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Circulation Pump vs Jet Pump: What's the Difference?

By Nashville Hot Tub Pros  ·  Education

Open the cabinet on a modern hot tub and you'll often see two pumps that look very different from each other. One is small, quiet, and runs almost all the time. The other is much larger, makes considerable noise when it's on, and only runs when the jets are active. Both are necessary, both can fail, and they fail in totally different ways.

The Circulation Pump

Sometimes called the "circ pump," this is the small, low-flow workhorse. It typically moves 20–60 gallons per minute at low pressure, just enough to keep water moving through the filter and heater.

Its job:

Most circ pumps draw only 80–200 watts. They're designed for long, continuous duty cycles — essentially they're always on, or on a 24/7 cycle that runs the filter constantly.

The Jet Pump

The jet pump (often called the "main pump" or "1-speed/2-speed pump") is the big motor. It runs at much higher flow rates — typically 200–350 gallons per minute — at higher pressure to drive water hard through the jet manifolds.

Its job:

Jet pumps typically draw 1,500–3,000 watts on high. They aren't designed to run 24/7 — they're built for short bursts of high output, then to shut off.

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Two Pumps Means Two Failure Modes

Because the two pumps do different jobs and run on different duty cycles, they fail differently:

How Circulation Pumps Fail

How Jet Pumps Fail

How to Tell Which One Is Failing

Knowing which pump is acting up shortens the diagnostic conversation dramatically. A few quick patterns:

Some Spas Only Have One Pump

Older or smaller spas sometimes have just a single multi-speed pump that handles both jobs — low-speed circulation/filtration, high-speed jets. These work fine but have one weakness: when the pump fails, both functions die at once.

Pump Replacement Notes

What This Means for You

The takeaway: your spa probably has two completely separate pumps doing two completely separate jobs. When something goes wrong, the symptoms point pretty cleanly at one or the other. A tech can usually narrow it down in a few minutes once they have eyes on the equipment, and the right repair is rarely a guess.

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