Pool & Spa Subcontractors in Florida
204 Florida-licensed pool & spa subcontractors statewide. Showing the first 200 — browse by metro below to narrow. Sign in to see phone and email and invite a sub to bid on your RFQ.
Pool and spa subcontractors work the full lifecycle of commercial and residential pools — new pool and spa construction (excavation, shell, plumbing, equipment pad, deck and finish), pool renovations and resurfacing, and routine servicing (cleaning, water chemistry, equipment swaps and repairs). On commercial jobs the construction side prices from the pool drawings and aquatics spec, coordinates with site, electrical, gas, and plumbing on the equipment pad, and pulls permits and schedules inspections on its portion of the work.
What GCs ask for
A pool RFQ usually points at the pool drawings, the aquatics spec, and the equipment schedule, with a clear scope: shell type and size, finish, plumbing, equipment package, deck and coping, and any automation or chemical-treatment system. For bid prep a GC typically wants pricing broken out by scope so bids compare cleanly, confirmation the sub priced to the spec book, and a note on the split between construction scope (CILB-licensed) and any servicing or warranty scope. Site-visit-required jobs — common for pool work, since site access and equipment pad location drive the price — will say so up front.
Licensing in Florida
Pool and spa work splits into two licensing paths in Florida. Construction is a state-licensed trade, regulated by the Construction Industry Licensing Board (CILB) under the DBPR — the Certified Pool/Spa Contractor (CPC) license authorizes construction, renovation, and structural repair of pools and spas anywhere in the state, and a registered tier limits the same scope to a local jurisdiction. Routine servicing and maintenance — cleaning, water chemistry, equipment swaps — is largely not state-licensed and is typically handled under local registration plus general-liability insurance. A GC's due diligence depends on the scope: confirm the CILB pool/spa license for construction, and confirm local registration and insurance for servicing-only contractors.
Common questions
Do pool subcontractors in Florida need a state license?
It depends on the scope. Pool and spa construction is regulated by the CILB under the DBPR — the Certified Pool/Spa Contractor (CPC) license is required for new construction, renovation, and structural repair. Routine servicing and maintenance is largely not state-licensed and is typically handled under local registration.
What's the difference between a pool construction contractor and a pool service contractor?
Construction contractors hold a CILB pool/spa license and build, renovate, or structurally repair pools and spas. Service contractors handle cleaning, water chemistry, and equipment swaps — work that's generally not state-licensed and is regulated locally if at all.
What should a GC include in a pool RFQ?
The pool drawings, the aquatics spec, the equipment schedule, shell size and finish, plumbing and equipment scope, deck and coping, any automation, the bid deadline, and whether a site visit is required.
Can I invite a pool sub to bid on Sunstate Trades?
Yes. GCs post an RFQ and invite matched subs by trade and service area; invited subs are notified and can submit a bid for your bid prep.
Are these pool subs verified, and what does the badge mean?
Listings are seeded from public Florida DBPR license data, and a sub can claim its listing and upload a credential for a one-time review. The badge reflects what was reviewed: a verified state license earns License Verified — the path for a pool construction sub holding a CILB pool/spa license — a verified certificate of insurance earns Insurance Verified, which is the natural badge for servicing-only contractors that work under local registration rather than a state license; a sub with both reviewed shows the Verified Pro umbrella.