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Hot Tub Winterization in Tennessee: Run It or Drain It?

By Nashville Hot Tub Pros  ·  Seasonal

Tennessee winters are a tease. Some weeks it's 60°F and you want to soak. The next week there's a hard freeze warning and the wind chill drops to 12. Hot tub owners have a real decision to make: keep the spa running through winter, or fully shut it down? Here's how a tech thinks through it.

The Case for Running It

If you use your spa even occasionally — say, twice a month or more between November and March — keeping it running is almost always the right call. Here's why:

The Case for Draining It

Draining and winterizing makes sense in a smaller set of circumstances:

The risk of fully winterizing is mostly about doing it incorrectly. A spa that wasn't fully drained, with water still sitting in a pump volute or low pipe segment, can split a fitting overnight in a hard freeze. The damage isn't always visible until spring.

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How to Keep a Running Spa Safe Through Winter

How to Winterize Properly

If you decide to shut down, here's the right sequence:

  1. Turn off power at the disconnect.
  2. Drain via the main drain valve and a submersible pump if needed.
  3. Loosen pump unions and let any trapped water drain out.
  4. Use a wet/dry vacuum on each jet face for a few seconds, blowing or vacuuming any standing water out of the lines.
  5. Pour a small amount of RV/spa antifreeze into the skimmer, footwell drain, and pump suction to displace residual water. Use spa-rated antifreeze, never automotive.
  6. Leave the cover on but cracked slightly for ventilation. Sealed shut on an empty spa, condensation and mildew become the new problem.

Most homeowners would rather not handle steps 4–6 themselves. A typical professional winterization visit takes about an hour and ensures no surprises in February.

While you're thinking about freeze risk on the spa, it's the right week to think about the rest of the house plumbing that freezes in a Nashville cold snap — outdoor spigots, crawl-space supply lines, and any pipes running through unconditioned space. The cold front that splits a hot tub fitting is the same one that splits a hose bib.

Restarting in Spring

What We Recommend in Middle Tennessee

For 90% of the Nashville-area homeowners we work with, the right answer is: keep it running, maintain the cover, and skip the winterization. Our winters are mild enough and short enough that the math favors running over shutting down for almost everyone who uses their spa at all. The exception is the seasonal homeowner who's away from November through March — for them, professional winterization is well worth the visit.

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