NextSite Demolition

York Region · Toronto · Extended coverage

Pool Removal & Fill-In

We remove above-ground and inground pools across York Region, drained, demolished, backfilled in compacted layers, and graded so the yard is stable, usable ground again.

WSIB

Clearance on request

$5M

Liability insured

Licensed

Ontario contractor

Swept-clean

Debris hauled same day

A pool you don’t use still costs you every year, maintenance, insurance, repairs, none of it stops just because nobody’s swimming. Take it out and you get the yard back, and the bills stop for good. The catch is that most of what makes a pool demolition job good or bad happens below ground: backfill compacted in proper layers keeps the lawn flat for decades, loose fill turns into a sinking dish by the second winter. Here’s what pool removal costs in York Region, how to fill in a pool the right way, how to choose between a partial fill-in and a full removal, and straight answers to the questions we hear most.

Pool removal cost in York Region: the real ranges

Above-ground pool removal cost typically runs $1,200–$3,500 including the surrounding deck. Inground pool removal cost runs $6,000–$12,000 for a partial fill-in and $12,000–$20,000+ for a full removal. Concrete pool decking adds $2–$6 per square foot, priced lower when bundled with the pool itself.

Cost factorWhy it matters
Backyard accessThe largest single variable. Machine access through a gate keeps costs down; hand demolition or craning over the house raises them significantly.
Pool constructionVinyl-liner shells break down fastest; reinforced gunite is the slowest to demolish and the heaviest to haul.
Fill-in vs. full removalFull removal roughly doubles excavation and disposal volume.
Decking and surroundAdds cost, but less than removing it as a separate project later.
Backfill specificationEngineered, compacted backfill costs more than loose fill, and is the difference between stable ground and a settling depression.

No estimates over the phone that change once the crew shows up, every quote is written and firm before work begins. Call with your pool size and access details and we’ll give you real numbers, not a range.

Partial pool removal vs. full removal: how to choose

Choose a partial fill-in when the space is becoming lawn, garden, or patio and you’re staying in the home for the foreseeable future. It’s the cheapest way to remove an inground pool and, done with proper drainage and compaction, performs well for decades.

Choose full removal when you plan to build, decks with deep footings, additions, garden suites, or when you expect to sell. A partial fill-in generally must be disclosed to buyers and can’t support permanent structures; full removal leaves clean, buildable ground with nothing to disclose.

Tell us what the yard is for and we’ll give you a straight recommendation on the call, and a lot of the time, the honest answer is the cheaper one.

Permits and approvals for pool removal in the GTA

Most pool fill-in and removal jobs in York Region need some form of municipal sign-off. Toronto treats simple fill-ins differently than structural demolition, while York Region municipalities, including Vaughan and Markham, which split Thornhill at Yonge Street, have their own rules covering demolition, grading changes, and the pool enclosure fence, which is regulated as long as the pool holds water. Properties backing onto ravines or watercourses may also need Toronto and Region Conservation Authority (TRCA) clearance before municipal approvals can issue.

We flag the requirements commonly associated with the address and proposed removal method. The property owner must confirm and file applications with the municipality and any applicable conservation authority before work is scheduled.

The pool demolition process, step by step

  1. Assessment and written quote. Photos usually suffice for above-grounds; inground removals get a site visit and an access walkthrough.
  2. Utility disconnection. Electrical to pumps and lights is made safe; gas lines to heaters are capped by a licensed trade.
  3. Controlled draining. Water is dechlorinated and discharged to the sanitary sewer at a controlled rate, per municipal rules.
  4. Demolition. The shell is broken down (partial) or fully excavated (full removal). Drainage holes are opened through any remaining bottom so groundwater never collects beneath the yard.
  5. Backfill in compacted lifts. Clean fill is placed in layers, each compacted before the next. The step that determines whether the ground stays level for thirty years.
  6. Grading and restoration. The surface is graded to shed water away from the house and finished with topsoil, ready for sod or seed. Debris is hauled away, usually the same day it’s produced.

How long pool removal takes

Above-ground: one day. Inground partial fill-in: one to three days. Full removal: up to a week on site. With utility disconnections, any permits, and grading included, most projects run one to three weeks from first call to finished yard.

What your yard looks like afterward

Properly backfilled ground grows lawn within a season and stays level. That’s the whole test. What you should never see: standing water, a slow dish forming where the deep end was, or chunks of old deck working their way up through the grass. Those are the fingerprints of loose fill and skipped compaction, and they’re why compacted-lift backfill is written into every pool quote we give.

Pool removal across York Region and Toronto

We quote above-ground and inground pool removal across York Region and Toronto from our Thornhill service base. Start with pool dimensions, construction type, access photos and what the yard becomes afterward. Inground removals receive a site review before the method, backfill and final grade are priced.

