leave it alone for next owners?

    • Hi Jane, you can jut pull the cover off, letting all the gunk on top slide into the pool, and then cover it with a new solid floating type cover, for around $100 – $200, or you could install a safety cover, which will look much better, for around $750. And/Or you could just rent a “Trash Pump” and drain it, clean-it and refill it, and then cover it. If you rent the pump and hire some neighbors or laborers, might cost about $400 to drain and clean.

  2. Gail Wood

    What can you use to remove the rotten smell of decaying leaves from your pool cover?

    • Hi, not sure – I would just remove them from the cover, using a Leaf Rake type of net, and scooping them off, or using a pool brush to push them to one side where they can be bagged up. Then you could pump off the pool cover. If your leaves are already off of the cover and you want to reduce the smell of the leaf pile, you could do so by piling green grass clippings or bush prunings. Or just wait a few days, the smell will dissipate naturally. Watering the pile could help…

  3. We have a stardard size in ground pool. Every year when we take cover off, I notice pool leakage. We replaced the cover 3 years ago so I’d like to think the cover is good but every winter, we get a lot of water and debris on pool cover and I have to drain large amounts of water and debris. Once I open cover, I notice I’m way lower than skimmer level where I put level before winterizing. This year it’s down ONE FOOT inside and I’m still getting water off cover. Am I just draining water from inside pool ?

    • Hi Lynn, 3 possible scenarios – 1) may be small holes in the cover, and pool water is being pumped out by the cover pump, or 2) The large amount of water on the cover displaced the water in the pool, pushing it over the edge of the pool, or 3) there is a small, slow leak in the liner, or around one of the wall fittings.

Comments are closed.