Florida Pool Authority Network: Complete Member Directory

The Florida Pool Authority Network spans 67 member sites organized by county, municipality, and regional corridor — covering the full geographic scope of Florida's licensed swimming pool service industry. This directory functions as the canonical reference for the network's structure, member coverage areas, licensing context, and the regulatory framework that governs pool contractors across the state. Professionals, property owners, and researchers use this directory to identify the correct regional authority for a given service area and to understand how the network's classification system maps to Florida's pool contractor licensing requirements.


Definition and Scope

The Florida Pool Authority Network is a reference and directory infrastructure covering the swimming pool service sector across all 67 Florida counties. It does not issue licenses, enforce regulations, or represent a governmental body. The network maps onto the actual regulatory geography of Florida pool contracting — a landscape governed primarily by the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation (DBPR) under Florida Statutes Chapter 489, Part II, which establishes the Certified Pool/Spa Contractor and Registered Pool/Spa Contractor license classes.

Coverage: This network addresses pool service operations physically located within the state of Florida and subject to Florida DBPR licensing requirements. It does not address pool service regulation in Georgia, Alabama, or any other adjacent state. Federal OSHA standards for commercial aquatic facilities (29 CFR Part 1910) apply in parallel but are not the primary regulatory framework indexed here. Municipal and county-level permitting requirements — which vary significantly across Florida's 67 counties — are addressed within individual member site coverage areas rather than at the network level.

Limitations: The directory does not cover pool equipment manufacturer warranties, HOA pool governance, or federal Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) compliance frameworks for public pools, except where those topics intersect with licensed contractor work under Florida law.

The pool-authority-florida reference consolidates statewide licensing and classification context that applies uniformly across all member coverage zones.


Core Mechanics or Structure

The network is organized across three structural layers: regional authority sites, county-level authority sites, and city/municipality-level authority sites. Each layer maps to a distinct geographic resolution of service demand and regulatory jurisdiction.

Regional Layer — 10 Corridor Authorities

Regional sites aggregate service data across multi-county corridors where pool contractor activity crosses administrative boundaries. These include:

Regional coverage details are mapped at network-regional-coverage-south-florida, network-regional-coverage-central-florida, network-regional-coverage-north-florida, network-regional-coverage-gulf-coast, network-regional-coverage-space-coast, and network-regional-coverage-treasure-coast.

County Layer — 20+ County-Specific Authorities

County sites correspond directly to county building department jurisdictions, which issue pool construction and alteration permits independently:

City and Municipality Layer

City-level members target dense urban markets with distinct municipal permitting jurisdictions:

Additional city members include Bradenton Pool Authority, Delray Beach Pool Authority, Destin Pool Authority, Homestead Pool Authority, Jupiter Pool Authority, Lakeland Pool Authority, Melbourne Pool Authority, Miami Beach Pool Authority, New Smyrna Pool Authority, Ocala Pool Authority, Palm Bay Pool Authority, Panama City Pool Authority, Pembroke Pines Pool Authority, Pensacola Pool Authority, Port Charlotte Pool Authority, and St. Augustine Pool Authority.

Service vertical coverage is indexed at network-service-verticals-maintenance, network-service-verticals-repair, network-service-verticals-leak-detection, network-service-verticals-automation, and network-service-verticals-commercial.


Causal Relationships or Drivers

Florida's pool contractor licensing framework directly shapes the network's geographic organization. Florida DBPR licenses pool contractors at two tiers under Florida Statutes §489.113: Certified contractors hold a statewide license valid in any Florida jurisdiction; Registered contractors hold a locally issued license valid only within the jurisdiction that issued it. This bifurcation means that a pool contractor operating in Broward County under a registered license cannot legally perform work in Palm Beach County without separate registration — creating hard geographic boundaries that mirror the network's county-level member structure.

Florida's climate drives year-round pool service demand at a scale absent in most other states. The Florida Swimming Pool Association (FSPA) estimates Florida has more residential swimming pools than any other state. This density — concentrated in South Florida, Central Florida, and the Gulf Coast — explains why the network's highest member count clusters in those corridors.

The regulatory-context-for-florida-pool-services reference details how DBPR enforcement actions, county building department permit requirements, and FSPA industry standards interact across the network's coverage zones.


Classification Boundaries

The network classifies member sites across four dimensions:

  1. Geographic resolution: Regional (multi-county), county, city/municipality
  2. Service scope: Maintenance, repair, new construction, leak detection, automation, commercial
  3. Regulatory jurisdiction: DBPR-licensed certified contractors vs. locally registered contractors
  4. Market segment: Residential, commercial (as defined by Florida Administrative Code Rule 61G20), and specialty (aquatic therapy, water features, spas)

The network-membership-standards page defines the criteria by which sites are classified at each resolution level. The regional-authority-structure reference explains how regional, county, and city designations interact when a contractor's service area crosses administrative boundaries — a common situation in the Tampa Bay, Miami metro, and Orlando metro markets.

Space Coast Pool Service illustrates the specialty service classification: it focuses specifically on maintenance and repair service operations in Brevard County distinct from the broader authority reference function of Space Coast Pool Authority.

PalmBeam Pool Authority represents the network's coverage of the Palm Beach–Boynton Beach–Delray Beach corridor as a distinct service zone within Palm Beach County — a geographic refinement below the county level. The internal reference palmbeam-pool-authority provides classification context for this member.


Tradeoffs and Tensions

Geographic precision vs. usability: Organizing member sites by county and city creates accurate regulatory mapping but can complicate navigation when a contractor serves multiple counties. A pool company based in Sarasota County frequently also serves Charlotte and Manatee counties — neither of which falls under the same member site. The network addresses this through regional overlay members like Gulf Coast Pool Authority that aggregate cross-county contractor activity.

Certified vs. Registered license coverage: Because the network mirrors the certified/registered distinction, some member sites reference contractor pools with mixed license types. A county member site in a high-growth area like Pasco County may index both statewide-certified contractors operating there and locally registered contractors whose license is county-specific — without implying interchangeability between the two categories.

Specialty service verticals vs. geographic coverage: Miami Commercial Pool Service and Miami Pool Leak Detection address service-type specialization within a single city market, while Ft. Lauderdale Pool Leak Detection addresses the same specialty in an adjacent city. These vertical-specific references operate in tension with geographic members that cover all service types within a territory.

Dual-domain members: The network includes both miamidadecountypoolauthority.com and miami-dadecountypoolauthority.com as distinct members referencing the same county. Similarly, miami-dadepoolauthority.com and miamicountypoolauthority.com each address overlapping geographic markets. This redundancy reflects the search geography of the Miami-Dade market, where service seekers use varying terminology to locate county-level pool contractors.


Common Misconceptions

Misconception: The Florida Pool Authority Network is a government agency.
Correction: The network is a private reference and directory infrastructure. Licensing, permitting, enforcement, and inspection authority rests with the Florida DBPR and individual county/city building departments. No member site issues licenses or enforces contractor standards.

Misconception: A DBPR-certified pool contractor license covers all work in all Florida counties without additional steps.
Correction

References


Related resources on this site:

📜 2 regulatory citations referenced  ·  🔍 Monitored by ANA Regulatory Watch  ·  View update log

Explore This Site

Services & Options Key Dimensions and Scopes of Florida Pool Services Regulations & Safety Florida Pool Services in Local Context
Topics (72)
Tools & Calculators Board Footage Calculator