HavenCostGuide

2026 Pricing Atlas

Pool cost by state — all 50 states, 2026.

Typical 2026 pool installation pricing for a 300 sqft mid-grade 14x28 inground pool (concrete or fiberglass shell with basic decking and standard equipment) across every US state. Sort by price, filter by name, click any row for the full state-specific cost guide.

National midpoint

$78,000

Avg across all 50 states · 300 sqft mid-grade 14x28

5 cheapest states

  • Mississippi$63,600
  • Arkansas$64,300
  • South Dakota$64,300
  • West Virginia$64,300
  • Alabama$65,100

5 priciest states

  • Hawaii$117,200
  • California$105,900
  • New York$105,900
  • Alaska$102,100
  • Massachusetts$99,800
Sort:

50 states shown

StateLowHighMid-rangeCost index
Typical Alabama pool buildALAlabama
$36,100$94,000$65,1000.86×Read guide
Typical Alaska pool buildAKAlaska
$56,700$147,500$102,1001.35×Read guide
Typical Arizona pool buildAZArizona
$42,000$109,200$75,6001.00×Read guide
Typical Arkansas pool buildARArkansas
$35,700$92,900$64,3000.85×Read guide
Typical California pool buildCACalifornia
$58,800$152,900$105,9001.40×Read guide
Typical Colorado pool buildCOColorado
$48,300$125,600$87,0001.15×Read guide
Typical Connecticut pool buildCTConnecticut
$54,600$142,000$98,3001.30×Read guide
Typical Delaware pool buildDEDelaware
$44,100$114,700$79,4001.05×Read guide
Typical Florida pool buildFLFlorida
$42,000$109,200$75,6001.00×Read guide
Typical Georgia pool buildGAGeorgia
$40,300$104,900$72,6000.96×Read guide
Typical Hawaii pool buildHIHawaii
$65,100$169,300$117,2001.55×Read guide
Typical Idaho pool buildIDIdaho
$38,600$100,500$69,6000.92×Read guide
Typical Illinois pool buildILIllinois
$39,900$103,800$71,9000.95×Read guide
Typical Indiana pool buildINIndiana
$37,000$96,100$66,6000.88×Read guide
Typical Iowa pool buildIAIowa
$36,100$94,000$65,1000.86×Read guide
Typical Kansas pool buildKSKansas
$37,000$96,100$66,6000.88×Read guide
Typical Kentucky pool buildKYKentucky
$37,800$98,300$68,1000.90×Read guide
Typical Louisiana pool buildLALouisiana
$38,600$100,500$69,6000.92×Read guide
Typical Maine pool buildMEMaine
$47,000$122,400$84,7001.12×Read guide
Typical Maryland pool buildMDMaryland
$50,400$131,100$90,8001.20×Read guide
Typical Massachusetts pool buildMAMassachusetts
$55,400$144,200$99,8001.32×Read guide
Typical Michigan pool buildMIMichigan
$38,200$99,400$68,8000.91×Read guide
Typical Minnesota pool buildMNMinnesota
$42,000$109,200$75,6001.00×Read guide
Typical Mississippi pool buildMSMississippi
$35,300$91,800$63,6000.84×Read guide
Typical Missouri pool buildMOMissouri
$38,200$99,400$68,8000.91×Read guide
Typical Montana pool buildMTMontana
$40,700$106,000$73,4000.97×Read guide
Typical Nebraska pool buildNENebraska
$36,500$95,000$65,8000.87×Read guide
Typical Nevada pool buildNVNevada
$44,100$114,700$79,4001.05×Read guide
Typical New Hampshire pool buildNHNew Hampshire
$48,300$125,600$87,0001.15×Read guide
Typical New Jersey pool buildNJNew Jersey
$53,800$139,800$96,8001.28×Read guide
Typical New Mexico pool buildNMNew Mexico
$39,500$102,700$71,1000.94×Read guide
Typical New York pool buildNYNew York
$58,800$152,900$105,9001.40×Read guide
Typical North Carolina pool buildNCNorth Carolina
$41,200$107,100$74,2000.98×Read guide
Typical North Dakota pool buildNDNorth Dakota
$36,100$94,000$65,1000.86×Read guide
Typical Ohio pool buildOHOhio
$38,600$100,500$69,6000.92×Read guide
Typical Oklahoma pool buildOKOklahoma
$36,100$94,000$65,1000.86×Read guide
Typical Oregon pool buildOROregon
$47,000$122,400$84,7001.12×Read guide
Typical Pennsylvania pool buildPAPennsylvania
$42,800$111,400$77,1001.02×Read guide
Typical Rhode Island pool buildRIRhode Island
$51,200$133,300$92,3001.22×Read guide
Typical South Carolina pool buildSCSouth Carolina
$39,900$103,800$71,9000.95×Read guide
Typical South Dakota pool buildSDSouth Dakota
$35,700$92,900$64,3000.85×Read guide
Typical Tennessee pool buildTNTennessee
$39,100$101,600$70,4000.93×Read guide
Typical Texas pool buildTXTexas
$42,000$109,200$75,6001.00×Read guide
Typical Utah pool buildUTUtah
$42,800$111,400$77,1001.02×Read guide
Typical Vermont pool buildVTVermont
$46,200$120,200$83,2001.10×Read guide
Typical Virginia pool buildVAVirginia
$45,400$118,000$81,7001.08×Read guide
Typical Washington pool buildWAWashington
$49,600$128,900$89,3001.18×Read guide
Typical West Virginia pool buildWVWest Virginia
$35,700$92,900$64,3000.85×Read guide
Typical Wisconsin pool buildWIWisconsin
$39,100$101,600$70,4000.93×Read guide
Typical Wyoming pool buildWYWyoming
$40,700$106,000$73,4000.97×Read guide

