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How much chlorine (or bromine) to add to a hot tub

The honest answer is "it depends on your tub volume and which product you use" — but the math is simple once you have those two things. Hot tub doses are small (a tub is a fraction of a pool's volume), which is exactly why eyeballing it leads to overshooting.

The base dosing rates

These are the standard amounts to raise free chlorine by 1 ppm per 10,000 gallons:

ProductPer 10,000 gal / 1 ppm
Liquid chlorine (12.5%)10 fl oz
Cal-hypo (68%)2.0 oz (dry)
Dichlor (56%)2.4 oz (dry)

For bromine, the rule of thumb is about 0.13 oz of sodium bromide per 100 gallons to raise bromine by 1 ppm.

Worked example: a 400-gallon tub

A typical home hot tub holds 300–500 gallons. Say yours is 400 gallons and you want to raise free chlorine by 1 ppm. Scale the rate by 400 ÷ 10,000 = 0.04:

These are tiny amounts — which is the whole point. A "splash" of cal-hypo can be several ppm in a small tub. Use a measuring spoon or a small scale, not your hand.

After a soak

Bathers consume sanitizer. The working rule is about 1 ppm of sanitizer demand per person, per hour in the tub. So two people for an hour will burn roughly 2 ppm — top up afterward to bring chlorine or bromine back into range before the water sits overnight.

Weekly shock

Wait before the next dose.

After shocking, let sanitizer fall back into range (1–3 ppm chlorine / 2–4 ppm bromine) before soaking. Don't stack doses on top of a high reading — more isn't better, and high sanitizer is hard on skin and equipment.

Skip the arithmetic — Soak sizes the dose to your tub

Enter your volume and reading once; Soak gives the exact dose for your chosen product, the after-soak top-up, and the weekly shock amount — with built-in "re-test" and "don't add more" guardrails. Pay once, no subscription, no ads, fully offline.

Get Soak on the App Store

Sources

General guidance, not a substitute for your own testing. Doses scale with your exact volume — measure carefully and re-test after dosing.