Recent work

Before & after

Drag the handle to compare, then open the project for the full field report.

Inground Pool Removal in Thornhill after demolition and cleanup
Inground Pool Removal in Thornhill before work began
Before After Use the left and right arrow keys, or drag horizontally, to compare the two images. View project →
Above-Ground Pool Removal in Thornhill after demolition and cleanup
Above-Ground Pool Removal in Thornhill before work began
Before After Use the left and right arrow keys, or drag horizontally, to compare the two images. View project →
Concrete Pool Removal in Richmond Hill after demolition and cleanup
Concrete Pool Removal in Richmond Hill before work began
Before After Use the left and right arrow keys, or drag horizontally, to compare the two images. View project →

How it works

Four steps, no surprises

  1. Walkthrough & quote

    We look at the job in person or from photos and give you a firm written price. No vague estimates that grow later.

  2. Prep & protection

    Floors, walls and pathways get protected. Utilities are confirmed off. Containment goes up where dust control matters.

  3. Demolition

    The crew tears out exactly what was scoped. Nothing more. Structural elements are never touched without an engineer’s direction.

  4. Haul-away & broom sweep

    All debris leaves in our bins the same day where possible. The space is swept clean and ready for the next trade.

Already have plans or a scope? We’ll price the actual work.

(905) 000-0000

Common questions

Pool Removal & Fill-In FAQs

How much does pool removal cost?

In York Region, above-ground pool removal typically costs $1,200–$3,500 including deck teardown and haul-away. Inground pools run $6,000–$12,000 for a partial fill-in and $12,000–$20,000+ for full removal, depending on size, construction, and access. Backyard access is the single biggest variable, a yard a machine can reach costs far less than one requiring hand demolition or craning.

What's the difference between a partial fill-in and full pool removal?

A partial fill-in breaks off the top portion of the shell, opens drainage holes through the bottom, and backfills over the buried rubble. It's the more affordable option and takes one to three days. Full removal takes the entire shell out of the ground, costs more, and leaves ground you can build on. Partial fill-ins generally must be disclosed when you sell, and structures can't be built over them; full removals carry neither restriction.

Does removing a pool decrease home value?

No, in the GTA, removing an aging pool usually helps resale rather than hurting it, since Ontario's short swim season and thousands of dollars a year in upkeep make many buyers see an older pool as a liability, not a feature. A level, usable backyard typically appeals to more buyers than a pool in declining condition. The exception is a well-maintained pool in a neighbourhood where pools are expected. If you're unsure, ask your realtor before deciding.

Do you need a permit to remove or fill in a pool?

Municipal and conservation requirements vary by removal method, grading, property location and what will be built afterward. Pool enclosures and properties near ravines or watercourses can add conditions. We can flag common requirements, but the owner must confirm and file with the municipality and any applicable authority.

How long does pool removal take?

Above-ground pools are usually removed in one day. Inground partial fill-ins take one to three days on site, and full removals up to a week. Including utility disconnections, any permits, and final grading, plan for one to three weeks door to door.

Can I remove a pool myself?

An above-ground pool is a realistic DIY project if you can handle disassembly and disposal. An inground pool is not, DIY removals risk utility strikes, and improper backfill is how yards end up with sinking ground and drainage problems years later. Between equipment rental, disposal, and fill, DIY inground removal often costs $4,000–$7,000 anyway, without the compaction standards or accountability a contractor provides.

What happens to the pool water?

Pool water is dechlorinated first, then drained at a controlled rate to the sanitary sewer, not onto lawns, storm drains, or the street, which municipal rules prohibit. This is part of our scope on every removal.

Can you build on top of a filled-in pool?

After a full removal, yes, the ground is unencumbered once properly compacted. After a partial fill-in, lawns, gardens, patios, and light structures are fine, but permanent structures like garages, additions, or garden suites generally can't sit over a buried shell without geotechnical work. If building is in your future plans, tell us before choosing the removal type; it changes the right answer.

Will the equipment damage my yard or fence?

Machine access requires roughly a gate-width opening; we protect the route with mats where ground conditions call for it, and fence panels can be temporarily removed and reinstalled. Whatever the equipment disturbs along the access path is regraded and raked before we leave, and we walk the route with you during the quote so there are no surprises.

What happens to the pool equipment, pump, heater, and lines?

Electrical to the pump and lights is disconnected and made safe, gas lines to heaters are capped by a licensed trade, and the equipment itself is removed and recycled with the rest of the debris. If you'd rather keep or sell any equipment, tell us during the quote.

Need pool removal handled?

Call for a straight answer and a firm quote, usually same day.