Pumps are the heart of a hot tub — circulation pumps push water through the heater, and jet pumps run the therapy seats. When one fails, you'll hear it before you see it.
Get a Free QuoteMost spa pump failures show up as noise first, performance second. A bearing starts to whine, then it screams, then it locks. A seal weeps for a few weeks before it leaks. Catching pump issues early usually means a cheaper repair. We diagnose pumps and motors as separate systems — sometimes the wet end is fine and the motor is the failure, or vice versa.
You submit a quote request describing what your spa is doing. A real Nashville-based tech responds soon to confirm the appointment. We arrive in a marked truck with common parts on board, run a structured diagnostic, and give you a flat-rate quote before any work begins. Most jobs are done the same day.
We service every major brand on the market — Jacuzzi, Hot Spring, Caldera, Sundance, Marquis, Master Spas, Bullfrog, Dimension One, Cal Spas, Coleman — plus most off-brand and inflatable spas. If you've inherited a spa or aren't sure what you have, send a photo with your quote request and we'll figure it out.
If your spa is doing any of these, this is the right page.
Worn impeller, partial airlock, or a tired motor. Diagnosed in minutes once we open the cabinet.
Bearings on their way out. Catch it early and we can replace the motor before it locks up.
Mechanical seal failure. Replacement is straightforward; ignoring it eventually kills the motor.
Airlock after a refill, clogged impeller, or a failed wet end. Quick diagnosis, quick fix.
Capacitor, motor winding, or a board-side issue. We test each before condemning the pump.
Often a thermal overload tripping from a binding bearing. Replacement is the standard fix.
Most pump replacements run $450 to $900 installed, depending on horsepower, brand, and whether it's a 1-speed or 2-speed unit.
Sometimes — if the wet end and shaft are good, a motor swap is roughly half the cost. We always quote both options.
Bearings dry out and start to whine. The longer it runs that way, the higher the risk of seizing. Catching it early matters.
5–10 years is normal in Middle Tennessee. Heavy daily use or poor chemistry shortens that window.