Methodology

How these numbers are calculated

Each state's range is the 2026 national baseline ($42,000–$95,000 for a typical 14x28 inground pool) multiplied by the state's cost index. Cost index is a composite of Bureau of Labor Statistics regional labor rates, material-delivery cost premiums (HI/AK are highest at +50%/+45%), permit fee patterns, and aggregated contractor pricing data. Index 1.00 = U.S. national average. Each state-specific guide ships its own deep-dive — cost drivers, top metros, neighbor comparison, and 4-year YoY trajectory.

Next steps

Get your exact number

The table above is a state-level baseline. Your actual quote will depend on your specific pool shell type (concrete vs. fiberglass vs. vinyl-liner), exact square footage, metro pricing within your state, and any subfloor prep your home needs.

How much does new pool cost in 2026?

The U.S. national average for a 300 sqft mid-grade 14x28 pool installation in 2026 is $78,000 for materials, labor, framing, railings, footings, and standard prep. State-level spread is wide — the cheapest states (Mississippi, Arkansas, South Dakota) sit around $63,600, while the priciest (Hawaii, California) push past $117,200 for the same scope.

Why does pool cost vary so much by state?

Three factors drive the spread: labor rates (installer wages in CA and NY are 40-55% above the national average; in MS/AR/AL they're 15-22% below), material delivery costs (HI and AK absorb shipping premiums that don't exist in the lower 48), and permit and inspection patterns (some coastal jurisdictions require permits for any install that touches a subfloor, others don't). Each state-specific guide breaks down the local drivers in detail.

What's the cheapest state to build a new pool?

Based on 2026 mid-range pricing, the five cheapest states for pool installation are: Mississippi ($63,600), Arkansas ($64,300), South Dakota ($64,300), West Virginia ($64,300), Alabama ($65,100). These states benefit from below-national-average framer/carpenter wages, simpler permit cycles, and longer build seasons that compress contractor schedules.

What's the most expensive state to build a new pool?

The five priciest states for a typical mid-grade pool build in 2026: Hawaii ($117,200), California ($105,900), New York ($105,900), Alaska ($102,100), Massachusetts ($99,800). Hawaii and Alaska absorb significant freight surcharges on composite pooling; California and New York are driven primarily by labor, permit, and code-driven structural scope expansion.

Is this pricing for materials only or installed?

Every dollar shown is fully installed pricing — labor, framing, pooling, railings, footings, standard prep, permit fees (where required), and a 10% contingency reserve. Material-only pricing for the same scope runs roughly 40% of the installed total (pooling + railing dominates that share). For a precise quote tailored to your material choice and square footage, run the pool calculator with your state pre-selected.

Looking at multiple outdoor projects?

Cross-reference pool pricing alongside outdoor kitchen, pool, and fence cost for every state on the Outdoor Living Hub — same state-by-state pricing framework, applied to the full outdoor-living renovation bundle, with an outdoor-value tier showing where these projects pay back best at resale.