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Building a pool in Volusia County

Building a Pool in Volusia County

Professional Pool Company — What Homeowners Need to Know Before Building a Pool in Volusia County, FL

Volusia County includes Deltona, DeLand, DeBary, Orange City, Daytona Beach, Port Orange, Ormond Beach, and surrounding coastal communities. The county has unique permitting steps, strict coastal rules in some areas, and additional inspections depending on location.

This guide explains everything you need to know before building a pool in Volusia County.


1. Overview of Pool Construction in Volusia County

Volusia County is known for:

✔ Faster permitting inland

✔ Longer review times in coastal zones

✔ Strict flood zone and wind-load requirements near the coast

✔ Drainage-focused reviews for stormwater control

✔ Larger lot sizes in many neighborhoods

✔ Detailed safety enforcement

Most pool permits take 3–6 weeks, depending on location and whether the home is inland or coastal.


2. What Volusia County Requires Before a Pool Permit Is Submitted

To submit your Volusia County pool permit, we must include:

1. Engineered Pool Plans

Stamped drawings showing:

  • Structural shell details
  • Steel schedule
  • Beam heights
  • Steps/benches
  • Spa (if applicable)

2. Current Property Survey

The survey must show:

  • Setbacks
  • Easements
  • Drainage paths
  • Elevations
  • Utility lines
  • House footprint

Volusia rejects surveys lacking elevations or drainage arrows.

3. Site Plan

Includes:

  • Pool placement
  • Deck layout
  • Access path for equipment
  • Equipment pad location
  • Setback verification

4. Drainage/Stormwater Notes

Typically required, especially in:

  • Deltona
  • DeLand
  • Ormond Beach
  • Daytona Beach

Must demonstrate that pool and deck do not alter neighboring drainage.

5. HOA Approval (if applicable)

Many subdivisions require HOA sign-off before county submission:

  • Victoria Park
  • LPGA communities
  • Venetian Bay
  • Ormond Lakes
  • DeBary Golf & Country Club


3. Permitting Timeline in Volusia County

Typical Review Time:

3–6 weeks

Includes:

  • Zoning review
  • Stormwater/drainage review
  • Structural/building review
  • Flood zone review (if applicable)
  • Corrections/resubmittals

Coastal zones may require additional environmental checks.


4. Property Considerations Unique to Volusia County

1. Coastal Zone Restrictions

Homes near the coastline may need:

  • Additional engineering
  • Flood-zone compliance
  • Higher structural requirements
  • Wind-load documentation
  • Possible dune protection restrictions

2. High Water Table Areas

Common in:

  • Deltona
  • DeBary
  • Edgewater

High water tables may require:

  • Soil evaluation
  • Dewatering
  • French drains
  • Raised decks

3. Large Utility Easements

Some lots—especially in older Deltona—have rear or side easements that restrict pool placement.

4. HOA Review

Several Volusia communities have strict architectural guidelines, particularly for:

  • Deck materials
  • Screen enclosures
  • Fence style and height

5. Septic System Considerations

If your home is on septic, setbacks must respect:

  • Tank
  • Drainfield
  • Reserve field


5. Required Inspections in Volusia County

Volusia requires the standard Florida Building Code inspections:

1. Steel Inspection

Before gunite application.

2. Electrical Bonding Inspection

Ensures bonding grid is complete.

3. Plumbing Pressure Test

Verifies plumbing integrity.

4. Deck/Footer Inspection

Required for:

  • Concrete decks
  • Paver footers
  • Screen enclosure footers

5. Final Inspection

Inspector checks:

  • Safety barriers
  • Function of equipment
  • Proper drainage
  • Setback compliance
  • Interior finish
  • Water clarity
  • Gate & alarm compliance

Final inspection approval is required before finish/turnover.


6. Safety Requirements in Volusia County

Volusia County follows Florida Building Code pool safety laws:

✔ Fencing (4 ft minimum)

✔ Baby barrier

✔ Door/window alarms

✔ Screen enclosure with compliant latches

✔ Self-closing gates

A barrier must be installed prior to the final inspection.


7. Construction Timeline in Volusia County

Once the permit is issued, construction typically includes:

  1. Excavation – 1–2 days
  2. Plumbing + Steel – 2–4 days
  3. County inspections – 1–3 days
  4. Gunite – 1 day + curing time
  5. Tile & Coping – 2–4 days
  6. Deck installation – 3–7 days
  7. Interior finish & startup – 2–3 days

Total estimated build time:

12–18 weeks, depending on:

  • Weather
  • Access
  • Lot slope
  • Drainage requirements
  • HOA restrictions


8. Tips for a Smooth Build in Volusia County

✔ Get your survey early

Volusia often requires updated elevation data.

✔ HOA approval is often required first

Many HOAs meet monthly.

✔ Expect drainage questions

Stormwater corrections are the biggest delay.

✔ Coastal zones need extra paperwork

Wind and flood requirements take longer to review.

✔ Keep side-yard access clear

Volusia inspectors require safe access.


9. Summary: Building a Pool in Volusia County

Homeowners can expect:

✔ 3–6 week permitting process

✔ Drainage and stormwater review

✔ Possible coastal/flood zone requirements

✔ Multiple inspections

✔ Strict barrier compliance

✔ 12–18 week construction timeline

Volusia County is generally smooth to work with inland, but coastal builds require more engineering and documentation.


Ready to Build Your Volusia County Pool?

Professional Pool Company handles:

✔ Engineering

✔ Survey review

✔ HOA coordination

✔ All permitting

✔ Drainage compliance

✔ Complete construction

✔ County inspections

👉 Contact us anytime to begin your Volusia County pool project.


Need help right now?

Call us at 321-252-7371 or schedule a design consultation at this link.


© 2025 Professional Pool Company. All rights reserved.

Updated on: 29/11/2025

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