Inspection requirements for swimming pools
What is really being checked?
Swimming pools are regularly inspected for safety. One of the most underestimated elements?
👉Fastening materials and structural connections
Inspectors look not only at visible defects, but above all at underlying risks — such as material choice and potential failure mechanisms.
With the introduction of NEN 9200 (August 2025), inspection requirements have been further tightened.
On this page you will discover:
- what inspectors check
- which mistakes are often made
- how to avoid rejection
- and how to demonstrably comply
Why are inspections so important?
Inspections aim to identify risks early and prevent incidents.
They focus on:
An approved installation means not only compliance, but also risk control.
Which standards apply in inspections?
Inspections are based on:
- NEN 9200
- Environmental Planning Decree (Bbl)
- general duty of care and safety standards
This means inspectors don't just follow rules, but also assess whether risks are sufficiently covered.
What do inspectors specifically check?
Material choice
Are the materials used suitable for pool environments?
- resistant to chlorine and moisture
- no risk of unexpected failure
Fasteners
A critical inspection point:
- type of fastening
- application and load
- exposure to chlorine vapours
Mistakes here often lead directly to rejection.
Stress corrosion risk
Inspectors assess whether materials are susceptible to stress corrosion. This particularly applies to:
- stainless steel
- applications under stress
Structural safety
Are loads correctly supported?
- suspension systems
- fixed installations
- structural connections
Documentation and substantiation
Increasingly important under the new standard:
- is material choice documented?
- have risks been assessed?
- is there proof of suitability?
No documentation = elevated risk at inspection.
Common reasons for rejection
Inspections often lead to rejection due to:
- use of unsuitable materials (such as stainless steel in critical applications)
- insufficient knowledge of stress corrosion
- missing documentation
- application of standard solutions without validation
These mistakes are usually preventable.
What happens in case of rejection?
When an installation doesn't comply:
👉Prevention is always cheaper than repair.
How do you prevent rejection at inspection?
A safe approach consists of:
- 1Use materials suitable for pool environments
- 2Avoid risks such as stress corrosion
- 3Choose proven and tested systems
- 4Document all choices and applications
- 5Perform internal checks before inspection
👉Be prepared, not reactive.
The role of fasteners in inspections
Fastening is often a "hidden" component — but with great impact.
Inspectors judge:
reliability
durability
safety under load
👉A weak fastener can make an entire installation unsafe.
Practical checklist: are you ready for inspection?
Check:
- 1Are all fasteners suitable for chlorine environments?
- 2Is stainless steel used in load-bearing applications?
- 3Have stress corrosion risks been excluded?
- 4Is documentation complete and available?
- 5Have installations been visually and technically checked?
👉One weak link can lead to rejection.
Conclusion
Inspection requirements for pools are not a formality — they aim to eliminate risks before they cause problems.
With NEN 9200, the focus has shifted to:
- demonstrable safety
- substantiated material choice
- active risk management
Those who anticipate this avoid rejection and increase safety.
🔥 Want to be sure your pool passes inspection?
Avoid surprises:
Also read:
GRATIS DOWNLOAD
Free: Pool Safety Whitepaper 2026
NEN 9200, stress corrosion and inspection rules — in one practical PDF.
